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A dragon’s breath of fresh air for an old MMO - World of Warcraft: Dragonflight Quick Review

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A dragon’s breath of fresh air for an old MMO - World of Warcraft: Dragonflight Quick Review
Dragonflight, has wowed me, so to speak. I’ve been playing Blizzard’s much-loved (and just-as-much-maligned) MMORPG on and off since it launched eighteen years ago. Every time a new expansion comes out, I wonder if this will be the one where I finally lose interest. Thanks to a mix of smart quality of life changes, compelling new gameplay mechanics, and an exciting and adventurous new locale, Dragonflight won’t mark the end of my adventures in Azeroth.
TIME PLAYED
I spent somewhere between twelve and fifteen hours playing World of Warcraft: Dragonflight last week. This time included leveling my main (an undead mage) to level 66, just over halfway to the level cap of 70, as well as completing one-and-a-half zones worth of quests (of five new zones in total), running several of the new dungeons, and spending a lot of time exploring and taking in the heavily revised crafting and gathering systems.
A dragon’s breath of fresh air for an old MMO - World of Warcraft: Dragonflight Quick Review
WHAT’S AWESOME
• Setting. After the last expansion, Shadowlands, took players to the literal afterlife, you might think that just heading off to visit some unexplored island on Azeroth isn’t all that exciting. You’d be wrong, however. Not only are the Dragon Isles absolutely gorgeous zones packed full of stuff to do, but the idea of finally gaining access to this long-lost land and slowly discovering its people and stories lends the game a sense of smaller-scale adventure that’s been missing for a long time. It feels similar to 2012’s Mists of Pandaria and like what 2018’s Battle for Azeroth should have been.
• Dragon riding. The biggest new feature for Dragonflight is a new approach to flying mounts that feels closer to actual flying: Players gain momentum by aiming down, flap their wings to gain height, and so on. It’s a brilliant addition that adds a ton of gameplay to the act of exploring and navigating each zone. The dragon riding time trials are a blast as well.
A dragon’s breath of fresh air for an old MMO - World of Warcraft: Dragonflight Quick Review
• Professions. Gathering and especially crafting have been a dull, predictable process in World of Warcraft for at least a decade now. We’ll have to see how the much more complex forms of crafting and gathering shake out in the endgame across months of play, but at the very least they’re much more engaging to level up and work through now and involve making actual decisions as you go.
• interface improvements. After eighteen years of players needing to rely on -created mods to do some of the most basic tweaks to how the game’s interface is laid out, Blizzard has finally put in a comprehensively adjustable UI. Thank you!
A dragon’s breath of fresh air for an old MMO - World of Warcraft: Dragonflight Quick Review
• The return of real talent trees. Blizzard has spent the last decade-plus focusing on pruning down character choice and making the game more approachable. Understandable, but I am ecstatic to see the return of full-scale talent trees in all their complexity and number-crunching glory. Even playing as a supposedly underpowered spec (fire mage), I’ve felt that the new talents give me freedom to experiment and shape my own playstyle.
WHAT SUCKS
• Story. Nothing about Dragonflight’s plot is a complete disaster in the way the last couple expansion narratives have been, but it’s still not particularly strong. The dragon characters like Wrathion and Alexstrasza are interesting enough, but I can’t shake that eternal World of Warcraft feeling like I’m just a side character who gets to stand nearby the main characters during cutscenes...and then run errands for them.
A dragon’s breath of fresh air for an old MMO - World of Warcraft: Dragonflight Quick Review
• Questing, sort of. I’m fine with traditional MMO questing, but it’s a little disappointing that most of Dragonflight’s quests so far have stuck to the usual “go here, kill X bears, bring me Y bear paws.” Some more exciting set piece questlines break up the monotony, but I’d love to see a little more inventiveness.
SHOULD YOU PLAY IT?
If you’re a long-time World of Warcraft player who skipped the last couple expansions or has been waiting to hear thoughts on Dragonflight, here it is: It’s worth playing! I can’t speak to the endgame yet, and Blizzard notoriously has problems keeping players invested and getting new content out fast enough. But in of its leveling experience, at least, Dragonflight is full of cool new stuff, and frankly, dragon riding alone is enough reason to give it a shot. Just don’t expect a lot of innovation in questing.
💬 What's the longest you've ever stuck with a single game, MMO or otherwise? Share your record in the comments!
Posted on 12/05/202223K Views

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Descuajaranliza'
Descuajaranliza'12/06/2022
Playback GW2!!
SpFinX
SpFinX12/06/2022Liked by Author
Second worst update after famous WoD. Well, what did you expect after Warcraft 3 Refunded, Diablo II Disconnected, Diablo Immoral and Overwatch 0.2? Blizzard is done, go and play some Starcraft 2 until they ed it exist and ruined it too.
Kef
Kef12/06/2022Author
whoa, you think it's second worst already? feels way too soon to decide that to me, it'll depend a lot on how endgame plays out and how slow they are on updates. So far I definitely like Dragonflight more than WoD or Battle for Azeroth, but I was also enthusiastic about Shadowlands at launch, so I'm definitely worried where it will go from here.
Zri
Zri12/06/2022Liked by Author
I wish It was on mobile
Virendre Kagra
Virendre Kagra12/06/2022
pleasant my advan server
Prinny X
Prinny X12/06/2022
Is this where I can choose to be genderfluid trans black rainbow halfbreed orc and elf with disability because that is heckin valid