Still Skeptical About the World of Warcraft Magazine

Ars Technica has a post up today on the arrival of the first issue of the official World of Warcraft magazine. It's a favorable account of its 144 pages of art and articles covering the topics of line of sight and loot sharing; interviews with Blizzard's CEO; and a feature retrospective. It all sounds well and good, but here's why we're still skeptical:

Recommended Videos

Ars Technica has a post up today on the arrival of the first issue of the official World of Warcraft magazine.  It’s a favorable account of its 144 pages of art and articles covering the topics of line of sight and loot sharing; interviews with Blizzard‘s CEO; and a feature retrospective.

It all sounds well and good, but here’s why we’re still skeptical:

To this particular writer, a WoW addict who is raiding Icecrown (but only two nights a week!) and owns an authenticator (come on, officers need to take more responsibility for account security!), it doesn’t sound like there’s much editorial content in the magazine that I couldn’t get from fan sites for free, and more succinctly.  (Or, that won’t be condensed and rehashed on a fansite within the next month.)

Ars also waxes eloquent on the physicality of the magazine and its glossy, high quality paper, pointing out that most magazines these days are printed as cheaply as possible, and claiming that you won’t really understand the value of the mag until you hold it in your hands.  That, I can’t form an opinion on, since the magazine is only shipping to subscribers, and not to newsstands.

But aren’t magazines supposed to be disposable?  Magazines don’t go on my bookshelf, they go in the recycling bin.  I just don’t have room.  My Terry Pratchett and Neil Stephenson are already stacked horizontally, and the WoW magazine probably won’t share their re-reading value.  It’s a collector’s item, for $35-40/year, depending on your subscription length.

Lets call a duck a duck.  I’m still uninterested, and am likely to remain so at least until a subscription comes with a mount, non-combat pet, title, or other form of WoW-gamer crack cocaine.


The Mary Sue is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article ‘Little Kitty, Big City,’ in All Its Glory, Is Almost Here
Cats in hats in 'Little Kitty, Big City'
Read Article ‘Funko Fusion’ Is an Unholy Union of IP (That Looks Kind of Fun?)
Funko Pop! characters assemble in the new video game 'Funko Fusion'
Read Article How Did This Racist Message Make Its Way Into ‘Stellar Blade’ in the First Place?
Eve in Stellar Blade
Read Article Gotta Go Fast! The 10 Best Sonic Games, Ranked
Sonic and his friends leave motion blurs while running through the woods in "Sonic Colors"
Read Article The 10 Best Tomb Raider Games Ranked
Lara Croft overlooks rugged wilderness in "Rise of the Tomb Raider"
Related Content
Read Article ‘Little Kitty, Big City,’ in All Its Glory, Is Almost Here
Cats in hats in 'Little Kitty, Big City'
Read Article ‘Funko Fusion’ Is an Unholy Union of IP (That Looks Kind of Fun?)
Funko Pop! characters assemble in the new video game 'Funko Fusion'
Read Article How Did This Racist Message Make Its Way Into ‘Stellar Blade’ in the First Place?
Eve in Stellar Blade
Read Article Gotta Go Fast! The 10 Best Sonic Games, Ranked
Sonic and his friends leave motion blurs while running through the woods in "Sonic Colors"
Read Article The 10 Best Tomb Raider Games Ranked
Lara Croft overlooks rugged wilderness in "Rise of the Tomb Raider"
Author
Susana Polo
Susana Polo thought she'd get her Creative Writing degree from Oberlin, work a crap job, and fake it until she made it into comics. Instead she stumbled into a great job: founding and running this very website (she's Editor at Large now, very fancy). She's spoken at events like Geek Girl Con, New York Comic Con, and Comic Book City Con, wants to get a Batwoman tattoo and write a graphic novel, and one of her canine teeth is in backwards.