World Of WarCraft Name Change

If you ever wanted to change your name in World of Warcraft, I have good news and bad news for you. The bad news is: you have to pay $10. The good news is: you can finally do it! We’re happy to announce that through the wonders of modern gnomish engineering, you are now able to change your characters’ names. Finally, you can turn the moniker that seemed like a good idea at the time into something more befitting your true standing in World of Warcraft. Visit Account Management ( https://www.worldofwarcraft.com/account/ ) to begin the paid character-name-change process. The fee is $10 per name change. As with our recent addition of voice chat to the game, this feature is being rolled out across all realms in several phases. The first-phase realms are listed in this forum post. Enjoy this new feature and the subsequent effect that your bold new name will have on friends and foes alike. For some this may be great news.

Lichborne: The 2008 Death Knight year in review

Welcome to first 2009 installment of Lichborne, the WoW Insider Death Knight column. Welcome to 2009, which I am, completely arbitrarily, declaring the year of the Death Knight. Sure, Death Knights were first announced back in 2007, but 2008 was when they took shape and showed up in playable form, and 2009 will be the first full year that they’ve been on the live servers. Let’s look back then, at 2008, and see some of the milestones in the creation of my favorite new class and yours. Calm before the Storm The first Death Knight article to be posted on WoW Insider in 2008 came on the first of January, dealt with the fear of many that Death Knights would be so awesome that everyone would roll one, and there’d be no-one to play the “normal” classes. Such a fear, I think, hasn’t come to past. There are many like me who did shelve their old characters to play their Death Knight, of course, but I still see more than enough of most other classes in the game. Well, I could use a few more healers, but that’s what the next expansion is for, right? Still, it’s