World Of Warcraft Patch Will Add Fan-Requested Features
After months of player feedback that seemed to largely fall on deaf ears, Blizzard is set to bring about some major changes to many of World of Warcraft Shadowlands’ biggest systems in the game’s next patch, which will include the removal of a controversial feature that has long been a source of player complaints along with changes for in-game references to numerous former developers.To get more news about
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As outlined in a statement by the WoW development team, Blizzard will be making some significant quality-of-life changes to Shadowlands in patch 9.1.5, many of which are direct responses to feedback many players have had since Shadowlands launched.“Over the past few weeks since we shared an update, the WoW team has been focused on the immediate future–both for our people and workplace, and what’s next for players too,” the WoW team writes. “As a part of that, the entire team came together to ask: What are the biggest things we’re hearing that are getting in the way of your fun, and what are the most impactful changes we could make to WoW today to fix that?”
As stated by Shadowlands game director Ion Hazzikostas on Twitter, many of the changes coming in the next patch are tailored around making the lives of “alt” characters easier. For the unfamiliar, an alt is any secondary character a player may play after having already done the majority of the game’s content on a primary, or “main,” character. It’s a list of changes that include adding new ranks of heirloom items, the ability to skip Covenant campaigns on alts after completing them with another character, the ability to skip the expansion’s introductory Maw questline for alts, the ability to level in Torghast, and more. According to Hazzikostas, even more alt friendly changes, such as being able to transfer a Shadowlands-only currency called Anima between main and alt characters, could be coming in the future as well.
Big changes that players have long asked for are also coming to the game’s Covenant system, including the widely disliked Conduit Energy system. Blizzard is removing Conduit Energy completely, writing in a forum post that the system did not play out as the developer had hoped.
“We should have heeded community feedback and taken a different direction a year ago,” the post reads. “A majority of players largely ignore the system and are unaffected by it, while the minority who want to engage in multiple content types competitively feel constrained by it. Overall, that adds up to a negative experience. Conduit Energy isn’t really making the game better in any appreciable way, so we’re removing the system entirely.”
Players who reach a high enough Renown rank will also be able to switch freely between Covenants. That change is particularly significant, as Blizzard at the outset of Shadowlands made a big deal out of how major a choice a player’s chosen Covenant would be, going as far as to punish players who decided to later swap to a different Covenant. With patch 9.1.5, players will be able to change Covenants to their hearts’ content with no penalty whatsoever, allowing for more experimentation with different Covenant abilities without feeling locked in to a certain path.