Filed under: RPGs
The best of WoW.com: June 23-30, 2009

See that shocked look on Thrall's face above? That guy's the leader of the Horde, and he just read (on WoW.com, of course) that for the first time, players of World of Warcraft will be able to switch their factions -- players will be able to leave his Horde, and those dirty Alliance might come to his side. No wonder he's so shocked. That story and more in this week's most popular posts from Joystiq's Azeroth-obsessed sister site.
News
- Faction changes coming to World of Warcraft
Horde can be Alliance, Alliance can be Horde, cats and dogs sleeping together! It's lunacy! - Patch 3.2 PTR unveils Tier 9 sets
The next level of epic armor is coming to the game in the latest content patch... - Patch 3.2 PTR Tier 9 set names
...And it's got a great set of lore names to go with along with it. - Patch 3.2 upcoming Engineering changes
Big changes for one of the game's most popular professions. - Exodus punished for exploiting Yogg-Saron encounter
After a guild accomplishes a world-first achievement kill, Blizzard determines they didn't quite follow the rules.
Features
- Patch 3.2 PTR: Tauren Druid conversation may reveal lore and expansion secrets
A pair of Druids chatting in the new content patch might hint at the future of the game. - The OverAchiever: Guide to Midsummer Fire Festival achievements
Azeroth is heating up with the Fire Festival -- here's how to get everything done this week. - Arcane Brilliance: More questions than answers
Our Mage columnist didn't get all his questions answered in Blizzard's recent Q&A article about the class. - Patch 3.2 PTR: New heirloom items gallery
A pictoral look at some new heirloom items headed to the game. - WoW Casually: What Patch 3.2 means for casuals
Oh, you don't raid five times a week? Patch 3.2 has something for you as well.
The best of WoW.com: June 16-23, 2009

News
- Patch 3.2 PTR patch notes
Here's the breakdown on what'll be in the Public Test Realm very soon. - Crusaders' Coliseum details released
Blizzard gives out deets on what we'll see in the next big instance added to the game. - Patch 3.2 changes to the tiered Emblem system
3.2 will bring both new sets of gear tokens to collect, as well as some tweaks and updates to old ones. - New Shaman totem interface revealed
Shamans will have new ways to both watch and lay down their totems. - Class Q&A: Mage
Blizzard answers questions on "the iconic caster" class.
Features
- WoW.com's Guide to Patch 3.2
Everything you need to know about the upcoming content patch, and then some. - The OverAchiever: Guide to Midsummer Fire Festival Achievements
The Fire Festival is back, and so's our guide to get the most out of it. - Insider Trader: Patch 3.2 profession change analysis
What's new with professions? Read this column and find out. - The Queue: Patch 3.2 and beyond the infinite
Our readers ask questions every day, and we offer up answers just as often. - Guildwatch: We're not even in his guild
Another week brings another look at all of the guild drama, downed, and recruiting news from around the realms.
Turbine arrives at E3 with brand new CFO

MMO maker Turbine started off E3 not with a new game announcement, but a new staff member. They've hired on M. Beau Paradowski, who's worked in the past for Clearwire Technologies and Optasite, as their brand new Chief Financial Officer. As CFO, he'll be in charge of both overseeing worldwide financial operations as well as scouting ahead for any hidden orc raider camps.
Massively has more, and says that Turbine will depend on Paradowski's financial knowledge to help guide their three big MMO titles, Lord of the Rings Online, Dungeons and Dragons Online, and Asheron's Call. Paradowski says in a press release that, "I'm thrilled to join and help this talented team take Turbine to the next level." And by "next level," we assume he means one floor deeper into the dreaded Mines of Moria. You need as many executives as you can get down there.
Massively has more, and says that Turbine will depend on Paradowski's financial knowledge to help guide their three big MMO titles, Lord of the Rings Online, Dungeons and Dragons Online, and Asheron's Call. Paradowski says in a press release that, "I'm thrilled to join and help this talented team take Turbine to the next level." And by "next level," we assume he means one floor deeper into the dreaded Mines of Moria. You need as many executives as you can get down there.
The best of WoW Insider: May 12-19, 2009

