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Title: WoW Moviewatch: wow gold
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Blog Entry: WoW Moviewatch: wow gold I'm a man who likes to tank. If you find me in PvE content, it's almost always out there doing my very best to take as much damage as possible. It's kind of my thing. So when I first saw Ascension Gaming's This is Why I'm Prot, I was understandably excited. The song is a parody of This is Why I'm Hot with a protection warrior spin. Still, I think it probably applies to all tanks about equally, even if the song pokes a bit of fun at the protection paladin crowd. The music itself is fairly straightforward, and completely accessible. It's got a solid beat, and I'd actually love to hear the rapper do other work -- he felt pretty solid to me. The video itself was a little more bland. But if you consider dimoisbestb that the video is meant to be a vehicle for the music, it served its purpose very well. The flashing lyrics were slightly distracting. But if you view the machinima portion as being a little more trailer-like, and a little less music video, I think the whole thing comes across better. Seemingly in response to having lost the wow gold license wow power leveling to operate World of Warcraft wow gold in China, online firm The9 aion gold has launched a website for its upcoming, similarly titled World of Fight. Assuming we know the password length, which we do not, and assuming every character we can use has an alternate printable character via the shift key which they don't, allowing a larger character set via caps etc would still be far less secure than adding an additional character. imagine you have a 10 character password in lower case. now make one of these characters able to be upper case (it doesn't have to be) note: extra keystroke required(shift key). the password has at most twice as many possibilities(yay?). now take an eleven character password, also requiring one extra keystroke. Assuming you have more than two keys on your keyboard, a longer password is far better and takes the same number of keystrokes. Just as easy to remember, many times more secure. The similarities between Blizzard’s hit MMO wow power leveling and The9’s latest don’t end at its moniker though. I think one of the reasons many people discount account security is because most account compromise aren't genuine. I was in a raid last week with a person who was bitching up a storm about how slow Blizzard was to respond to his "hacked" account. As the details come forth it turned out that the account wasn't hacked by any ordinary definition of that term. He had lent his account name and password to his roomate so he could try out the game. His roommate then deleted two of his level 80 toons as a "joke". While we can’t comment on wow gold the actual gameplay, I suspect that a very large percentage of Blizzard's time is wasted on these type of "hacks". Rather than admitting to the truth to Blizzard, they blame it on gold scammers and so on. No amount of account security reminders or authenticators is going to stop this type of "hacking". .as Gamasutra points out both the website’s , and the game’s official logo wow power leveling (seen above) are incredibly similar to the Chinese version of World of Warcraft. Bliz should just make the authenticators mandatory already, forum whiners be damned. They're cheap, easy to use, and highly effective, even for luddites. No reason not too, and would save tons of headaches for both Blizzard and the playerbase. Assuming World of Fight is a blatant copy of World of Warcraft, one wonders what sort of legal recourse Blizzard wow gold might have. China has long been known for its, um, “relaxed” copyright laws, and given the country’s inherent nationalism, I can’t see a Chinese judge ruling in favor of an American firm over a Chinese one. This was a fun video, and I'd definitely like to hear more from the performer. And at the end of the day, this is why I'm prot. =================================================1 Related Article: wow gold wow gold wow gold wow gold wow gold