Allows the mouse to hover over windows and they instantly become a active window. Spamming key presses or scroll wheel as you move along at a high rate over your windows can almost instantly cast spells or macros in a cast sequence.
Method #2: Activate Window by Hovering Over with Mouse in Windows
Open the Control Panel, click Ease of Access Center > Make the Mouse Easier to Use > Enable Activate a window by hovering over it with the mouse
This method keeps your main WoW1 window as a active focus while spamming AoEs or instant cast with use of macros bound to mwheelup or down.
Currently I’m using the first method but I did enjoy spamming Arcane Explosion with my scroll wheel.
I have 1/8 of his set up basically with 1/3 of the computing power. I have a decent rig that was built within the last few years but I would love to have a setup like that!
he won’t suffer the least bit of inconvenience whatsoever. the total nonexistence of comprehension of computers, the complete and utter tech illiteracy of thousands of idiots on these forums never ceases to amaze me.
it’s the year twenty gods-cursed twenty, and most of you coudnl’t navigate a restaurant menu if it weren’t for pictures. he’s using virtual machines and hypervisor or simulated mechanical input management. there’s nothing for blizzard’s anti-botting software to detect, at all.
the only people who’s joy is affected are the idiots who think the new ruling affects multiboxers at all. if you’re “multiboxing” simply by running multiple instances of the game client on one machine, you’re just silly. a virtual machine environment for each instance of the wow client completely supercedes any ability blizzard has to detect or enforce any kind of botting or control input duplication software rules, because all of that happens on the host machine layer and not within the actual virtual machines that are running the game clients
I was multiboxing on Classic for fun to try it out, Doing a 4 Warlock/Priest Group, But before that I was Dual Boxing a Hunter/Paladin Duo to 60 using a Lap Top and Stream Deck to control the character, I’d probably just do that from now on if I was going to continue to do it.
Actually its pretty easy…
All the systems are still part of the same network.
Therefore they all share an IP address, unless you want to get a business account and assign a different address to each VM…
Also, inputs sent to each VM happen simultaniousely. Blizzard tracks and records input, including the rate at which they are sent. (Via the packet rate from each client.)
So, if you see 5 accounts and they are all together and taking the same exact actions, they probably will ban you.
Mind you, I am COMPLETELY AGAINST the banning of multiboxers.