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May 30, 2016 · An admission to fans of World of Warcraft that this wouldn't quite be their Azeroth: the film turns the clock back a generation to tell, roughly, the story of the 1994 strategy game Warcraft:...
- Former Editor-In-Chief
Depends on how you play. I can only play an hour or two a night, I don’t bother with progression at the servers pace, but my own. I’m still not max level and I’m having a blast exploring the world and doing the quests. Casual play is not over rated and it’s been a refreshing way to play. 29.
Because wow isn’t just an MMORPG… you can play solo if you want. If you want to play for two hours a day it’s enough if you accomplish what you want to accomplish. Not everyone needs to work a part time job and put 10 hours of WoW time in to complete their goals in game.
The way to play Wow casually with only an hour or two a day is to accept that there are things you will not be able to achieve, and that's ok. There are achievements that get removed over time, and you can't do them expansions later when the content is trivial, for example.
Time consuming in the sense that more than half of the content requires some form of a time-gated grind? Yes and no.
2hrs a day*30days = 60 hours, 25c per hour of entertainment, sweet. Depending on the rules on what counts as 2 hours you might want to try rolling a healer or tank, don’t want to spend 45 minutes in an LFG chat channel + travel only to go over your 2 hour limit before getting to the end of the dungeon.
I think it was probably too faithful to the video game series, and novels. The story might have worked really well in those formats, but translating it to other art forms (like film) doesn't always work.