New York Times can't let WoW duo get away with it

New York Times can't let WoW duo get away with it

 

By way of example, the folks at wowminifan.com were able to grab a shot of the card for Vindicator Hodoon. The card, much like WoW TCG cards, lists a class, spec, an attack and defense rating and a set of abilities. In a somewhat amusing twist, Vindicator Hodoon is Holy spec, but insists on weilding a Might of Menethil. We can only hope he's using the updated level 70 80 version that will no doubt drop from the revamped Naxxramas, but still, you'd think he'd go for a +healing weapon! But seriously, this guy doesn't look half bad. He has a version of Devotion Aura that grants an extra 1 armor to all allies within 1 hex of him in addition to his normal attack, so that looks cool. It should be fun to see if other classes have similar "buff" abilities.

Reader Roland (thanks!) pointed us to this weird WoW reference in the New York Times. In the wedding section of all places, there's a story about a couple that used World of Warcraft to play and have fun as a duo, and it's too damn bad that the NYT falls back into the old media idea that playing videogames as a couple isn't healthy.

Can we get one mainstream media article that breaks the mold? Can we get one portrayal of a wow gold player (or players, in this case) that doesn't fall back into the old line of MMOs being the territory of cave-dwelling social outcasts? That's most certainly not the case in reality -- how long is it going to take for mainstream reporters to forget this moronic angle and report on what's really happening here: two people in love sharing a hobby in between the rest of their full and fulfilling lives.

There are now ten million people playing this game around the world, and the large, overwhelming majority of them are healthy, fulfilled individuals who lead great lives both in and out of game. In fact, the two people this article is about are two of those individuals. It's perfectly healthy to sit down and play a videogame with your significant other, on a beautiful spring day or at any other time (yes, it's never healthy to do one thing all the time, be it videogames or TV watching or anything else, but that's not what's happening here). And it's crazy that the NYT bent over backwards to make it seem like that's not the case.

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