Posts Tagged ‘worldofwarcraft.com’
World of Warcraft – English (NA) Forums
Hi. I recently recieved an email regarding something called The Cataclysm and I was wondering whether you thought this was legit or not.
*****************************************************
The Cataclysm alpha Test
Selling a world of warcraft account
What is the name of your state? Michigan
My question is why is it against the law in order to sell a World of Warcraft account. I have been considering to sell my for some time now and when I posted it on Ebay it said i violated some EULA laws. According to Blizzard when i contacted their billing department i’m not allow to give out my account name and password to anyone because they host the account it doesn’t belong to me. I also put disclaimer all throughtout the auction stating that i was not selling the account it’s self but only the time i spent in game collecting the virtual items that blizzard owns and these two disclaimer that follow were also placed in the auction:
World of Warcraft – English (NA) Forums
My guild currently uses Guild Portal to host our website. Basically what we’ve discovered is that someone was able to inject an iFrame with a keylogger hack into the common GP code such that it affected all GP guild websites. GP must have discovered this on Wednesday, since they brought everything down and disabled all scripting on the home page. We had a flash intro that we noticed stopped working, but thought nothing of it at the time.
Fast forward to today and two of our members log in to find themselves stripped with everything gone. Several other members were inflicted by the logger, but were able to catch it in time. At first we didn’t realize it was from guild portal, but a brief inspection of other WoW guild GP forums found similar posts in almost every instance.
Karazhan – WoWWiki
From WoWWiki Karazhan Medivh’s Tower, KZ, Kara
The Karazhan loading graphic Location Deadwind Pass Race(s) Ethereal
Man’ari eredar
Satyr
Undead End boss Prince Malchezaar Instance info Type Raid Advised level 70+ Player limit 10 Key [The Master's Key] (needed to open front and side gates; attunement requirement removed 3/25/08) Lockout timer 7 days Other raids Karazhan [54, 78] (a.k.a. Medivh’s Tower, Ivory Tower of Karazhan, or Ivory Spire of Karazhan)LoC 44 is an abandoned citadel (or castle)LG 195, 250 located on a nexus of ley lines in southern Deadwind Pass. The tower is best known for its last known occupant — Medivh, the last Guardian of Tirisfal. After Medivh was killed by Khadgar, Lothar, and Garona, the tower sealed itself off from the rest of the world. But recently, Karazhan has reawakened — an evil presence has taken the tower as its own, its halls crawling with spirits and demons… and Medivh’s presence is still alive and well, even decades after his death.
Karazhan, as a level 70 ten-man raid instance, was opened in World of Warcraft: The Burning Crusade.
- 1 General information
- 1.1 Shortcuts
- 1.2 Vendors and repair
- 2 History
- 3 Contradictions
- 4 Instance layout
- 5 Encounters
- 6 Related quests
- 7 Loot
- 7.1 Tier 4
- 7.2 Badges
- 8 Dungeon denizens
- 9 Trivia
- 10 Karazhan gryphon roost
- 11 External links
- 11.1 Databases
- 11.2 Strategy guides (english)
- 11.3 Strategy guides (other)
- 11.4 Videos
- 11.5 Other resources
- The instance is huge, scripted, and non-winged, containing twelve boss encounters, with 22 different NPCs.
- In order to open the first door right after the instance gate, at least one person in the raid must have [The Master's Key] which is obtained through an attunement process. The door can be lock-picked by rogues or using a blacksmith skeleton key.
- The following bosses and encounters must be defeated in order: Moroes, the Opera Event, The Curator, and the Chess Event. All other bosses are optional.
- Note that Karazhan is a level-70 instance, and many of the bosses can be easily defeated by players above that level. Certain classes with well geared and experienced players behind them are able to solo the instance at level 80.
- Killing the Shade of Aran makes a teleport to his room available from Berthold the Doorman.
- Karazhan has a side entrance. When climbing the tower to the right of the main entrance (across the small creek), the stairs lead to a bridge and to a door which can be unlocked from the inside once the Opera Event has been cleared.
