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Wowhead is a website that provides a searchable database, internet forum, guides and player character services for the popular massively multiplayer online role-playing game World of Warcraft. It is owned and operated by ZAM Network LLC ( doing business as Fanbyte), [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] a subsidiary of the Chinese company Tencent .
Two new playable races were added to World of Warcraft in The Burning Crusade: the Draenei of the Alliance and the Blood Elves of the Horde.Previously, the shaman class was exclusive to the Horde faction (available to the orc, troll and tauren races), and the paladin class was exclusive to the Alliance faction (available to the human and dwarf races); with the new races, the expansion allowed ...
Classic recreates the game in the state it was in during patch 1.12.1, c. September 2006, before the launch of The Burning Crusade expansion. The maximum level of the player characters is set to 60, all expansion content is absent, and almost all the gameplay mechanics of the original version have been exactly replicated. [3]
The new raid came with a third, easier difficulty option for groups formed through the new Raid Finder tool, which is similar to the Dungeon Finder. [28] Three new heroic 5-man dungeons were added: End Time, Well of Eternity and Hour of Twilight. These are accessible through the Caverns of Time and introduce the story for the new raid instance.
Bob the Builder: Bob Builds a Park: Microsoft Windows: August 9, 2002: Asylum Entertainment Scooby-Doo!: Night of 100 Frights: GameCube: September 12, 2002: Heavy Iron Studios [47] The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius Vs. Jimmy Negatron: Microsoft Windows: September 16, 2002: AWE Games SpongeBob SquarePants: Employee of the Month ...
A review from RPGnet said that "All in all, the Stronghold Builder’s Guide is a useful, solid product. It is well designed, clean and well written, but lacks a certain amount of flair that would have made it truly outstanding, the authors not having quite gone the extra mile."
The Burning Wheel is a fantasy tabletop role-playing game independently written and published by Luke Crane.The game uses a dice pool mechanic (using only standard six-sided dice) for task resolution and a character generation system that tracks the history and experiences of new characters from birth to the point they begin adventuring.
Unlike the Dragon Age video games, the animation studio developing Dawn of the Seeker could build specific sets for the film's scenes and focus on picture making. [4] The choice to center the film on Cassandra as it tied into the themes the series had been building, giving "a new take" on the events and groups of the franchise. [5]