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It has been a while since I last checked the all the WoW Gold sellers but it seems at least a small change has happened. I know you all want:

1.) cheap World of Warcraft gold
2.) the WoW gold to be delivered really fast
3.) a really good service, meaning someone trustworthy

For this purpose we have created theses three pages which should be quite helpful:

Cheap WoW Gold
Fast delieverd WoW Gold
Best service WoW gold

The best WoW Gold seller all in all right now is RandyRun:
RandyRun.com - World of Warcraft Gold, WoW Powerleveling, ...

World of Warcraft

The Cheapest WoW Gold you can get at Swagvault:


And the Fastest WoW Gold you may get at MMOstreet:

wow broom mountHope everyone is having as much fun with their Headless Horseman brooms these days during the Hallow’s End event in WoW as me, but with an incorrect tooltip and heaps of confusion about just how long they’ll last, most wow players aren’t quite sure just how much fun they’re going to have.

Bornakk clears up some of the confusion (which he also had a hand in creating), saying that “the wow items with a duration on them won’t all vanish on November first, you just won’t be able to get any new ones.” So now here is the factual summary of the official words on blizzard regarding your beloved wow broom mounts:

  1. They last for 14 days, not just for one ride.
  2. They last for 14 days of played wow game time on the character that possesses them, not 14 days of real time, and extending beyond the Hallow’s End event for however long you keep them on an unplayed wow character.

Now, just think about how those of you who were patient and saved up your brooms on an alt can try and sell them later on when Hallow’s End is over in the AH, when people still wish they could ride in witchy (or Quidditchy) style, but are the brooms are even more rare than the twin blades! Do you think they’ll be worth something? A bet in June they will be more expensive than an wow epic mount, so ust the chance to earn 10000g wow gold or more;)

Did you ever thuoght about playing virtual games in your workplace?

Well, I’ve told you before about how different activities in World of Warcraft can actually help you be better at your job, but now the BBC has posted an article examining how game mechanics from games like WoW can actually help your company help you work better. According to the ESRB, the average wow gamer isn’t a teen after school any more– he’s 33 and has been gaming for 10 years. And because so many more professionals nowadays know the basics of gaming, employers are starting to apply those rules to the workplace to make everyone more productive. (in terma of earning wow gold)

One mechanic used is a form of “virtual currency” like “wow gold” in terms of emails and meeting time– send an email or hold a 15 minute meeting, and it costs you a wow gold or tokens, while wowgold/tokens can be earned in all kinds of ways. Not only does it keep employees on task, but it adds an extra layer of strategy and thought to the normal workday. Another wow game mechanic used by employers, says the BBC, is the idea of wow guilds and wow leveling rewards. “WOW Guilds” in the workplace are tracked along a point system,(like honor points) and the best wow guilds get the best projects and rewards (in this case money not wow gold).

Very interesting shit. While it sounds like good news for employers, I’m not sure how successful ideas like this would actually be among non-gamer employees– at some point, how good you are at your job would be determined not by your industry ability, but by your game-playing ability, and that doesn’t seem like a good outcome. But if employers find employees are willing to use these mechanics to make themselves more productive, everyone could benefit from the extra wow gold.

wow gold farmerIt’s a variation on the red state/blue state argument, in that it points out that there are actually more World of Warcraft players in the United States today than there are professional farmers. I mean real farmers not wow gold farmers! And so, says the piece, when someone, be they politician or pundit or newscaster, says that “the real America” is rural farmland where people are more likely to be milking cows than running Karazhan, they’re wrong - totally :)

There are a few problems with this argument, of course, one of which is admitted to in the article: farming and World of Warcraft-playing are hardly mutually exclusive. Just because you read blogs and play MMOs doesn’t mean you’re not a person who wakes up in the morning and gets your eggs out from under chickens. The other issue is that if you’re going to start fighting nostalgia, you’re going to lose. Every generation looks at the future (or in this case, the rapidly approaching present) and compares it unfavorably to the past. I’ve always thought it amazing that someday we will have someone in the White House who knows how to get 30 extra lives in Contra, and that person will probably look at the new holo-vid-games that come out in 2016 and say “when we were young, we played with buttons and thumbsticks!”

But back to the issue at hand: it’s true– America is becoming a technological, urban country, and whether you like it or not (politics completely aside, because I know how much you guys like those on this gaming blog), it’s a fact that a person on the street is more likely to know what day Brewfest starts rather than when the summer solstice hits. Sure, we’re not seeing the latest class changes on the evening news, but we are seeing World of Warcraft selling trucks, and whether newscasters and politicians are recognizing it or not, the MMO culture is becoming more and more massive every day.

Sunwell is coming along nicely,” says Tigole (a.k.a. Jeffery Kaplan). “It will be on the PTR shortly after wow patch 2.3 goes to the live realms. We still need to perfect wow patch 2.3 a bit on the PTR.

There it is.

Most of us suspected that wow patch 2.4 would be the big Sunwell patch, but now it’s official. There’s going to be lots of new instancing coming up once all the big changes in wow patch 2.3 go live. Tigole even adds that “The 5 person wow dungeon is complete and the 25 person wow raid instance is progressing nicely. There’s also a cool “public” area featuring brand new wow daily quests called Sunwell Isle.”

The 5-person wow dungeon plus even more wow daily quests are a bit more to look forward to for those casual gamers who thought all their wow goodies were finished in wow patch 2.3, and that wow patch 2.4 would be almost entirely about the new 25-person raid dungeon. For the more hardcore-inclined among us, this will be the startling conclusion to The Burning Crusade expansion, the last big raid before Wrath of the Lich King! How does it feel? Exciting? Nostalgic? More of the same?