- Medivh’s staff — [Atiesh, Greatstaff of the Guardian] can be used to teleport players to the front gate of Karazhan.
- There is a servants’ entrance from the mezzanine above the ballroom that leads to the broken stairway. This door must be opened from the stairway side. While this doesn’t help for initial clearing, it can later shorten some paths e.g. from the blacksmith to the Curator, or from Nightbane to Berthold (in order to get to Aran).
- Koren
, next to Attumen the Huntsman, will repair gear for players who are Honored with Violet Eye. He also sells some epic Blacksmithing recipes (frost resistance gear). Near him is Calliard who wanders around, babbling how evil Midnight and her owner are. - Outside of the Gamesman’s Hall (before the Chess Event) is Ythyar, a reagent and The Consortium reputation reward vendor, who can repair gear (however it is worthy to note that Ythyar has no faction attached to him, so no reputation discounts are available — whether this is a bug or intentional is unclear).
Karazhan is located in Deadwind Pass on the sub-continent of Azeroth in the Eastern Kingdoms. Existing long before Medivh inhabited it, it is unknown who originally built Karazhan or who now resides within its walls. The land it sits on “was similar in shape to a human skull. Many had noted it over the years, though only a few had been sufficiently brave, or powerful, or tactless to mention it to the property’s owner”.LG 2
Shaman (character class)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In role-playing games, a Shaman is a character class that is generally portrayed as using spirit-based magical abilities that involve healing and enhancing the combat abilities of fellow players, and damaging and diminishing the combat abilities of enemies. A Shaman generally wears mid-level or chainmail armor, and wields spears and clubs.
- 1 Age of Conan
- 2 d20 System
- 3 Dungeons & Dragons
- 3.1 AD&D
- 3.2 AD&D2
- 3.3 D&D3
- 3.4 D&D3.5
- 3.5 D&D4
- 4 EverQuest
- 5 EverQuest II
- 6 Fire Emblem
- 7 Guild Wars
- 8 Vanguard
- 9 World of Warcraft
- 10 References
[edit] Age of Conan Overview in Age of Conan, the Bear Shaman is one of the three Priest archetypes, and unlike other healing classes, it also comes with good offensive abilities – in the case of the Bear Shaman, this is based on melee and melee enhancement. Races Only a Cimmerian may learn the ways of the Bear Shaman. Equipment The Shaman can wear light, medium, or cloth armor (as opposed to heavy) and wields two-handed blunt (and ranged) weapons, but may not use shields. [1][2] [edit] d20 System Overview The d20 System is an open source role playing game system. As such, various sources have created versions of Shaman and Shaman-like classes:
A Shaman class was specified in “The Shaman’s Handbook” in 2002.[3]
Make Love, Not Warcraft
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia “Make Love, Not Warcraft” South Park episode 
The boys playing World of Warcraft. Episode no. Season 10
Episode 8 Written by Trey Parker and Matt Stone Directed by Trey Parker Original airdate October 4, 2006 Season 10 episodes South Park – Season 10
March 22, 2006 – November 15, 2006
- The Return of Chef
- Smug Alert!
- Cartoon Wars Part I
- Cartoon Wars Part II
- A Million Little Fibers
- ManBearPig
- Tsst
- Make Love, Not Warcraft
- Mystery of the Urinal Deuce
- Miss Teacher Bangs a Boy
- Hell on Earth 2006
- Go God Go
- Go God Go XII
- Stanley’s Cup
↠Season 9 Season 11 → List of South Park episodes
“Make Love, Not Warcraft” is episode 147 of Comedy Central’s animated series South Park which first aired on October 4, 2006. This episode takes a satirical look at the popular massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) World of Warcraft, and on videogamers. The episode was announced by Comedy Central on September 30, 2006 and was advertised as the tenth season second half premiere.
