The other element that adds to the unease is the fact that players be waiting an extra week before they can confront the Jailer WoTLK Gold. The raid will begin to open at the beginning of March (a week following 9.2's February 22 release) The final three bosses will be unveiled on March 8. So it's going to be several weeks until players are able to learn the end of the story , and the fate of characters like the Jailer and Sylvanas Two of the main characters from Shadowlands who have divided many members of the game's fanbase.

It's a tale that in general hasn't been well-received by many fans. The Jailer--the expansion's big bad--has become retroactively linked to huge expanses of World of Warcraft lore dating all the way in time to World of Warcraft. The entire millennium-long scheme is more than confusing, leading some fans to joke about him as playing an unsolved games of 4D Chess that no one else can comprehend.

Sylvanas and her storyline might be seen in a different way. A character that has been a long-time fan favorite and her current role as a genocidal war criminal and the Jailer's deputy-in-command has left a bad taste in the mouths of a lot of players. The issue that Sylvanas and then betrayed Jailer's position at the end of patch 9.1 with what appears to be a whim gave more than some players a bit of narrative whiplash. What exactly, all of sudden what character has committed genocide and showed no regret, suddenly changing his heart? It's unclear whether fans will be given a precise answer to that question, but lead quest designer Maria Hamilton said that the story of Sylvanas and the larger storyline of Shadowlands is being planned out at a high-level. The smaller details are getting more fleshed-out as time goes on.

"I think that people should be satisfied," Hamilton said in relation to Sylvanas' story. "There will always be those who are not. It's a fine line cross and we'll try our best. We try to tell the most compelling possible story and buy WoTLK Gold make sure that the characters are appropriately represented and depicted."