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Reader Comments (5)

Posted: Nov 10th 2008 11:21AM (Unverified) said

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Yes. I'll be "attending" a midnight release party at a local Gamestop. By that I mean, buying the game and getting out of there so I can go home and install/play it.

Why does every WoW-related post here lately have to have conspiracy theory comments about how biased "the media" is towards WoW. Massively has done a great job of balance. Look at it this way - it's a huge MMO news story that the biggest blockbuster game is a few days from an expansion. I'm sure Massively gets a huge influx of readers during these times when they do WoW related stories.

They're not journalists, they're simply bloggers. Get off their case about WoW...it's a large reason why Massively is even here in the first place. I doubt the MMO industry would be nearly what it is today without WoW.
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Posted: Nov 10th 2008 2:20PM wjowski said

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Because WoW's the big kid on the block. It was the same way when EQ was on top of the heap. It's gameplay was seen as 'simplistic' and 'stupid', everyone complained about it being a 'boring grind', and any website that showed it any publicity at all was immediately branded as being in the tank for Verant/SOE.
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Posted: Nov 10th 2008 6:40PM Abriael said

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And it probably would be better. Without so many whiny kids that see social interaction in MMOs as a chore, or that cry endlessly if they don't receive instant gratification at every step they make.

In the internet-fed world of nowadays there isn't much difference between being journalists and being bloggers (besides the fact that a blogger most of the times isn't paid). You still influence people's tastes and purchases, depending on the number of your readers and how much of your opinions you pour in your articles, so in the end a blogger is a marketing tool as much as a journalist is.

Maybe they balanced the number of articles, but the tone definatyely isn't balanced. Everything about wotlk is music and roses, while I saw them actually make an effort to try hard and find flaws in other games to point out. This without to mention the laughable TWO articles on the percentage of people going back to wow. Not one, but two.

And honestly, I'm not sure what's huge about what kind of shipping people chose to receive WOTLK.
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Posted: Nov 10th 2008 8:31PM wjowski said

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Your view is distorted and incorrect.
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Posted: Nov 11th 2008 9:00AM (Unverified) said

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"Without so many whiny kids that see social interaction in MMOs as a chore, or that cry endlessly if they don't receive instant gratification at every step they make."

I hate to say it, but it's been like this since Everquest. It's almost a time-honored tradition to whine when you don't get your way in an MMO.

The tone is what it is. Go read the WoW forums and you'll complaints about class balance...like every other game. But other than that, WoW is in a pretty rosy spot: new, highly anticipated xpac coming in a couple days; more players than ever; a great big wad of cash coming its way.

Now, go read the WAR forums. Complaints about empty RvR, bored with scenarios, people with dying guilds (sounds like AoC forums a month after launch). I don't think that everything is rosy at WAR, but the outlook is certainly much better than AoC.

So, you have a few choices as a blogger. Either: write stories that reflect the mood of the game and its players; write everything with rose-colored glasses; or write every story with a doom-and-gloom apocalyptic bent. What you get here is a reflection of the mood of the games players.

Eve articles are technical and full of depth. WoW's are fluffly and slightly shallow, WAR's are focused on PvP, LotRO's are feature-rich to let more people know the basics of that wonderful game.

I've gone on too long, so I'll leave it at that.
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