In 2007 the episode won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Animated Program (for Programming Less Than One Hour).[1]
- 1 Plot
- 2 Production
- 2.1 Collaboration
- 2.2 Production length
- 2.3 Reciprocation
- 3 Reception
- 4 References
- 5 External links
[edit] Plot
Read the rest of this entry »
World of Warcraft – English (NA) Forums
Original post: http://forums.worldofwarcraft.com/thread.html?topicId=3907977047&sid=1&pageNo=1
Still WTB Blue Post. How many times is this thread going to have to be reborn?
Yeah, the 9 or so nerf patches since arenas came out have been lovely. Everything useful that a Paladin had, or was unique for, has been nerfed into the ground. Everything, EVERYTHING a Paladin had has been nerfed either by weakening the ability, or buffing other classes to negate it.
World of Warcraft – English (NA) Forums
Update: http://launcher.worldofwarcraft.com/alert
SERVERALERT:
June 22nd, 2010 02:34PM PDT
We are continuing to work to resolve issues with the application of the new content patch and will provide an additional update by 4:00PM PDT.
World of Warcraft
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia World of Warcraft 
Developer(s) Blizzard Entertainment Publisher(s) Blizzard Entertainment[1] Designer(s) Rob Pardo, Jeff Kaplan, Tom Chilton Composer(s) Jason Hayes
Tracy W. Bush
Derek Duke
Glenn Stafford Series Warcraft Version NA 3.3.5 (June 22, 2010)
EU 3.3.5 (June 30, 2010)
Platform(s) Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows Release date(s) AUS / NA November 23, 2004
EU February 11, 2005[2]
Genre(s) Fantasy, MMORPG Mode(s) Multiplayer online Rating(s) ESRB: T
OFLC: M[3]
PEGI: 12+
Media 4 CDs (5 for the game of the year edition), 1 DVD, download System requirements Microsoft Windows
- Windows XP, Windows Vista or Windows 7 (32- & 64-bit supported)
- Intel Pentium 4 or AMD Athlon XP 1500+ 1300 MHz
- 512 MB or more of RAM (1 GB for Vista Users)
- 32 MB 3D video card with Hardware T&L or better
- 15 GB free HD space
- 1x DVD drive
- Broadband Internet connection
Mac OS X
- Mac OS X 10.4.11 or newer
- 1600 MHz or higher G5, or Intel Core Duo processor
- 1 GB RAM or higher
- ATI or NVIDIA video card with 64 MB Video RAM or more
- 15 GB free HD space
- 1x DVD drive
- Broadband Internet connection[4]
Input methods Keyboard, mouse
Read the rest of this entry »
Warcraft: Orcs & Humans
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Warcraft: Orcs & Humans 
The box art for Warcraft: Orcs & Humans Developer(s) Blizzard Entertainment[1] Publisher(s) NA Blizzard Entertainment
EU Interplay Entertainment[2]
Designer(s) Blizzard Entertainment[3] Version 1.21 (PC) / 1.06 (Mac) Platform(s) MS-DOS, Mac OS[1] Release date(s) NA 1994[3]
EU 1995
Genre(s) Real-time strategy[3] Mode(s) Single player, Multiplayer[3] Media CD-ROM/4 Diskettes 1.44 MB Input methods Keyboard and mouse
Warcraft: Orcs & Humans is a real-time strategy game (RTS), developed by Blizzard Entertainment and published by Blizzard and Interplay Entertainment. The MS-DOS version was released in November 1994 and the Macintosh in late 1996. Sales were fairly high, reviewers were mostly impressed, and the game won some awards and was a finalist for others. The sequel, Warcraft II: Tides of Darkness, became the main rival to Westwood Studios’ Command & Conquer series, and this competition fostered a RTS boom in the mid to late 1990s.
Although Warcraft: Orcs & Humans was not the first RTS title to offer multiplayer games, Blizzard’s game persuaded a wider audience that multiplayer facilities were essential for future RTS titles. The game introduced innovations in mission design and gameplay elements, which were adopted by other RTS developers.