Third playable class in Diablo 3 is the “wizard”. Gameplay movie looked awesome.
The Wizard page on the official Diablo III site is now up here, and includes gameplay movies. Disitegrate and Slow Time are awesome.
Third playable class in Diablo 3 is the “wizard”. Gameplay movie looked awesome.
The Wizard page on the official Diablo III site is now up here, and includes gameplay movies. Disitegrate and Slow Time are awesome.
We found three extra tickets and we’re watching the opening ceremonies
Well, we finally made it. We’re on scene at Blizzcon and looking forward to heading in first thing in the morning. I have a feeling the there won’t be anything as exciting as the WotLK announcement last time, but we could get lucky
More soon!
So Pwnshop is up to level 71. Blizzard has said they’re making adjustments in the 60-70 leveling speed and it definitely shows. Pwnshop went from level 55-70 in day 22 hours played, by the end averaging about 3 hours a level. The only problem is, then you hit the brick wall. Getting from 70 to 71 took 9.5 hours of /played time, so it’s a pretty sudden transition. I’m sure it’s all still being adjusted, but it sure feels weird to have your leveling time triple in just one level.
Well I finally did it. Pwnshop hit level 68 on the Beta server last weekend and I’ve been off playing in Northrend ever since. In an earlier post I mentioned I bought a new 1TB external drive so I could make some more interesting movies for everyone, so I’ve just been letting the recordings run while I play. I finished up this compilation and got it uploaded to YouTube late last night, and I’m super excited to share it with everyone. As usual, don’t forget to watch it in high quality mode (the link right below the view count when you click through to YouTube).
One of the coolest new Death Knight abilities is “Path of Frost”. This allows you to walk, run, and ride mounted on bodies of water similar to a Shaman’s “Water Walking” ability (except for the mounted part!). The absolute best part is it allows you to mount in the middle of a body of water… just hit Path of Frost, jump to stand up on the water, and mount up! I uploaded a quick video to YouTube to check out, just be sure to watch it in High Quality Mode…
In the wake of the ticket sales snafu for Blizzcon, there are a few gems out there on the discussion boards. Mixt from the Arthas Realm posted what I think is the funniest and most succinct comment on the subject, summarized here:
My name is Doctor Sad Panda.
I am a reject living in New York City.
I am broadcasting my sadness on all AM frequencies.
I will be checking the Blizzcon site everyday at midday, when the sun is highest in the sky.
If my Blizzcon ticket is out there — if any Blizzcon ticket is out there — I can provide money, I can provide my presence there.
If theres any rejects out there– Anybody –please, you are not alone.
Earlier today when I set my son up to play WotLK there was no new patch, but when I logged in tonight to test a new 1TB external drive I bought to make some additional movies, I was greeted by an enormous 668MB patch (build 8820). No official patch notes yet, but I’ll keep you posted.
I had to actually cool off a bit before I could write this. WoW Insider does an excellent job of describing the complete and utter debacle that will be known forever as Blizzcon ’08 Ticket Sales. Now that I’m a little more level headed, I figured I’d post an open letter to Mike Morhaime (president of Blizzard entertainment) describing why I am so frustrated with this situation, so here goes.
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Mike,
I have attended both previous Blizzcon’s, and had an excellent time at each event. In both cases, not only did I attend, but my son and my father attended as well. We have all played together for a long time (May 2005 for me), and I am fairly certain that during the first event, we were one of very few groups representing three generations of WoW players. I think this is a great game, and a great community; so much so that I went out of my way to make sure that when I hit level 60 on my first character, it happened sitting at the test stations at the first ever Blizzcon.
Unfortunately this year will be far different. On August 11th, I was primed and ready to buy tickets for what was to be our third Blizzcon in a row. I woke up excited, but it quickly turned to frustration as I determined the website was completely unusable; my existing Blizzard account wasn’t being recognized, I couldn’t create a new one, and I didn’t seem to be able to make it through the purchase process anyway. Due to other commitments I was not able to sit and wait for the situation with the Blizzard store to fix itself, although my father was.
The one thing I haven’t mentioned at this point is that my father has Parkinson’s disease. This causes most everything to be a little more difficult for him, and certainly makes it much more difficult to race through the process of filling in several forms before getting a confirmed ticket order. On two occasions on August 12th, my dad was able to put the Blizzcon tickets into his shopping cart in the Blizzard store, and proceeded to fill in the forms as fast as he possibly could. In both cases, by the time he reached the final confirmation screen, he received the message that the tickets has already been sold out. This brings me to my main complaint about the process used to sell tickets for this event. Unlike sites like TicketMaster, which reserve the tickets in your shopping cart for a set amount of time before they are released back into the pool, the purchasing process for this Blizzcon was left up to luck, and those that could sail through the myriad screens the quickest. Those with disabilities that made this difficult were at a severe disadvantage with this entire process.
In reality, I’m willing to accept that fact that even if the process had happened this year as I described above, maybe I’d still be sitting here without tickets. At least in that case, we’d know it was because we got to the website a little too late, and were unable to add the tickets to our cart before they were sold out, instead of my dad wondering what would have happened if he could have been a little bit faster. Maybe I’m just being overprotective of him, but it really bothers me to think that on some level he’s thinking this is his fault, and that he did something wrong.
Your recent post to the main World of Warcraft site was a good step in the right direction of restoring the communication with your user base, but I’d ask that future Blizzcon’s take a few lesson’s learned into account:
I won’t rehash all the details here since WoW Insider has a detailed and hilarious post on the issues we’ve all been experiencing, but it’s 9:03PM on August 11th and I’m still no closer to securing my Blizzcon ’08 tickets. I’m headed to bed to get some rest for an unfortunately full week of work, but I’ll be back online in the morning trying to secure my spot in Anaheim latter this year…
Considering I’ve made the first two Blizzcons so far, the thought of potentially missing out on this one is pretty disappointing…