Tuesday, August 26, 2025
Blaugust 2025: How I Come Up With Things to Write About
Monday, August 25, 2025
Blaugust 2025: Update on Leveling
I finally managed to ding 80 on the Alliance Shaman today, making it my 39th max-level character. It had been 24 days since I last hit 80 on an alt, making the longest stretch in a while without a new ding. That's partially because of my travel schedule, and partially due to the latest content, but we're back to full-on leveling mode now.
Up next is a Horde Warlock. I'm done with my first two realms, other than some low-level allied race characters, and I'm now focused on finishing up the third realm. The leveling time on the shaman wasn't great, as near as I can tell, but there's no rush now with the timing on Midnight being fairly clear.
I'm debating just trying straight delve leveling on this next character, other than doing the first few quest hubs in the first War Within zone, just to see how that feels. It's a demonology warlock, and those are pretty good in delves right now, so we'll see how that works.
As mentioned previously, after that will be my original mage, then warrior, monk, another mage, demon hunter, and then rogue. And that's it for the 50s.
A relatively short update for today, but I will be back tomorrow. I'm trying to finish strong with Blaugust!
Cheers,
Joar
Friday, August 22, 2025
Blaugust 2025: My Initial Thoughts on Midnight
I'd like to lay out my initial thoughts on Midnight, as well as talk about my plans for the expansion, once it finally gets here.
The storyline is a solid continuation of what we've seen so far in War Within. I will say, during the scene in the trailer where Lady Liadrin was begging for help at the Sunwell and someone put their hands on her shoulder, I was kind of hoping it would be Anduin and Faerin coming to help. I think they missed an opportunity there to bring us a reenergized Anduin.
So far, everything I've seen about the game looks fine. I'm super glad that our new delve companion for this expansion is going to be Not Brann. It looks like there will be lots of dungeons and delves available at release, which is always good with me.
The new Prey gameplay looks interesting, but I'm not sure how well it will fit my casual play style yet. Finally, housing looks interesting, so I'll be eager to explore it a bit.
Pre-ordering the game will give me a level 80 boost, which raises the question of what to do with what will then be my 51st alt. Right now, I'm pretty well balanced between Alliance and Horde, with 24 Alliance and 26 Horde, which suggests I lean more towards the Alliance.
When I count my various classes, I'm also well-balanced. I have 7 warlocks, 6 hunters, 5 druids, 4 each of paladin, shaman, mage, and rogue, 3 each of death knight, demon hunter, warrior, priest, and monk, and finally only a single Evoker. So, just to bring Evoker up a bit, I'm leaning towards having the boost be an Alliance Dracthyr Evoker, and then that will let me do the Haranir Allied Race character as a Priest, which will bring that up in line with some of my other favorite classes.
The Alliance Shaman that I'm leveling now is coming along well and just hit level 76. I'm heading out of town for a water polo tournament with the youngest Joarling this weekend, so I won't have much play time, but hopefully I can get this guy finished up by the end of next week and move on to the Warlock. Given that we probably won't get the new expansion until June, I have plenty of time to level this last group of alts.
That's the update for now!
Cheers,
Joar
Thursday, August 21, 2025
Blaugust 2025: The Evolution of World of Warcraft for a Casual
When I first set foot in Azeroth, it was a different world — literally. World of Warcraft was new, sprawling, and intimidating in that way only early MMOs could be. Quests weren’t always clear, mounts weren’t handed out like candy at level 10, and the idea of flying over entire zones was the stuff of imagination. But for me, it wasn’t just about the mechanics or the graphics. WoW was about connection — especially with my teenage son, who lived a good 450 miles away. Logging in together gave us a world we could share, no matter the physical distance. That foundation is part of why I’ve kept playing all these years.
Over time, though, WoW itself has gone through almost as many phases as my roster of alts. Each expansion reshapes the experience, and I’ve found myself adapting right along with it. In the early years, leveling felt like a marathon — long, sometimes grueling, but incredibly satisfying when you finally crossed the finish line. I still remember grinding mobs for that last sliver of XP, watching my Warlock Joar ding with a sense of triumph that today’s streamlined questing can’t quite replicate.
Then came the expansions that changed everything: flying mounts that opened up the skies, dungeon finders that made group content easier, and entire continents of new lore to dig into. Every time, Blizzard reimagined how the game worked, and every time, I had to decide how I wanted to interact with it. Some changes I embraced wholeheartedly. Others I grumbled about before eventually coming around — usually after realizing my fifth alt could level faster than ever before.
That’s part of what has kept WoW fresh for me. The game doesn’t stay the same, and neither does my relationship with it. In one expansion, I might be all about raiding schedules and chasing gear. In another, I’m perfectly content to poke along with alts, enjoying the storylines and leveling experiences. My main — Joar the Warlock — is always there, steady and reliable. But the cast of supporting characters shifts with every expansion, depending on which class catches my fancy at the time.
And then there’s the blogging. If WoW is the canvas, the blog has been my sketchbook. Every new mechanic, every new class obsession, every expansion that threw me for a loop — it’s all recorded. Looking back, I can see not just how WoW evolved, but how I did too. There are posts about raid nights that went brilliantly, others about leveling frustrations, and still others about family life woven in between dungeon runs. It’s a chronicle of more than just a game.
