At the first week of Classic WoW, the realm I was playing (Kirtonos) on was full, active, there were tons of Alliance and Horde and everything was cool, I came back 2 months ago due to college and now the horde outnumber us 1:4 and it is now nearly impossible to participate low level dungeons (I’m level 30) because there’s hardly any Alliance left…
I rerolled off Kirtonos for this reason. Im leveling a new toon untill either bgs or paid transfers come out. I was 60 when I made this choice with some good gear, so I would definitely recommend going ahead and leaving that terrible server while you are lower level. It has made the game fun again for me.
At level 30, I’d just reroll. If you want pvp server go Deviate Delight or Heartseeker for Alliance. No point in being the undersize faction when bgs are going to be cross realm.
Yeah right, I cant even level Alliance on this server because of the constant gank squads. Horde has taken over this server and its nearly impossible to do ANYTHING without getting ganked. Alliance are leaving in waves, its super toxic.
I’ve a nelf priest I’m playing on Netherwind. Server seems to be pretty balanced! It’s Medium population, so you don’t have to worry about queue times or much lag at all. Ther’es plenty of Alliance to party with, and Horde to pew at.
Kromkrush is imbalanced at 67:33 according to ironforge.pro. I transferred off this server because there were not many alliance there. The imbalance is real.
Honestly, it’s 58:42 split. It’s bad, but not dead on the alliance side, and nowhere near the worst (75/25 on herod & heartseeker).
In the past 7 days there were 2000+ max level alliance characters seen on kirtonos, almost twice as many as vanilla servers.
At level 30 you have gnomer or SM GY to run–gnomer sucks and you’ll have access to 3-4 dungeons in a few levels for SM instead of 1 making it way easier to find groups.
Complete and utter bs about kromcrush balance. Can’t hardly do anything out in the open world. I know what ironforge.pro says but it cannot possibly be accurate.