Buy Cheap Wrath of the Lich King Low Prices
“World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King” gives “Warcraft” players more of what they love about the country’s most popular online world game:
More scenery to see, more quests and levels to conquer, more dungeons to explore, and some fine new twists on the gameplay that keeps them coming back to this virtual land of swords and sorcery for far too many hours every month.
“Lich King” picks up where “The Burning Crusade” left off. It gives players the ability to do quests and explore dungeons in a new continent — Northrend — that includes some of the most detailed, breathtaking scenery ever seen in the game.
The maximum level for players’ characters has been raised from 70 to 80, and new dungeons have been opened for players at every point along the way.
“Lich King” represents a refinement of the gameplay that has become so familiar to Warcraft players, with more tweaks and new additions than players saw in “The Burning Crusade” expansion pack.
Gamers can select for the first time a new hero class, the Death Knight, available to anyone who has a level 55 character on their existing Warcraft account. Death Knights use a system of runes and runic power to do damage and take damage from the game’s big bosses, and have some of the most detailed, mean-looking character models in the game.
Even players who don’t plan on actually playing a Death Knight in game should make one to go through the Starting Experience, a controlled series of quests that starts off all new Death Knight characters. You begin as a true Death Knight, a servant of the game’s big villain Arthas the Lich King, and even receive your first quest directly from him.
You start off by doing things some players may find morally repugnant — hunting civilians, torturing people for information, and the like — until you’re betrayed and set on a more pleasant path (albeit one tinged with revenge). The quests gradually replace your lower-level starting equipment with higher-level pieces, grant you a stunning-looking undead fiery horse to ride, and generally get you geared up and ready to experience the rest of the game on your new character.
It’s easily one of the most immersive, engrossing story lines in the Warcraft universe, and one worth seeing for all players.
The Death Knight starting experience is also the first example most players are going to see of Lich King’s new “phasing” technology, one of the most stunning additions to the new game. How you see the online world and the other players in it changes depending on where you are in the questline you’re working on. Turn around after you complete one quest in the series, for example, and you may see that buildings are on fire or that the landscape has literally changed from what it was but a moment ago.
Other players who are on the same stages of the quest as you are visible, and you can group and communicate with them. Players who are not are essentially invisible to you, and you to them.
It’s technology that you’ll see at periodic, dramatic points in the game. One quest involving a major plot twist later in the game that we won’t spoil here has you defending a major capital city from invasion, for example. Those doing the quest will see the city under siege, with undead invaders disrupting normal commerce and making vendors and other normal city life inaccessible.
But to players not on that quest line, all looks normal. It’s a stunning breakthrough in how an online world game works, and one that moves seamlessly for Warcraft players. I’ve been playing the game for four and a half years — well before it was released — and have nine characters at the maximum level. Phasing is easily one of the most impressive changes I’ve seen in the game since its inception.
Players of “The Burning Crusade” saw bombing-run style quests for the first time, and the new quest type that’s likely to catch their attention in “Lich King” is the use of vehicles, which appear both in player-versus-player areas and in quests that ask you to ride vehicles or fight off bad guys on horseback.
It’s impossible to argue that “Lich King” doesn’t give players more of everything they’ve been asking for. Ten-man dungeons, like the ultra-popular Karazhan in “The Burning Crusade,” are now everywhere. There are 10-man versions of the major dungeons that once would have only been open to 25-man groups, for example.
OverAll, “Lich King” is really all that and more. Ever since I got it I haven’t been able to put it down. And I think you won’t be putting it down any time soon either. If you are a fan of World of Warcraft series this is must have. And if you never played a World of Warcraft before, no better version to start with. This is well worth it. The fun factor is high and those who can’t get this are truly missing out!




