World of Warcraft
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World of Warcraft (WoW), massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) created by the American company Blizzard Entertainment and released on November 14, 2004. Massively multiplayer refers to games in which thousands, even millions, of players may participate online together, typically in gaming worlds that persist indefinitely (with characters that are stored and then reactivated whenever a player rejoins). World of Warcraft, or WoW, is part of the Warcraft franchise, which includes Warcraft: Orcs & Humans, Warcraft 2: Tides of Darkness, and Warcraft 3: Reign of Chaos. Soon after its release, the game enjoyed a period of tremendous success and popularity among gamers worldwide.
Set in the fictional world of Azeroth, WoW allows players to create avatar-style characters and explore a sprawling universe while interacting with nonreal players—called nonplayer characters (NPCs)—and other real-world players (PCs). Various quests, battles, and missions are completed alone or in guilds, and the rewards for success include gold, weapons, and valuable items, which are used to improve one’s character. Characters advance by killing other creatures to earn experience. Once enough experience is acquired, the character gains a level, which increases the character’s powers. WoW offers a rich class system of characters, allowing gamers to play as druids, priests, rogues, paladins, and other fantasy-related classes. Guilds often achieve notoriety for their ability to finish certain quests or defeat specific monsters quickly, and, in this way, a hierarchy system is established in the game.
Players have contributed to the WoW community by creating artwork inspired by the game, writing fan fiction, and spending innumerable hours online inhabiting the game’s virtual world. Some view this intense investment in the game as an addiction. The popularity of the game led to a cinematic adaptation, Warcraft (2016), which expounded upon the mythology of Azeroth.
There has been widespread abuse of WoW’s regenerating enemy population by users who employ autopilot programs or hired players to advance their characters at an unfairly rapid pace.The issue of unfairness has grown substantially as some players spend hours earning in-game wealth, hunting for rare weapons, and gaining power and prestige for their characters so that the fruits of their virtual labours can be exchanged for real cash. The buyer and seller agree on a purchase price, the funds can be transferred electronically, and the two can then meet in the game world to complete the transaction. Some Chinese companies have turned this into serious business, employing thousands of “gold farmers,” who play the game in an effort to hoard resources that can be sold to players in South Korea or the United States. The size of the Chinese gold-farming community is suggested by the revelation that in 2007 the 5th through 10th fastest supercomputers in the country were owned by a gaming company that has online rights to WoW in China.