The image above is by a WoW Insider reader named Raymond Liang -- he just won our fan art contest recently, and you can see his work and all of the other winners' over on our site right now. Just like the intrepid Troll and Blood Elf in the picture above, we're dedicated to bringing you the latest news from the World of Warcraft, even with a giant robot coming up behind us. Here are our most popular stories of the past week.
News
- BlizzCon ticket status
BlizzCon ticket sales took place last Saturday, and things sold out in about 30 minutes. Here's the breakdown. - Project 62*80: 62 level 80s by Christmas
A World of Warcraft player wants to create 62, yes 62, level 80s by December 25th. - Boom goes the servers
Server issues bring the game down on a Friday night. - Game Fuel pets for all. Sort of.
Mountain Dew meets World of Warcraft in the form of a noncombat pet. - Ensidia gets 10-man Algathon world first
And yet again, the game has been beaten.
- The Queue: Going to the movies
You have questions, and we endeavor to answer them for you. - From our readers: Is my Ulduar-clearing guild holding me back?
Is it possible to be in a guild that's too good? - WoW Rookie: Filter out the @#*(!
How to make sure you only see what you want. - Ready Check: Casual meets hardcore
What's the real difference between casual and hardcore players? - Forum Post of the Day: Be disciplined about healing meters
Healing meters definitely aren't everything when it comes to raiding performance.
The best of WoW Insider: April 21-28, 2009

News
- Val'anyr stats discovered
A new legendary mace has been discovered in the game's new Ulduar instance. - WoW Insider exclusive: PopCap releases Peggle for WoW
Insert joke here about one addictive substance inside another. - Video teases iPhone WoW client
Blizzard will likely never let it happen, but a third party says they've gotten WoW running on the iPhone. - Today's in-game fixes
Two weeks later, Blizzard is still fixing a few issues from patch 3.1. - The OverAchiever: Guide to Noblegarden Achievements
Albeit a little late, Blizzard is finally celebrating their version of Easter on the live realms.
Features
- Varian Wrynn is right
The Alliance's latest leader really, really hates the Horde. And here's why he should. - The Queue: Raid goes up, boss goes down
A little Queue and A about... whatever you want to know. - Loot, rationality and The Sunwell Effect
A great essay about what drives us to do what we do in-game, and how Blizzard can use that. - Lichborne: A Patch 3.1 talent build cookie platter for Death Knights
So you're a DK and you have no idea what talent build to choose after 3.1. If you're OK with a cookie cutter build, boy do we have a batch for you. - Eggsellent Guidance: 30 Noblegarden eggs in 15 minutes
The easiest and quickest way to collect some yolks for the latest holiday achievement.
The best of WoW Insider: March 10-17, 2009

