Is there any way to obtain the Warlord’s Deathcycle? I want to get it for my wife.
You meant the Warlord’s Deathwheel? It’s not possible to get it at this moment, you had a limited timeframe back then to logon and receive it as a promotional item.
It’s possible it could return through the Trading Post, but it has legal problems due prize awarding rules so it may be more complicated.
I’m really hoping that in 2024 when the mount turns 10 that some statute of limitations runs out and Blizzard can give this mount to the Horde that missed out on it.
Atm it feels more like the Alliance won instead.
?
If you are talking about the Alliance buying the mount, it’s locked behind the “license” that granted the Deathwheel. If you don’t have the Deathwheel you can’t buy the Alliance mount.
I think were missing the point they want it brought back they have 2 options post in general or use ingame suugestion feature.
100% false. Anyone can buy it.
Really? I thought it was tied to qualifying for the Deathwheel. It was originally.
I’m not seeing this said any where.
It’s not, I have the alliance version and I didn’t even play WoW then, I didn’t start until right before BFA launched. You just have to buy it.
I’ll have to remember to buy it when I have time on my EU account.
What legal issues?
One of the reasons I read about was something about the fact that it was a “prize” so that restricted Blizzard from letting a vendor sell it in-game. Another reason suggested it was a copyright issue with American Choppers. No actual confirmation that either reason was the cause.
It wouldn’t be a copyright issue or they would not be able to in-game sell the Alliance bike since they were both done by Paul Tuttle, Jr. Blizzard has the rights to use them in the game. The fact that the Horde version was a prize is the most likely reason.
I agree. There was something about a law in California about prizes mentioned in what I was reading.
Not necessarily;
A generic copyright can be over ridden by the terms of a specific contract negotiated between the principals. Other concerned parties have no “rights” to be informed regarding the details of an agreement between the contracting parties