You are correct Draech,
But the work was stopped after WoW became the success it is.
Remember Starcraft Ghost ?
There was a warcraft in the works too, but it died earlier than Ghost.
Blizzard cancelled the Warcraft RTS and then Starcraft Ghost went in 2005.
Why cause they knew the gravy train had arrived.
And yes I was a WoW player and had a great time, but age has made me more cynical (well a bit more cynical than I was).
If anyone believes that Diablo and Starcraft had been cancelled in their entirity for WoW then you are deluded.
Remember you never put all your eggs in one basket.
I have to agree with Snowplow in a way, it looks like a game which has been ported from the Xbox in its early days. I play it on 1900x1200 res with everything turned to 11 and it does not stutter. But then with the graphics it has it shouldn't.
I think the work for the port has already been done,they are just waiting for an acceptable period before unleashing it onto the console market.
A market which is a hell of lot less forgiving than the PC market.
But the work was stopped after WoW became the success it is.
Remember Starcraft Ghost ?
There was a warcraft in the works too, but it died earlier than Ghost.
Blizzard cancelled the Warcraft RTS and then Starcraft Ghost went in 2005.
Why cause they knew the gravy train had arrived.
And yes I was a WoW player and had a great time, but age has made me more cynical (well a bit more cynical than I was).
If anyone believes that Diablo and Starcraft had been cancelled in their entirity for WoW then you are deluded.
Remember you never put all your eggs in one basket.
I have to agree with Snowplow in a way, it looks like a game which has been ported from the Xbox in its early days. I play it on 1900x1200 res with everything turned to 11 and it does not stutter. But then with the graphics it has it shouldn't.
I think the work for the port has already been done,they are just waiting for an acceptable period before unleashing it onto the console market.
A market which is a hell of lot less forgiving than the PC market.