Things are hopping (as always) in World of Warcraft -- we're still waiting for an impending content patch, and the Public Test Realm (or the PTR, as we like to call it) is thriving with huge patch 3.1 changes and game updates. Even if you're not interested in World of Warcraft, the new patch is worth a look over at WoW Insider: our good friends at Blizzard are revolutionizing massively multiplayer gaming with every change they announce.
News
- WoW Insider's Guide to Patch 3.1
Everything you need to know about the upcoming patch and then some. If you only click on one WoW-related link today, make this it. - New mounts for Horde fishers in 3.1
To re-balance the mount outage, Horde will be able to fish up a new mount soon. - Full Tier 8 armor sets beginning to emerge
All of the shinies we'll soon be pining for in the game. - Ulduar achievements unveiled
Check out what Blizzard has in store for all of the new raid's hard modes. - Background downloader active for patch 3.1
It begins. Some parts of the new patch are ready for primetime.
Final Fantasy IV: The After Years coming to Wii
It seems that Nintendo's recently discovered trademark for "The After Years" was, in fact, referencing a Wii port of the cell-phone based follow-up to the SNES role-playing classic Final Fantasy IV. An ESRB rating for the sequel confirms that the game will be hitting North American Wiis, though a time frame for its release, or even its release format (retail? WiiWare?) has yet to be revealed. The ESRB stamped the title with an E rating, as it doesn't classify the frequent usage of the word "spoony" as inappropriate for adolescent ears.
Final Fantasy IV: The After Years, which was released in an episodic fashion on a number of Japanese mobile platforms last year, follows the exploits of Ceodore (the progeny of FFIV protagonists Cecil and Rosa) nearly 17 years after the events of the original game. It'll also feature appearances from other major characters from the SNES title -- well, the ones who survived, anyway. Those who played the title will recall that FFIV was somewhat Hamlet-esque in its final body count.
Final Fantasy IV: The After Years, which was released in an episodic fashion on a number of Japanese mobile platforms last year, follows the exploits of Ceodore (the progeny of FFIV protagonists Cecil and Rosa) nearly 17 years after the events of the original game. It'll also feature appearances from other major characters from the SNES title -- well, the ones who survived, anyway. Those who played the title will recall that FFIV was somewhat Hamlet-esque in its final body count.
Bethesda ranks Oblivion DLC, Horse Armor still selling
Considering that the term "Horse Armor" has become a common idiom when referring to unnecessary, costly DLC, we find it somewhat surprising that people are still purchasing Oblivion's equestrian plate mail. However, a recent Bethesda Blog post which ranked Oblivion's available add-ons by their total sales figures claimed, "even Horse Armor continues to sell daily." While pondering the type of folks who would drop two-and-a-half American dollars to trick out their virtual ponies, check out how the rest of the DLC measured up:
- Wizard's Tower
- Thieves Den
- Mehrunes Razor
- Spell Tomes
- Vile Lair
- The Orrery
- Knights of the Nine
- Shivering Isles
- Horse Armor
- Fighter's Stronghold
Final Fantasy XIII countdown ends, new trailer released
The hype machine for the game is just beginning, as this is but the first of many countdowns to come in the future. However, will Final Fantasy loyalists be able to handle the long wait to 2010?
Gallery: Final Fantasy XIII
Lionhead: We're not working on Fable 2 PC
While we're certain the point-and-click enthusiasts among us would like to get their paws on Joystiq's favorite game of 2008, Fable 2, it looks like they'll be waiting for a while longer -- on a Lionhead forum post asking whether or not the Albionic caper would be making its way to computers, community manager Woody swiftly answered, "We're not working on a PC version of Fable 2." As far as we can tell, no winks, nods or suggestive elbow nudges were included in the dispatch.
Woody's statement seems contrary to a report which made the rounds late last week -- a report which claimed that a Lionhead rep confirmed that a PC version of Fable 2 was "likely imminent". Why the discrepancy? We contacted Lionhead's senior community manager, Sam Van Tilburgh, who explained that the quote embedded in said report wasn't legit. Get comfortable, WASDers -- it's looking like Molyneux's hero sim won't be hitting your platform of choice in the near future.
[Via VideoGamer]
Woody's statement seems contrary to a report which made the rounds late last week -- a report which claimed that a Lionhead rep confirmed that a PC version of Fable 2 was "likely imminent". Why the discrepancy? We contacted Lionhead's senior community manager, Sam Van Tilburgh, who explained that the quote embedded in said report wasn't legit. Get comfortable, WASDers -- it's looking like Molyneux's hero sim won't be hitting your platform of choice in the near future.
[Via VideoGamer]
Fallout 3's Operation Anchorage available now
Fallout 3's Operation Anchorage DLC is now available to scav from the Xbox Live Marketplace for 800
($10, 50 caps or 100 pieces of scrap metal). The VR mission takes place in the land of Palin, as a force attempts to liberate Anchorage from the Chinese. Once downloaded, keep an eye out for the "Outcast Distress Signal" to find the new content.
If you're sitting on the fence about the purchase, bear in mind that we'll have a review available later this week. And don't forget, the next couple of months will feature two more DLC packs for the post-apocalyptic adventure. The big change arrives in March with Broken Steel, which will increase the game's level cap and get rid of that pesky (abrupt?) ending.
($10, 50 caps or 100 pieces of scrap metal). The VR mission takes place in the land of Palin, as a force attempts to liberate Anchorage from the Chinese. Once downloaded, keep an eye out for the "Outcast Distress Signal" to find the new content.If you're sitting on the fence about the purchase, bear in mind that we'll have a review available later this week. And don't forget, the next couple of months will feature two more DLC packs for the post-apocalyptic adventure. The big change arrives in March with Broken Steel, which will increase the game's level cap and get rid of that pesky (abrupt?) ending.
Gallery: Fallout 3: Operation Anchorage
Bethesda: No plans to patch Fallout 3's PS3 ending for end-game play
When the third DLC scenario for Fallout 3, "Broken Steel," hits Xbox 360 and PC in March, it will replace the game's current ending, which doesn't allow players to keep on exploring the Capitol Wasteland post "end-game." This is something we've known since last November; what we didn't realize is that PS3 players -- already missing out on any DLC action -- will continue to be stuck with the current "brick wall" ending.
When asked by MTV Multiplayer if there were plans to patch the PS3 version of Fallout 3 for end-game play, Todd Howard, the game's executive producer, responded, "Not at this time, no." Howard has also remarked that Bethesda "really underestimated how many people would want to keep playing [past the ending]," and that Fallout 3 was "probably the last time we'll do something like that."
Source - Bethesda Won't Commit To PS3 Fallout 3 Getting Ability To Play Post-Ending [MTV Multiplayer]
Source - Bethesda Reacts To Three Major Fallout 3 Criticisms [MTV Multiplayer]
When asked by MTV Multiplayer if there were plans to patch the PS3 version of Fallout 3 for end-game play, Todd Howard, the game's executive producer, responded, "Not at this time, no." Howard has also remarked that Bethesda "really underestimated how many people would want to keep playing [past the ending]," and that Fallout 3 was "probably the last time we'll do something like that."
Source - Bethesda Won't Commit To PS3 Fallout 3 Getting Ability To Play Post-Ending [MTV Multiplayer]
Source - Bethesda Reacts To Three Major Fallout 3 Criticisms [MTV Multiplayer]
Hellgate: London staying open as free-to-play game

