I’m glad WoW found some restraint, but I hope it doesn’t ditch the best parts of Shadowlands

World of Warcraft’s next expansion, Dragonflight, was announced this week, promising a return to terrestrial Azeroth, the restoration of something like the pre-Mists of Pandaria talent system, and the end of expansion-specific “borrowed power” mechanics like artifact weapons or Azerite gear. As someone who has been playing WoW since the closed beta back in 2004, I was a little surprised by how lean the announcement was. There are some flashy features like physics-based dragon riding and playable dragon people, but in a lot of ways it seems Blizzard is trying to sell Dragonflight on what it’s not, rather than what it is.

I hope Dragonflight doesn’t abandon everything Blizzard tried to do in Shadowlands, but its restraint could be just what World of Warcraft needs right now, when previous expansions have tried to make a bigger splash but fell flat in the end.

For the first time, we’ve had two expansions in a row that are widely seen as failures.

It’s no big secret that WoW has been navigating rough waters lately. 2018’s Battle for Azeroth is one of the most widely disliked expansions in the MMO’s 18-year history. And while 2020’s Shadowlands got off to a strong start, issues with the story and post-launch support have led to opinion turning against it fairly quickly. Zerith Mortis, the capstone questing area for the recent Patch 9.2, feels rushed, dull, and visually unexciting—an oddity for Blizzard which, even when it’s struggling in other areas, usually excels at creating memorable new zones to explore.

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