Zygor Alliance & Horde World of Warcraft Leveling & Dailies Guides Review

Yes Zygor Guide! I use this ALL the time. One of my good buddies introduced me too it , and i can say that it makes leveling in this game, effin easy!


First, installing the guide is super easy with the installer program. Once you login to play , getting started is just as simple. Now I have personally used this addon to level a Dranei Warrior to level 60 and a Dranei Priest to level 70. Man I really could have used this a while back when i was trying to level up my Night Elf Druid.

It's gotta a new waypoint feature, which ultimately makes Zygor the best choice when it comes to leveling the best leveling addon you can get. If you were like me when WoW first came out , we had to Alt+Tab in and out of the game to look at websites to figure out a quest. Guess what ? With Zygor no more of that BS! The waypoint system literally takes you right to your objectives and back to the quest giver so you dont waste anymore time. Honestly this is one of the best features of the addon, especially if your a n00b! You wont get lost in an unfamiliar world, you'll also find that you complete your quests a lot faster . Zygor groups stuff intelligently, and you end up with some good faction scores to boot

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Also the Zygor guide has a talent advisor, So if your completely clueless on where to put your points as you level, Zygor can show you where to add them .

Seriously Zygor kicks ASS, most people that I've chatted with loves it and ends up leveling up faster then you can say WoW , and if history repeats itself like I KNOW IT WILL, You'll love it and level up faster as well, Sincerely this Guide is absolutely amazing ..Like I was saying you can get this by click here or the link below!



Wednesday, December 30, 2009

[World_of_Warcraft_List] World of Warcraft and Philosophy??

 

http://www.opencourtbooks.com/books_n/world_of_warcraft.htm

World of Warcraft and Philosophy

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Wrath of the Philosopher King


Edited by Luke Cuddy and John Nordlinger


Volume 45 in the Popular Culture and Philosophy® series
World of Warcraft is the most popular ever MMORPG (massively multiplayer online role playing game), with over twelve million subscribers and growing every day.

 WoW is everywhere­from episodes of South Park and The Simpsons, to online series like Watch the Guild, accolades and awards from game critics, prime-time commercials with William Shatner and Mr. T., and even criminal and civil courts in the real world. People marry and divorce individuals they have met in the game, realworld financial markets thrive in virtual WoW property, parents have their kids 'treated' for Warcraft addiction, and real-world lawsuits, vendettas, and murders have been provoked by the game.

 Since identities are known to be assumed, is it okay to totally misrepresent yourself in the game? Does the Corrupted Blood epidemic warn us of future public health catastrophes? How can it be wrong to steal something which doesn't exist or torture characters who don't feel pain? Is warfare really essential to the world of Warcraft? What can our own world learn from Azeroth's blend of primitivism and high-tech?

 A specially commissioned guild of philosophers tackle these and other hard questions in World of Warcraft and Philosophy.

 "Finally, something Horde and Alliance alike can enjoy! Log off and curl up with World of Warcraft and Philosophy: you'll level up your Intellect for better boasting at your next guild party and cocktail party alike."

­Ian Bogost, author of Unit Operations: An Approach to Videogame Criticism

"WoW fan? WoW curious? This is a terrific read to uncover what lurks beneath the 'Tolkien-ites chill at the mall' veil of WoW."

&­David Gerding, game developer and professor of Interactive Media at Columbia College

"Tired of raiding or grinding for rep? Level up your philosophy skills instead, with this witty, concise analysis of the best-selling World of Warcraft. You can embark on chains of philosophical quests, such as learning how Machiavelli's writings apply to guild politics and the intricacies of ninja ethics, all inside this fascinating volume."

­Mia Consalvo, author of Cheating: Gaining Advantage in Videogames

"Dense kotaku-ness masquerading as philosophical weezership for the consumption of the embedded masses so that they know where and why-fore they did tread."

­MICHAEL ZYDA, Director, USC GamePipe Laboratory

 A longtime gamer, Luke Cuddy now teaches and writes philosophy, a light diversion from the stresses of battling the Horde. He conceived and edited the much-acclaimed trailblazing volume, The Legend of Zelda and Philosophy: I Link Therefore I Am (2008). John Nordlinger is Senior Research Program Manager at Microsoft Research. He writes and speaks about ethical and educational issues surrounding MMORPGs and other videogames. Balancing the book, John is a member of the Horde and harasses the Alliance.

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