The first patch HanbitSoft plans to release "soon" will combine the game's two modes, along with balancing game and class issues. Could the title that helped bring down Flagship Studios find an audience in the nurturing arms of the Korean developer?
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Echoes of Time clocks in March 24
Square Enix sent word by Moogle mail today that Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Echoes of Time should arrive punctually at North American retail on March 24. Echoes allows Wii and DS gamers to play alongside one another with a bit less hassle than the original Crystal Chronicles. Remember all those link cables?
The game will cost $40 on either platform and will allow Wii players to use their Miis, some of which no doubt already look like Final Fantasy creatures.
The game will cost $40 on either platform and will allow Wii players to use their Miis, some of which no doubt already look like Final Fantasy creatures.
Braid's Jonathan Blow working on a 2D RPG
If you enjoyed the older Final Fantasy games but always wished they included more navel-gazing reflections on love, loss and (possibly) the atomic bomb, brace yourself for stellar news: Jonathan Blow, the mind behind last year's surreptitious hit chronoplatformer Braid, recently mentioned in a Gamasutra interview that he's currently working on a new 2D role-playing game. He revealed few details, but did mention that dialogue is "very closely related to the core mechanic" of the game. Consider us intrigued.
However, don't get your hopes up quite yet -- by Blow's own concession, the guy's got the attention span of a fruit fly. He explained that he's worked on several projects since wrapping up Braid, teasing, "you never know. Next month, it could be a Pac-Man clone or something." Ah, yes -- a Pac-Man clone, in which the circular, titular hero takes copious amounts of drugs and is chased by the ghosts of his past in a futile attempt to reclaim the affections of his female, bow-headed counterpart. Hey, we're down with that too.
[Via X3F]
However, don't get your hopes up quite yet -- by Blow's own concession, the guy's got the attention span of a fruit fly. He explained that he's worked on several projects since wrapping up Braid, teasing, "you never know. Next month, it could be a Pac-Man clone or something." Ah, yes -- a Pac-Man clone, in which the circular, titular hero takes copious amounts of drugs and is chased by the ghosts of his past in a futile attempt to reclaim the affections of his female, bow-headed counterpart. Hey, we're down with that too.
[Via X3F]
















