The enthusiasm surrounding the article was a clear testament to the gullibility of AI-generated content. WoW fans rejoiced as the article went live, and to add to the hilarity, a senior developer from the World of Warcraft team even joined in, expressing his relief at being able to discuss Glorbo at last. These absurdities ranged from the non-existent “mandatory item Klikclac” to an “epic quest to depose Quackion, the Aspect of Ducks,” and even the imaginary “small, cosy island” of Zoop. Not only that, the piece listed a series of other outlandish and entirely fabricated features that had been playfully mentioned in different subreddit threads. The gaming site, Zleague, fell for the ruse and published an article presenting Glorbo as a genuine and upcoming feature. To their delight, the trap worked like a charm. They crafted exciting posts about a fictional game feature they called “Glorbo.” The catch? Glorbo was entirely fictitious and had no existence within the actual game. Determined to expose this potential automated deception, they cleverly laid a trap. It all began when members of the WoW subreddit started to suspect that their discussions were being mined by a bot to create news stories. Recently, these avid players have claimed a triumphant victory over AI after a gaming website unknowingly published a false article, taking inspiration from their Reddit posts. If I stop playing for a couple of weeks/months, my money is going down the toilet.In the dynamic realm of gaming and technology, even artificial intelligence is no match for the cunning wit of World of Warcraft (WoW) fans. If I'm not getting full value out of it, I'm wasting my money. The second I start paying monthly for something, for me at least it turns entertainment into a chore. It's not that I don't think ESO plus is a fair price, I think it is, but for personal reason I refuse to pay subscription services for games I play. I'm also not denying the pros of sunscription but it is not a necessity nor a recommendation on my behalf (in my country buying the newest expansion costs less than the subscription).Įdit: to bring another point of view into this subscription based gameplay and how it does prevent a player from experiencing the game to the fullest is the following statement from a fellow gamer. Doing what the game wants you to do you will get enough money to buy the storage you need anyways tbh. I play the game to it's fullest, newest expansion and all the things but never had any kind of need for the crafting bag. Problem being the subscription will take much more money from you than buying the things you want individually. I buy all these things, many ppl don't subscribe to ESO, for casuals and mid-hardcore gamers it's not even necessary. The future for WoW and Blizzard will be interesting to see in the hands of the Microsoft Overlords. We never thought that Blizzard would let Activision games like CoD on the launcher, but look at it now. It will mean we got alot more players coming into the game, which is a very positive thing for WoW. Regardless, if Microsoft acquires the rights over all Activision Blizzards IP's and they put WoW onto the Gamepass. Would Microsoft push Blizzard users or WoW players into buying the Gamepass instead to play WoW? And why wouldn't you just pay the $15.00 for the Gamepass, where you get access to a ton of games WoW included. Xbox Ultimate Gamepass is $15.00 a month, WoW is $15.00 as well. A quick google search says 25 Million Active Subs, PC Subscribers get access to PC games as well. To those here that don't pay attention to Microsoft or Xbox may not know how big the Gamepass really is. Once or if Microsoft gets full rights of Activision Blizzard is it possible they would put WoW onto the Gamepass?
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |