Still using the rig you designed for me on the tech forums. <3
The horde starting area has never moved.
Moving it now won’t save you from being bad.
You might want to work on your forum reading skills. There are enough. Read posts on Tuesday and Wednesday after the patches.
The alliance playerd are just bad. At this point even with a 3 to 5 min headstart they would still not win.
Because they are THAT bad.
This version of AV, existed for maybe 2 months in vanilla. I love how people ignore this fact when bringing up the “Alliance winrate”.
Based on what I saw, for most of AV’s history in vanilla, the queues were single realm so the faction win/loss rate depended on faction balance/imbalance and the raiding community. If your realm had more Alliance raiding guilds, the access to better gear for more people usually meant more Alliance wins. Same for Horde.
Only when the queues went to battlegroups that the win/loss rates became slightly more homogenized as the pool size grew. But they weren’t the same because Alliance/Horde players from pvp realms could swing the tide.
Wrong. Ally premades happened constantly and I was IN them on detheroc. A highly horde dominant server back in the day where sodapoppin and venruki played. Look it up or admit you are a troll
Duel me bro!
You’re 60 so no.
More like 5, but sure, go on with your bunk argument.
Crossrealm BGs ALSO only existed for the same time…
and those were the win rates Blizzard posted. They never, AFAIK, posted win/loss rates per faction when it was limited to server-only BGs.
So, the published win-rates are ONLY for the time during Vanilla when Xrealm, 1.12-AV existed.
And Alliance won over 60% of the games.
So, have fun with that crow. Im sure itll taste great.
Cross realm was out for only about 2 months before tbc, which is what I mean by “this version”.
Did you just learn about people “eating crow”, and you just had to try it out? I have seen a lot of people use that phrase lately.
Kagthul is correct about how long battlegroup queues were available in vanilla. 1.12 dropped in August 2006. BC launched January 2007. Using the exact dates, Excel says 147 days apart. If 30 days per month, 4.9 months is ~5 months.