Nope wrong as usual. Yall are just a bunch of hatemongering trolls attacking everyone who presents valid counterpoints to your fantasy version of WoW classic/retail hybrid game
Regardless your still a hatmonger and dual spec in tbcc is still just a pathetic meme. All the efforts put forth have only created overly polarized sides of the argument. Every single thread turns into insults and personal attacks. The subject itself is toxic at this point, Well done!
I’m simply responding to the various OPs and posts asking or wondering if dual spec will be added and then following up when arguments happen in reaction to that reality.
I’m not going out of my way to make threads called “There can’t ever be dual spec in TBC! Stop asking!”. Your camp are the ones who keep making threads.
You keep starting it.
Someone has to finish it, or be around to clean up your messes as you doodoo all over yourselves in angst over your precious missing other-expansion feature.
Have you ever even successfully rebuked #nochanges?
I mean you constantly repeat this ad nauseam as if #nochanges is a broken argument and thus invalidates the point the poster is trying to make, and yet I’ve never seen you actually counter it.
Pro-tip: “#nochanges” is not a literal term, per se. It is simply referring to the game being as close to the original as possible, meaning any change that happens is likely to not be seen as favorable simply for that reason.
Does that means #nochanges is invalidated when a change is made?
No, it doesn’t.
It just means the argument can be applied to the next change being proposed. Once any change has already been made, it’s about have the least amount of changes possible. That’s #nochanges.
Whether Blizzard is or isn’t considering that as an argument for whether they do or don’t make changes is also irrelevant, because ultimately, as has been made loud and clear by you yourself, you don’t even know the reason why they will or won’t (they won’t) add dual spec henceforth.
Therefore, it is a perfectly valid opinion to believe that a change shouldn’t be added because it makes the game less like original TBC.
The difference in popularity of Classic (which was much more in-line with #nochanges) vs. TBC Classic (which adopted #somechanges) makes it quite clear #nochanges was the much more successful design philosophy. But the trolls can’t deal with facts and reality. They can’t reason outside their own bubble of idealism. If THEY don’t like it, it must be bad.
Seriously?? Dude, people like you just want to fight and berate others to make themselves feel better about their own self-importance. #nochanges is your buzzword and your the ones bringing it up as a blanket dismissal to anyone that doesn’t think your qol experience and heavily biased opinion is the best to gauge major game changes on. Your 1 in 4billion. Get over yourselves already.
No, my position is a lot of things that would invariably mean a change doesn’t happen if they are agreed with, which is not the same as arbitrarily not wanting a change because it is a change.
I believe in the exact same reasons why dual spec was excluded from TBC originally by the original TBC devs.
Well, I don’t think it’s because the devs are overly committed to authenticity. I think it’s simply because there’s no profit in doing such a change. People aren’t quitting over not having dual spec. If they add it, the whiners simply move on to their next QQ, as they always do. There’s literally zero incentive for Blizz to do it. Unless they put it in the cash shop and sold it for real $$$$.