
My warrior at level 6 and again at level 51. They grow up so fast!
Part 12 of the Summer of Warcraft series.
Well, it’s been a fun ride, but the leaves are changing and summer is officially over. And so is my romp through Azeroth. A few observations on the game as I leave it for now:
- Massively online gaming has a long way to go to attract a mainstream audience. Warcraft is the most mainstream of the MMOs, and it is has very little content for those who would use the platform as a social experience. I have seen flashes of community during my time in the world, such as happy hours at the inn and a wedding at the Stormwind cathedral, but those moments are few and far between. They should be constant, but they are largely missing in the older areas of the game. Allowing players to customize their appearance, as they can in Second Life, and allowing players to sell their own customized wares (not just those already built into the job systems of the game and not just shirt emblems) would go very far toward doing that. That should be something players should be able to do right from the start, encouraging self-identity and community formation.
- The guilds need help. There needs to be a systematic way for new players to find and easily apply to guilds IN GAME. The short-lived New Horizons guild of which I am still a member helped a lot of new players get a foothold in the game early on, but they found me. I never would have known how to find them until much later. And much of the guild management tasks handled by guilds through their own web sites and databases should be built right into the game itself. Guild leaders should not have to work a second full time job just to organize instance runs and distribute loot.
- Many of my previous gripes are being addressed in the upcoming Cataclysm expansion, including a complete overhaul of the old continents that encourage older players to come back and explore or, better yet, re-roll a character and join the noobs in progressing through the game. I also like that Blizzard is going to attempt to give the player permanent results for completed quests, giving the player a sense that he or she is leaving a mark on the world as the story progresses.
- When you install the Cartographer plugin, you discover very quickly that Azeroth is really pretty small. The entire area of the older continents could fit into the county I live in with plenty of room to spare. In real life, the continents would be the size of a large town.





Part 7 of the 