WoW today is sleeker, faster, and in some ways friendlier to casual players than it ever was in the early days. And I’ve shifted too — I’m not grinding endless raid nights like I once did, but I still find joy in exploring new content, tinkering with alts, and seeing how my old Warlock fits into each new era. That’s the beauty of a game that keeps reinventing itself: I get to reinvent how I interact with it, without ever really leaving Azeroth behind.
Wednesday, August 20, 2025
Blaugust 2025: Back to Leveling
Tuesday, August 19, 2025
Blaugust 2025: Back to School
It's one of those "not-great" Pittsburgh area houses, but we were pretty surprised that it was reasonably clean. His other roommates had just left a bunch of crap all over the place on the ground floor, so they've got some work to do to get it fully ready, but it seems like he'll be fine. In any case, he just needs to get through this year, and then he'll be starting a full-time job back in Boston on June 15th of next year.
Friday, August 15, 2025
Blaugust 2025: Initial Thoughts on K'aresh
Thursday, August 14, 2025
Blaugust 2025: Buried Under an XBox
If these blog posts are starting to feel like I'm stalling, and not really on my normal content coverage, you're absolutely correct. Due to out-of-town swim meets, a later vacation, and work commitments, I haven't played any video games since August 2nd. I'm finally going to get some play time tomorrow, so you can expect a resumption of the normal content starting tomorrow.
However, we're moving the middle Joarling back to college on Monday of next week, so I'm still not going to be back to my normal pace of game play for another week or two. In the meantime, in my earnest desire to continue to participate in Blaugust, you're getting other stuff!
I'm a finance and accounting person by background and work for a large, global public company. Some of the more well-read blog posts that I had several years ago were regular analyses that I used to do of Activision-Blizzard's regular earnings calls and public filings. There was a lot of good information in there about the number of subscriptions or monthly active users. You could generally figure out how much money they were making off of the game and how that compared to their other gaming properties. Gradually, even with Activision-Blizzard, as the company acquired other companies and expanded its game offerings, the information became diluted and buried among other details. So I stopped doing them at one point.
Here's a link to one that I did back in 2016: Analysis of 2nd Quarter Earnings
I woke up this morning thinking it would be interesting to see if anything could be located about World of Warcraft within its new corporate overlord, Microsoft.
Broadly speaking, Microsoft reports its financial information under three particular business segments: Productivity and Business Process, Intelligent Cloud, and More Personal Computing. Those first two segments include things like Windows and Microsoft 365, Azure, LinkedIn, Dynamics, etc.
The last segment, More Personal Computing, includes Windows OEM and Device revenue, such as Surface tablets, plus advertising and search revenue, and finally, Xbox content and services.
So, where is Activision Blizzard in this array of business segments and reporting categories? It's under Xbox content and services. It seems like a sad and unfortunate ending for our beloved game and brand. Call of Duty can at least be played on an Xbox (I think), but it seems like an odd place to have World of Warcraft, Hearthstone, and, of course, Candy Crush.
So my hunt for data about World of Warcraft came to a crushing end, finding it even more hopelessly buried than it was in the final days of Activision Blizzard.
Wednesday, August 13, 2025
Blaugust 2025: Why I Keep Playing and Blogging
Every August, without fail, I find myself sitting down at the keyboard for Blaugust. I’ve been doing this long enough now that it feels like a personal holiday — part tradition, part self-imposed challenge, part excuse to drink too much coffee while mulling over screenshots of my latest alt leveling progress. Some people track their lives in photo albums or journals. I do it in blog posts, patch notes, and a suspicious number of level-capped characters.
Blaugust anchors my writing in a way nothing else quite does. It’s a yearly reminder to pause and reflect on where I’ve been — in game, in life, and sometimes both at once. August is usually busy in the real world: family events, summer travels, and the occasional “how did this entire weekend vanish?” mystery. But it’s also when I’m most likely to take stock of my in-game journey, from my stalwart Horde Warlock, the original Joar, to whatever roster of alts has captured my attention this expansion.
That’s the funny thing: Joar is a constant. No matter the expansion, leveling him is always pure enjoyment for me. He’s my touchstone — my reminder of the early days of Azeroth, when the world was fresh and everything felt enormous. But my other favorites? Those change like the seasons. In one expansion I might swear by a Mage and a Paladin. The next, it’s all about my Druid and Hunter. And then, just to keep me on my toes, a class I never gave much thought to suddenly becomes my obsession for months. It’s like my alt preferences have their own expansion-specific personality, and I never know which version I’m going to get until I dive in.
When I first started playing World of Warcraft, my purpose was simple and not at all about chasing achievement points or expansion meta goals. My son — now 29 — was a teenager then, and WoW was our shared space. His mom and I were divorced, and we lived about 450 miles apart, so there were long stretches where we didn’t see each other in person. Azeroth became the bridge between us. We could explore, quest, and chat while working toward something together, even if we were in completely different states. It was a surprisingly great way to stay connected despite the physical distance, and for that, I’ll always be grateful.
