Heck, if you want a pseudo-nerf? Make it so when the Broken Shore tower gets “rebuilt” - it gives a 5-10% Health/Damage/Healing buff to players, but if you complete the tower while this is up, you do not get credit towards the book achievement or the 36 specs achievement. The rest of Legion Timewalking can rotate as usual. You’re breeding the FOMO in people, and all this will do is chase people away from the game. The issue is the time limited factor of it. I stand by my belief that the Mage Tower is horribly overtuned.īut if I knew the mage tower was there to try anytime I wanted to, and had unlimited time to SLOWLY work on the perfect gear set for it? I wouldn’t mind as much. Especially if Legion Timewalking unfortunately aligns with a holiday week like this week. (Every 2-3 years, we’ll have 3 weeks)įor people with school, work, etc.? That’s even less. Hopefully by the time patch 10.1.5 arrives with Battle for Azeroth Timewalking, the schedule will be revamped in such a way to make Timewalking events more frequent, so it’s a little easier to collect our Timewalking rewards.A lot of the problems that me and many others have is that the Mage Tower is a temporary thing. With each specific Timewalking event only available three times a year, getting the rewards from them is going to become a lot harder even with the regular schedule. It is unknown if this “bug” will make it to live with patch 9.1.5, but until Blizzard tells us otherwise it is best to assume that it will follow the schedule outlined above. Note that on the PTR the calendar was incorrect for Legion Timewalking after the December event - it appeared directly adjacent to Pandaria Timewalking while there is also a gap when it is expected to be held. This means that there are 18 weeks between events, so if you miss Legion Timewalking in December or aren’t able to complete all your goals in the initial fortnight, you will not be able to make more attempts until April 12th, 2022, and after that, the week of August 16th. Burning Crusade Timewalking will thus be held starting on December 28th (three weeks after the start of Legion the fact that Legion Timewalking will take place over two weeks the first time does not impact this), Wrath Timewalking will follow on January 18th, and so on. Fortunately we won’t have to wait too much longer, as information on the PTR has confirmed that it’ll first be held on December 7th and will last for two weeks the first time it’s held, giving players plenty of chances to brave the Mage Tower.Īs of the arrival of Legion Timewalking, all Timewalking events will be moving to a strict every three weeks schedule (previously they would occur every three or four weeks). That means there’s a bit of a delay before we see the first Legion Timewalking event. With Pandaria Timewalking having completed just one week prior, it would be too soon to premier Legion Timewalking with the patch, and in addition Blizzard plans to keep the current Timewalking rotation intact, so Draenor Timewalking will occur as scheduled on November 9th. World of Warcraft Shadowlands patch 9.1.5 is now live, and with it will come Legion Timewalking and the return of the Mage Tower for two weeks starting on December 7th, but the Mage Tower gets an additional two weeks on top of that, and will close with maintenance in the first week of January.
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