Blizzard responds to Guardian Cub controversy


If you were struggling against horrible killer androids yesterday (like I was, thanks to Ziebart the Destroyer) you may have missed the news of the [hide]Guardian Cub pet[/hide], or as [hide]Young Master McCurley[/hide] likes to call it, [hide]gold on the paw[/hide]. There’s been a lot of discussion as to what this pet actually means, if it’s opening the door to real money trading in World of Warcraft, whether it (and not Deathwing) is the true harbinger of Cataclysm, etc etc. Now Blizzard comes out swinging (okay, more like comes out with cool rationality) in [hide]response to a forum thread[/hide].

Bashiok — Re: Blizzard, you’ve crossed the line

TCG Loot card mounts like the Spectral Tiger have been BoE for a long time now (since patch 3.2), and that was and continues to be well-received, and as far as we’ve been able to tell hasn’t had any adverse impact to the game or economy — despite them selling for sometimes astronomical amounts of gold.

It’s potentially worth noting that no new gold is being introduced into the game’s economy with those mounts or the new Guardian Cub pet.

Our goal with the Guardian Cub is to provide alternative ways for players who don’t want to spend real money to add these pets to their collection. Even though this has been available a while now with the TCG mounts, this is obviously a new kind of way to deliver Pet Store pets, and we’re definitely interested to hear your feedback and ultimately see how this will play out.

[hide]source[/hide]

To be fair, since this is exactly what I said about the Cub on the [hide]WoW Insider Show[/hide] this week, I’m already on record as agreeing with him fully. The only difference between the Guardian Cub and loot cards is that you don’t have to spend money hoping you’ll get the Cub. You spend ten bucks and you know you have one.

Well, also, the thing is adorable. That’s not really germane to the discussion, though. What do you think about our friendly Cub? Cute pet, money for gold, soul-meltingly cute step off of the slippery slope? Tell us.

Filed under: [hide]Analysis / Opinion[/hide], [hide]News items[/hide][hide]Blizzard responds to Guardian Cub controversy[/hide] originally appeared on [hide]WoW Insider[/hide] on Tue, 11 Oct 2011 16:00:00 EST. Please see our [hide]terms for use of feeds[/hide].[hide]Permalink[/hide] | [hide]Email this[/hide] | [hide]Comments[/hide]
If you were struggling against horrible killer androids yesterday (like I was, thanks to Ziebart the Destroyer) you may have missed the news of the [hide]Guardian Cub pet[/hide], or as [hide]Young Master McCurley[/hide] likes to call it, [hide]gold on the paw[/hide]. There’s been a lot of discussion as to what this pet actually means, if it’s opening the door to real money trading in World of Warcraft, whether it (and not Deathwing) is the true harbinger of Cataclysm, etc etc. Now Blizzard comes out swinging (okay, more like comes out with cool rationality) in [hide]response to a forum thread[/hide].

Bashiok — Re: Blizzard, you’ve crossed the line

TCG Loot card mounts like the Spectral Tiger have been BoE for a long time now (since patch 3.2), and that was and continues to be well-received, and as far as we’ve been able to tell hasn’t had any adverse impact to the game or economy — despite them selling for sometimes astronomical amounts of gold.

It’s potentially worth noting that no new gold is being introduced into the game’s economy with those mounts or the new Guardian Cub pet.

Our goal with the Guardian Cub is to provide alternative ways for players who don’t want to spend real money to add these pets to their collection. Even though this has been available a while now with the TCG mounts, this is obviously a new kind of way to deliver Pet Store pets, and we’re definitely interested to hear your feedback and ultimately see how this will play out.

[hide]source[/hide]

To be fair, since this is exactly what I said about the Cub on the [hide]WoW Insider Show[/hide] this week, I’m already on record as agreeing with him fully. The only difference between the Guardian Cub and loot cards is that you don’t have to spend money hoping you’ll get the Cub. You spend ten bucks and you know you have one.

Well, also, the thing is adorable. That’s not really germane to the discussion, though. What do you think about our friendly Cub? Cute pet, money for gold, soul-meltingly cute step off of the slippery slope? Tell us.

Filed under: [hide]Analysis / Opinion[/hide], [hide]News items[/hide][hide]Blizzard responds to Guardian Cub controversy[/hide] originally appeared on [hide]WoW Insider[/hide] on Tue, 11 Oct 2011 16:00:00 EST. Please see our [hide]terms for use of feeds[/hide].[hide]Permalink[/hide] | [hide]Email this[/hide] | [hide]Comments[/hide]

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