Of course, life moved on. He grew up, moved on to other things, and I stayed in Azeroth — both as a player and as a blogger. By then, WoW had become more than just a way to connect with my son. It was my own outlet — a hobby that gave me both a virtual world to explore and a reason to sit down and put words together. And once you’ve gotten used to chronicling your adventures, it’s hard to stop. Especially when you can look back years later and remember exactly what you were doing in game and in life in, say, August 2014.
That’s the part of blogging I treasure the most. It’s a record — not just of bosses downed and alts leveled, but of where I was in life at the time. One post might start with my raid progress and end with a paragraph about driving halfway across the state for a family swim meet. Another might be mostly about leveling my seventeenth alt to max level, but somewhere in there I’ll mention that the weather was unreasonably hot and the dog wouldn’t stop barking at squirrels. Over the years, those little details add up to something more than just a gaming log. They tell my story.
And sure, there’s a selfish joy in seeing how much I’ve done in game. Looking at a list of max-level characters is a little like pulling out a box of old medals or ticket stubs — proof of time well spent, or at least time enjoyably wasted. But there’s also the reminder that this hobby has been a thread running through a big part of my life. It’s been there during career changes, family milestones, and the normal chaos of everyday living.
Blogging is what ties all that together. Without it, those moments — both in game and out — might fade into vague memory. With it, they’re preserved, complete with the mood, the jokes, and even the occasional typo. The act of writing about my adventures makes them feel more solid somehow, more real. And when I go back and read posts from five or ten years ago, I’m often surprised by how clearly I can remember those times, even down to what was on my action bar.
So yes, Blaugust is my yearly excuse to keep this tradition going. It’s the nudge I sometimes need to remember that even if I’m not chasing the newest raid tier or racing to max level character number 38, there’s value in sitting down to share my corner of Azeroth — and my corner of the real world — with anyone who wants to read it. The game may change, my alt roster may rotate wildly, and my life outside Azeroth will keep throwing me curveballs. But as long as I can log in, play a little, and then sit down to tell the story, I’ll keep at it.
Because in the end, blogging isn’t just about recording what I do in game. It’s about capturing how the game has been a part of my life all these years — from long-distance bonding sessions with my teenage son, to quiet evenings after work, to this very August, where Joar is once again leading the way through whatever adventures this expansion holds. And if I can throw in a little humor, a few screenshots, and maybe an overlong tangent about squirrels or swim meets, well, that’s just part of the tradition
Tuesday, August 12, 2025
Blaugust 2025: Swimming Junior Nationals
Friday, August 1, 2025
Blaugust 2025
One of these years, I will go back and count the number of times I've done Blaugust. In 2023, I posted that it was the 4th or 5th time I had done it. I continue to think it's the 4th or 5th time I've done it, which is probably a sign that I'm getting old more than anything, and my memory isn't what it used to be. I even did it during the pandemic, when it was Blapril instead of Blaugust. I actually do think this is my 5th year.
Normally, in Blaugust, this first post is intended to tell the story of how you got into blogging and what your blog is normally about. Still, honestly, I've done a much better job of that in earlier years, and it feels unnecessary to tell the story again rather than just pointing you to the previous examples:
https://wowaltaddiction.blogspot.com/2023/08/blaugust-2023-its-not-you-its-me.html
https://wowaltaddiction.blogspot.com/2022/08/blaugust-2022-evolution-of-wow-alt.html
(That last one is really the best overview.)
https://wowaltaddiction.blogspot.com/2020/03/blapril-2020-how-i-started-blogging.html
Although, as you can tell from the posts above, this blog has taken a few detours over the years, it is now mostly back to its original theme, primarily focused on alt leveling in World of Warcraft.
I am continuing to make pretty good progress in that area. I just recently got my 37th character to max level, and number 38 is currently sitting at level 79. This one has been an Elemental Shaman, which doesn't feel quite as good as it did the first time I leveled it this xpac. So I have another shaman coming up right after this, and I'm going to go back to enhancement.
My play time during July was almost all World of Warcraft focused. I had a few minutes here and there in ESO and Guild Wars 2, but clocked a solid 34 hours in World of Warcraft. Which, interestingly enough, is pretty much the same as June. I managed to get 5 characters to max level during the month, which is decent.
I'm going to have a bit of a content draught during the early part of Blaugust. I'm currently in California at a swim meet with my youngest. We're extending our stay here next week for a vacation. As soon as I get home on the 10th, I'll turn around and drive to Boston on the 11th to pick up my middle son from his internship and bring him home on the 12th. So it may be until the 13th or later until I post again. August tends to be a crazy time for me because of kids' sports and the beginning of school, so this is not unusual.
That's it for now!
Cheers,
Joar
In the Home Stretch
I've finished leveling the Alliance Mage and started a Horde Warrior on my third realm. The leveling time on the Alliance Mage was disa...
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One of my WoW goals that has always been floating randomly out in the ether somewhere was to level a toon of each class to 80. I've see...
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Despite not being around much for the first 10 days of the month, it still ended up being a pretty successful Blaugust for me, with 12 total...