Neat story. You should go play it.
At least these spare parts understand the topic being discussed, you can’t even remember what you post in the last 20 minutes lol.
Wonder how the community will respond to it, think the general consensus about Criterion Dungeon was the rewards sucked
criterion dungeons went HARD on savage or w/e the 2nd difficulty is called. would’ve been 10/10 content if it had just given good stuff as a reward.
Using engine limitations as an excuse isn’t going to fly.
Blizzard has been iterating on their engine for well over a decade and we saw significant improvements to it with Shadowlands and The Zaralek Caverns in Dragonflight. Those kind of additions require innovations to the engine. The War Within saw even bigger enhancements with the addition of Hero Talents, a fully connected world (Khaz Algar) and significant improvements to verticality.
The short of it is that WoW’s engine is no longer a crutch that we can use as an excuse for bogus quality assurance. Blizzard has exceeded their limits in design scope, but they fall short on delivering an experience without technical issues.
The new savage 24 man is going to have unique rewards.
I think they are learning their lesson. 7.1 sprinkled more rewards across the entire game in various places. They even updated the achievement vendor lol.
Topic being discussed:
Known forum complainer posts blanket garbage about FFXIV being better than TWW.
Known human rogue troll, stirs the pot and offers no actual feedback.
I can see and understand just fine.
Why would I offer feedback on a troll thread topic? Like what kind of feedback do I give? “Nice job getting WoW players to mald out?”
So the only reason you are here is to boost your post count instead of logging in and actually hitting lvl 80. Makes sense now. Thanks for clarifying. Have a great night.
The irony here is amazing lol.
It’s not even really specifically engine issues. A lot of hardcoded and base assumption code design happened in the earliest iterations of the game, and those are hell to unravel.
Yeah, like the factions lol.
Factions, the system for holding currency, base assumed functions in certain systems… I’m amazed Blizzard has managed to unravel as much of that as they already have, and a lot of the technical issues around those features or caused by those features are almost unavoidable. As long as they go about fixing them in the process of moving forward, I can live with temporary growing pains.
Yeah i mean dont get me wrong. I think wow should be treated with extra care considering its significance. But if u want to just blast current wow content, there arent a lot of troubling bugs.
I don’t see how any of this serves as an excuse for allowing bugs reported for months on end to go unresolved? The Dawnbreaker bugs for example have been reported since beta testing.
What is the excuse here? Are we seriously defending this?
Current expansion dungeons are virtually unplayable depending on the bugs that hit you.
Volume doesn’t necessarily apply to bugs because depending on what it is, even one of them can be extremely concerning.
Current expansion content should have no major errors.
I’m referring to system bugs, not localized issues created in new content. Dawnbreaker has bugs and they need to be resolved. Dunno why you think I’m arguing about that, because I was speaking generally.
I highly disagree. Current expac dungeons are fine. There hasnt been a single instance of me skipping a dungeon due to a bug.
You mean to tell me that a Red Mage is a caster? How could anyone have known that? Oh, right. It’s still a mage. You can use the sword abilities without them being Enchanted but considering they are still primarily casters, you probably wouldn’t get that good of a result swinging a sword without the magic. Their gimmick is Dual Cast and being a melee range caster during their enchanted burst window, compared to summoner’s gimmick being their summon cycles and black mage being the only caster defined by their filler spell as the opposite to monk being the melee defined by their combo rotation.
It’s a mystery.