Yes, we sounds like insane cos we want wow classic, ppl telling this to us few years. Dunno whats wrong with wow classic.
You sound insane because you guys hear a 58 boost, and see a fully stocked out cash shop with every gear piece, mount, pet and anything else available you can imagine.
Have you seen retail…?
Waste of time arguing with that one, she’s become one of the most prolific pay-to-win evangelists on these entire boards, tirelessly defending the boost on every thread, day and night. Makes you wonder if there’s a vested interest.
“Yuh but Lorran u iz doin teh same ting aginst teh boozt!!111”
I have something to lose, the pro-boosters do not.
Did Blizztivision announce they would purposely make the same mistakes that killed the retail version? Re-launch fan favorite games to PURPOSELY ruin them again.
Mhm
yeah, they announced the boost
If you look at the state of retail and the timeline of wow classic then all of you anti boosters know it’s too late to argue.
Blizztivision is past the point of redemption.
Whatever they say, goes.
All of your efforts trying to stop this boost are meaningless, futile.
If blizz wants the boost, then we’ll have a boost. If blizz wants wow tokens, then we’ll have wow tokens.
If blizz wants to destroy their game again, then that is exactly what they will do.
And nothing you, Lorran, or parrydodger, or anybody else can do about it.
That is the sad reality. So stop fighting. Just spread wide and take it like I’ve been taking it for a while.
I’ve tried rebelling and they gave my account multiple bans, 1 off permanent.
You cannot change the opinion of a company this money hungry. Unless you start flashing cash and pay them bribes. I’m sorry but this is Blizzard now.
Edit: just wanted to post this before my permanent ban, ciao.
but it’s because you push back against blizzard’s microtransactions right?
This is the most of a response you’ll be getting from me.
95% of my posts are trying to get a rise out of ppl btw so quote all you want. I can’t even remember what I wrote 3 posts ago.
All your argument nuggets you keep posting make sense though.
It doesn’t affect you, don’t use it, etc
Until it does
But that is not as soon as it launches, that’s whenever daddy blizztivision decides it time to expand.
Ugh, that’s the wrong comparison. You see, it’s not the price tag that we need to discuss when buying a Ferrari. Let me explain why. Nobody goes to a Ferrari dealership to buy a car with the Honda price. But everyone wants to buy a car with the latest advances and new tech because they want their car to keep up with the modern life.
So if you want to compare buying a luxury car with playing a game, yes I also want the game to adapt to my needs if I’m going to make the investment.
Well good thing Blizzard is a business and has a little wider views than you.
Since you are introducing entirely new variables to the equation that I personally have absolutely no idea what they have to do with anything or what they are meant to represent and frankly are making me super confused, I’m gonna go ahead and say you misunderstood what I was saying.
The Ferrari is meant to represent something desirable. The money to buy the car with is a resource, limited in quantity, while the Honda is a cheaper alternative.
Now substitute Ferrari with Classic TBC, money with time, and Honda with Retail.
You want Classic TBC (Ferrari), but don’t have the time to spend leveling (money) to get it, so you are asking for a boost (lower price of the Ferrari) so that you could play it (buy one), instead of settling for Retail (Honda) that you can afford.
I actually think it’s a pretty neat comparison, because to make a Ferrari cheaper, you’d have to resort to using worse materials, cheaper parts, and generally cut corners to the point where the end result would neither look, nor handle like a Ferrari, so you’d basically have a glorified Honda. All of which doubles as nice metaphor for continually introducing changes to TBC Classic that would eventually make it indistinguishable from Retail.
Just like you don’t deserve a Ferrari if you don’t have the money or are unwilling to spend that much, you don’t deserve to play Classic TBC at level 70 if you don’t have the time to or are unwilling to spend it leveling.
Also you don’t need a Ferrari to keep up with the modern life, a Honda will do that job perfectly well since a Ferrari isn’t particularly useful. I may have no idea what you meant to say with that sentence, but I feel like that was an important point to make.
I’m not sure if I would necessarily call selling the soul of one’s game because of their sheer greed for more money as having “wider views”.
Which soul? It’s called supply and demand. Sorry, I’m not going to keep debating on the Ferrari thing, it’s an overdramatic comparison anyway. You’re getting the same product, no changes to the game. It’s just a boost that, surprise, the Classic community already abuses. This is a screenshot I just took randomly.
Yes. And that demand is entirely met by players who are supplying. There is absolutely no need for God’s intervention.
There is a massive difference between a player-offered boost for gold and Blizzard-offered paid service for money.
There isn’t. It’s only a pathological fear of accepting it and making it available for players that aren’t currently playing Classic. And the forum warriors are clearly a minority here.
You wanted to play Classic, but you didn’t want to level to 60. You were unwilling to pay for boost from players, but are all too happy to jump on the Blizzard money boost. Since there isn’t a difference, why did you opt-out of using one while looking forward of taking advantage of the other? Since there isn’t a difference, why don’t you buy a level 60 boost right now? You’ll even get 2 extra levels out of it.
I’m not going to pay some gold seller just so I can give them the gold back in level boosting. That’s ridiculous.
If after all these discussions about the boost, you honestly believe that a service offered by players and a monetary transaction using real-life money are the same, then I’m sorry to tell you that you are pretty simple-minded.
Okay, a service offered by “players” who can be very well bots and gold sellers or a service offered by Blizzard, I’ll stick to being “simple minded”. Now, excuse me guys, I need to return to studying. Wish you all a lovely evening.
Didn’t you just say that there wasn’t a difference?
If there is a difference, it might be that buying from Blizzard is better than supporting the bot community. That’s the only difference I see here. I really gtg now guys, was a great chat, have a nice evening.