When it launches later this fall, Shadowlands will take players on a journey to the afterlife to save the world of the living. At the end of that initial campaign, players will have to make the most difficult choice they’ve faced since the character selection screen. But Shadowlands is more than a chance to inject some feeling of consequence into your adventure. It’s an opportunity for Blizzard to tear the veil off an entirely new part of the Warcraft universe—one that wasn’t spelled out in game manuals, tie-in novels, or lore bibles decades ago.
“Many of our past expansions had a clear anchor in some large established villain, piece of lore, a place in the world,” game director Ion Hazzikostas tells me. “There were reams of novels that have been written or past references in games like Warcraft III or otherwise. But Shadowlands really started from almost a footnote, frankly. It’s a world created largely whole cloth from the imaginations of our artists and our narrative designers.”
THE OTHER SIDE
To understand what’s happening in the Shadowlands, players must be familiar with the climax of the current expansion, Battle for Azeroth. After being ousted as Horde Warchief, the undead banshee queen Sylvanas Nightrunner flees to the frigid continent of Northrend. It’s here she battles the new Lich King, Bolvar, for his Helm of Domination that Arthas once used to rule the undead Scourge. Instead of wearing it herself, however, Slyvanas shatters it, tearing the veil between the living world and the Shadowlands— Warcraft’s version of an afterlife. Obviously that’s not a good thing.
Denne historien er fra December 2020-utgaven av PC Gamer US Edition.
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Denne historien er fra December 2020-utgaven av PC Gamer US Edition.
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Special Report- Stacked Deck - Monster Train, a deckbuilding roguelike that firmly entrenched itself as the crown prince to the kingly Slay the Spire back in 2020, was the kind of smash success you might call Champagne Big.
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