Monday, February 25, 2013

Why do you play what you play?


 
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Life is complicated. There's no simple answers to most of our problems, and even if you think there are, there are lots of people who disagree with you. Life is fraught with tension, with situations that require tact and even diplomacy to navigate.

This is one of the reasons I enjoy playing warriors. I enjoy their straightforward approach to problem solving. In the real world, my troubles are usually things that simply can't be dealt with via the application of a gigantic axe to their heads (my bills just refuse to die no matter how much I try and stab them) but I face no such difficulty in World of Warcraft. To me, the game is escapism, a couple of hours in a world where the stakes are larger than life, but the solutions are much more primal and basic. Sometimes you just want to yell Hulk smash. sell GW2 items

My death knight gets played for a slightly different reason, but it's still based on the idea of escapism. In this case, it's escapism from my own moral code. In the world at large, while I'm somewhat irascible and have been called blunt on occasion (my wife often comments at these moments that it's a good thing I never decided to be a grief counselor) I tend to be reasonably kind-hearted. But my death knight has plagued towns, unleashed armies of corpses to do his bidding, and is in general just a walking epidemic. He's actively cruel and malevolent, and I enjoy playing him for the pure, cathartic release of letting the id out to play for a while. I usually get sick of him in about a week, while I can play the warrior indefinitely, possibly because the well I'm draining to play the DK is a lot less infinite, but I come back when it refills.


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There are of course as many reasons to play World of Warcraft as there are people playing it, and as many reasons to make the choice of race and class and faction. But what interests me is what keeps us going with these choices. I chose to play a draenei shaman because that was the only option for an Alliance shaman at the time, but I kept him draenei instead of dwarf or pandaren because I enjoy the lore of the draenei, and because I think dwarves look like their faces were caught in an industrial sock stretcher. I have an idea in my head of how my shaman acts, and it wouldn't work for any other race but draenei.

Similarly I've tried to play other Horde races, but I always come back to tauren. I just can't stay away from them. I've played orc, forsaken, troll, pandaren and blood elf. I always end up going back to the minotaurs, I just like them a lot more. I like their ponderous way of running, the way plate looks on them, the way they don't fit through doors. I like how their horns replace the horns on Tier 10. (Yes, that's seriously a consideration for me.) With transmogrification such a big part of the game for me, I really love how stuff looks with my tauren, and I always come back to it. sell Guild Wars 2 gold

So just in myself, I find aesthetic reasons, game play reasons (I play worgen for both, really, I dig their character model but I also love that crit racial) and even lore reasons (every draenei I play is for lore reasons) for what I play. I play some characters for pure escapism, and others for catharsis, and yet others (my paladins) to try and fight my knee-jerk loathing for the class. Seriously, I have yet to enjoy it, but I keep trying to and that's worth something.


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Sunday, February 17, 2013

‘Diablo III’ Sales Top 12 Million Worldwide




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Considering that Diablo III was one of the most anticipated titles of this generation, it came as no surprise in November when we heard that the game’s sales had already crossed the 10 million mark – and it’s no surprise again that it has since climbed.

In Activision Blizzard’s recent financial report to investors, the company revealed that sales of Diablo III topped 12 million worldwide by the end of 2012. Naturally, Blizzard doesn't plan to let any of that success go to waste.

“The launch of the game back in May had a tremendous impact on Blizzard and our community,” Blizzard sovereign Mike Morhaime told investors last night. “Diablo 3 broke PC games sales records, and as of the end of the year has sold more than 12 million copies worldwide.”

Morhaime went on to promise that Blizzard intends to continue to support Diablo III and its community “aggressively.” Indeed, Blizzard is continuing to roll out patches for Diablo III – patch 1.07, which adds in brawling (as it’s now called), is expected out soon. buy diablo gold

There’s also the matter of an expansion.
In news that isn't quite so good for Blizzard, the report revealed that World of Warcraft: Mists of Pandaria's subscriber count is now 9.6 million according to internal estimates. That’s down roughly 400,000 from last count.

Overall, Activision Blizzard had a strong 2012 – the company’s best yet, Activision Blizzard CEO Bobby Kotick claims.

“We are very pleased to report that Activision Blizzard delivered the best performance in its history,” Kotick said. “With better-than expected net revenues, record operating margins and record earnings, and over $1.3 billion in operating cash flow, we continue to set the industry success bar.”
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