World of Warcraft: The War Within is out later this year, and at launch will be trying something new for a WoW expansion: a three-day, paid early access period. When this was announced, a lot of people were pretty upset! But in an interview with IGN ahead of the game's alpha launch, game director Ion Hazzikostas defended the decision, calling it an "experiment."
Essentially, World of Warcraft as it currently exists has a number of price gates. It's entirely free to try up to level 20, and for a $15/month subscription, you can play most of the game's past expansions and reach up to level 50, and you'll also get access to World of Warcraft: Classic on top of that. For an additional $50, you get access to the current expansion, Dragonflight, and will be able to play World of Warcraft: The War Within whenever it officially launches.
But Blizzard is offering multiple versions of The War Within for purchase. There's a $70 version that includes some bonuses like character cosmetics, but a $90 version will get players not just into the game's eventual beta release, but also into the proper full launch three days before everyone else. It's this three-day head-start that players are upset about. Some are frustrated that people who want to be on top of the game's raiding scene are effectively being taxed to start on time. Many others are pointing out that this just means the game's release date is effectively three days earlier than advertised, but if you don't pay $40 more, you're stuck playing late.
We spoke to Hazzikostas in a big interview about everything we saw in our preview of the game's alpha, and at the end, we threw in a question about why the early access option is even on the table. Hazzikostas explained a bit, calling the whole deal a "bit of an experiment."
"We are looking to see how we can maximize the value of each of the different expansion tiers," he said. "It used to be that you needed to get the Heroic Edition to get a boost, for example, in Dragonflight. We
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