New World of Warcraft Mobile Game Revealed May 3rd

Activision-Blizzard was purchased by Microsoft earlier in the year. Although there is plenty left to work out in the process, I guess you could say that World of Warcraft is a Microsoft property now. The World of Warcraft MMO is one of the biggest and most profitable games of all time. If Blizzard were able to emulate that level of early WoW success with a mobile game in the modern time, it would be a huge boon to Microsoft Games’ revenue. So while there may be plenty of skepticism regarding anything Blizzard produces lately, there’s also a ton of promise that this could turn out beyond great. It’s a huge question mark.To get more news about Buy WoW WLK Items, you can visit lootwowgold.com official website.

But you wont’ have to wonder for very long as the oft-mentioned but never-seen World of Warcraft mobile game is going to be officially unveiled on May 3rd.

Laptop Mag had the opportunity to sit down with Game Director of World of Warcraft Ion Hazzikostas and pose questions about the MMO titan’s upcoming expansion. After the reveal of WoW 10.0 last week, officially titled Dragonflight, we’re incredibly excited to dive deep into what we can expect out of its massive updates.

Hazzikostas and I discussed time-gated questlines, the evolution of leveling through Chromie Time, the revival of talent trees (and whether Covenant abilities will find their place within them), the changes coming to transmogrification, and how old raids (particularly BfA) will be impacted by the player’s massive increase in power. This article covers Hazzikostas’ comments on the Dracthyr Evoker and some questions we had about its abilities.
Although World of Warcraft is on its ninth expansion, Blizzard Entertainment rarely graces its player base with new classes. Vanilla WoW launched in 2004 with nine playable classes, and over the course of 18 years, that number only increased to 12. Death Knights were introduced in 2008, Monks in 2012 and Demon Hunters in 2016. Following this pattern, 2020 seemed like the year we’d see another class, but Shadowlands didn’t even introduce a new race.

Thankfully, the Dracthyr Evoker came swooping in during Dragonflight’s reveal event (although it was two years later than expected). And for the first time in WoW history, the expansion is introducing a race and class that are exclusive to one another. The Dracthyr race can only play as the Evoker class, and the Evoker class cannot be selected for any other race.

WoW’s community has mixed feelings about this; some believe it’s arbitrarily limiting. Others are not particularly interested in playing a ranged caster class, but have been itching for a Dragon-esque race for a long time. It’s possible we’ll see the Dracthyr and Evoker break mutual exclusivity at some point, but Blizzard Entertainment is seemingly set on this decision for Dragonflight. Perhaps one of the expansion’s later patches (or a future expansion) will break from this restriction.

During Dragonflight’s reveal, a few details were given on the Evoker’s Preservation specialization, with Senior VFX Artist Kali Goss explaining that Green magic “is going to be evocative of the Emerald Dream,” not unlike a Druid’s powers, and then goes on to claim that Bronze magic will be more “timey-wimey.” This vagueness evoked curiosity, so of course, I brought it up with Ion Hazzikostas and questioned exactly what that meant.