If you've been paying any attention to World of Warcraft in the past year or so, you'll have noticed that things are getting a little weird. Not in a bad way—in fact, while other MMORPGs would struggle with a content lull before their next big expansion, we're only a few months out from The War Within and there's never been so many ways to get your WoW fix.
Season of Discovery, several flavours of Classic including the approaching Cataclysm, Plunderstorm (to be soon replaced with the harebrained, private server energy of Mists of Pandaria: Remix)—oh yeah, and retail. There's a lot to do.
Speaking to executive producer Holly Longdale in a group interview during a World of Warcraft: The War Within preview event, myself and several other journalists got to talking with her about WoW's new era of experimentation—unsurprisingly, Longdale says there's a whole team dedicated to throwing delicious gameplay spaghetti at the wall.
«The expansions for World of Warcraft—they did their job, they were relatively reliable, and they worked,» Longdale recalls. «And then they didn't work as well, particularly in Shadowlands where the content drought didn't work well for players.» She's referring to patch 6.1, which took a horrifying 218 days to arrive. Mercifully, Dragonflight has had a healthy roadmap that's been, for the most part, stuck to religiously.
In particular, Longdale says that «we saw in our data that our casual and midcore players»—midcore being players who like a challenge, but are short on time—«were under-served—that's where late last year, we created the 'live' team. Their job is retention of the players that are under-served.
»We started saying 'okay well, let's experiment for them'… and a lot of the stuff we did outperformed expectations."
As for what it is exactly that the live team does, Longdale says that their «remit is to remain agile. Those things have come together, by WoW team standards, very quickly—their job is to intake data, learn what players are
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