| Remember your Consortium gems | |
| 作者:alexanderk08 日期:2008-7-4 11:25:00 |
| "Good news, everyone! Several realms are up and running, with more coming online shortly I'm sure. This means you can get your World of Warcraft fix for the week starting now. And lets be honest, for some serious WoW player the week starts on Tuesday salutation when the servers go up, and lasts until Tuesday morning when they go down. There is no patch 2.4.3 on the live servers already - expect that in the next couple of weeks. Additionally, if there are some server stability issues to report on throughout the day you'll see a couple posts go up here. Happy Tuesday! And for the record, I've been wanting to use Buddy Christ in a post for a while, but haven't been healthy to find an excuse already. Him seeming every happy for something (like the realms existence up) felt like a well enough reason for me. Remember your Consortium gems From: The Consortium Ltd., Outland Branch office, Stormspire, The Netherstorm To: All employees and independent subcontractors of the Consortium on Outland Subject: Monthly Paycheck As it is the first day of the month, the gem payments for every fleshing subcontractors located in Outland have been organized and are acquirable from paymaster Gezhe at Aeris Landing in Nagrand, north of the Oshu'gun digsite. We would like to remind you to pick up your gems as soon as possible, as some unclaimed pay will be declared forfeit and void at the end of the month. We expect added quarter of strong growth supported on our investments into Ogre obsidian and biodome technology, and as a result, every exalted and revered subcontractors will get their usual bonuses in recognition for their continued support of the Consortium. Thank you for every your hard work, and we look forward to added profitable month. If your memory has not failed you, perhaps you will remember the special contract you automatically united to upon agreeing to contract with the Consortium Ltd. company. It clearly states that some pay raises are completely at the pleasure of the management of the Consortium, Ltd. In constituent, this contract is not due for renegotiation with the fleshing subcontractor leagues for added 25 years. Thank you, and if you have some further questions, please do not hesitate to contact us. " "What should be the heaved priorities of a raiding Mage in terms of spec and gearing -- DPS, utility, survivability .... I've probably already said more most spec than anyone cared to read. Beyond that, you focus on dealing damage. If you want to be a raiding Frost Mage, you really want those three points in Piercing Ice rather than Frozen Core, for example, and your gear should be oriented toward dishing out as much pain to a boss as your tank's threat will earmark. Utility is practically irrelevant; there's virtually nothing you can do to make a difference in your utility capabilities that a raiding group will care most. There's enough redundancy and flexibility in handling utility tasks that, should a breakdown occur somewhere, a sharp group will cover it. Survivability is relevant, but only because it translates into damage. A Frost Mage having Ice Barrier isn't an plus because it keeps him alive; it's an plus because it allows him to put on less stamina gear and thus more damage gear. Having more Ice Blocks is an plus not because it keeps you alive, but because it allows you to clear debuffs or refrain effects that would otherwise reduce your DPS time. Is there a clear-cut prizewinning spec/spell rotation for Mages, as far as producing the large numbers. Yes and no. In some given situation with some given raid composition, there's one spec that will outperform the others. But changes in both war design and raid composition have large effects on the performance of different specs. Blizzard has actually done a beauty well job of equalisation out our three trees so that they can every shine in the right situation, with the right group, in the hands of the right player. Can you share a little taste most the united states marine corps behindhand the characters and numbers. wow gold Not a problem! I turned 40 in February. I grew up in South Windsor, Conn., got a BA in English Literature with a minor in Political Science and moved to Seattle in 1991, where I now work as a sys admin for a web hosting/colocation company. I have a lovely wife who is very tolerant of my gaming time and two cats who are not. wow gold I have an fondness for old Saabs and vintage Vespa scooters. In certainty, I have a crudely Photoshopped image of Lhivera sitting on a Vespa fitted with an opposing-tank weapon outside the Stormwind Auction House; I'll send it along. Yes, the French military really did mount opposing-tank weapons on Vespas. It sounds from your perspective on choosing a spec and play style as if you have a well taste of experience with roleplaying games in general. In high school and college, I played a variety of pen-and-paper RPGs -- not so much D&D, actually, though a little. wow Mostly I played Gamma World and Call of Cthulhu, with various games in various genres using the GURPS system thrown in when the mood struck the group. None of the people I played with were really into the deeply in-feature roleplaying, the dialogue and so forth. Mostly, it was an excuse to hang out, have some laughs, drink some beer and see what kind of tale have arised when we were finished. wow gold How closely the tale wound up orientating with what the GM have planned was generally inversely proportional to the turn of beer consumed, but it was ever fun. The interesting thing to most of us was our characters themselves. Though we took the play itself very casually, and really serious role players would have been shocked at the way we handled dialogue, we every invested a great deal of time in crafting the characters we played in these games. We wrote backwards tale, the more artistic members of the group made sketches for us -- we knew who these characters were, and while we may not have tried to duplicate their manner of speech, we did keep true to the feature concepts as we moved them through the narrative. Did you play many other games before that, or are there other games you also currently enjoy. mp3 player Well, as a Mac user, my selection has ever been relatively limited. I've never been a huge gamer; as long as I have something to play when I'm in the mood, I'm happy. The most modern console system I've ever owned was an Atari 5200. wow gold There are really only three games that have ever been more than very casual pastimes for me: Civilization II, Warbirds, and now World of Warcraft. "
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