BlizzCon 2009: How far along is the development of Cataclysm?

Blizzard's Lead Level Designer on World of Warcraft, Cory Stockton, has stated that Cataclysm's development began before Wrath shipped (there's a surprise ...) but it's obviously futher along than many might have thought and then Mike Morhaime hesitantly confirmed the game was slated to be released in 2010 along with StarCraft II. So when exactly could we expect to see the third World of Warcraft expansion?
The fact that something, even if it's just the Goblin and Worgen starter areas, is available to play is a sign that the game is farther along in development than Wrath was when it was announced. However it is, Wrath which may well determine when we see Cataclysm. Less than a year after its release, we are nearly at the end of Arthas's story, with patch 3.2.2 due to hit in November to tie in with the game's fifth anniversary celebrations. I cannot believe patch 3.3 (which will include Icecrown Citadel) won't be be released before 2010. In fact I'm guessing it will hit in time for Christmas.
Last year, we had Wrath arrive just in time for the holidays and while I doubt Cataclysm will launch before 2010, it seems likely that another mini-expansion sized patch will be released before the holiday season, or in the early months of 2010 at the latest. Blizzard have confirmed, unlike The Burning Crusade, that Wrath will only have three large patches in the storyline, with Icecrown Citadel and the confrontation with Arthas ending the expansion storyline. So, this effectively leaves us waiting, lingering in anticipation until the new expansion hits. Even if Icecrown Citadel is epic, a massive raid which will tax even Ensidia and Vodka, it will not last forever. Indeed all of the Wrath endgame - with the exception of Algalon - was beaten in days, a drastic difference from raids like Black Temple, Gruul and Karazhan.
Even if patch 3.3 were to launch in the earliest months of 2010, there's no way Blizzard would wait too long before providing us with new content. Boredom means players will be more inclined to drift away from WoW into other MMOs like Aion or find their eyes turning to other upcoming titles like Star Wars: The Old Republic. Yes they might do a mini content patch post 3.3, something like patch 3.2.2 with its surprise boss Onyxia, or they might even do something like Echoes of Doom (patch 3.0), introducing some of Cataclysm's content a little early just to tide people over for another month or so.
The average amount of time between patches seems to be around 3-4 months, and that's actually quite a short time. I'm not denying that revamping Azeroth, that creating an entirely new geography for this much-loved world is a difficult and time consuming task. But it's probably a lot easier to just recreate Azeroth nearly from scratch than it would be to make the environment able to support flying mounts. This has been the most requested feature since The Burning Crusade, but was also one of the most graphically challenging and time-consuming things for Blizzard to look at. As the old world will cease to exist come Cataclysm, this is no longer a problem. Yeah, Blizzard are completely transforming the world we know and love. No phasing, no ability to go back to the Barrens or Auberdine of our youth's. It's sort of scary but it also frees them from the restrictions of the classic world.
The trailer, which was premiered on Friday, also offers a hint or two for us to unravel. Rather than being set after we kill Arthas, it acknowledges that the fight is still in progress and creates a parallel storyline which will go unnoticed until Deathwing's eruption back into the world. Yeah, we were so busy up in Northrend we totally forgot to keep one eye back home. That's kind of an epic fail on the parts of the people of Azeroth.
However it's a great idea that breaks away from the formula which was used in both the original game and The Burning Crusade as well as Wrath. It goes like this: we killed something really, really big and then had a period of calm before the next Big Bad threatens Azeroth. This is no longer going to be the case, the trailer suggests Deathwing might sneak back into Azeroth while we're still busy in the Frozen North. In game time, this could mean, there is no respite for us. We go from downing Arthas to dealing with yet another insane Dragon Aspect. In real world time, however, there's definitely going to be some gap between the end of Wrath and the beginning of Cataclysm.
On top of all that, Blizzard have told us how they plan to release expansions every 12-14 months and we're nearly due. The raising of the level cap to 85 over 90 also suggests this expansion is becoming the expansion version of the patches we've been treated to over the last year -- the boundaries are blurring more than ever before. I believe they will miss the holiday season, but my gut is telling me that we could see the expansion as early as Q2 2010. Disagree with me if you wish -- after all, it's my gut -- and yet there are several factors which hint to a shorter time between announcement and launch, which is why I believe 2010 will be the Year of the Cataclysm.
Filed under: Patches, Analysis / Opinion, Blizzard, Expansions, BlizzCon, Cataclysm






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 6)
mindor Aug 23rd 2009 11:03AM
OMG!!! I hope it's soon!!!!! /excited
kabshiel Aug 23rd 2009 12:30PM
I'm guessing it'll be out by next summer.
Tirris Aug 23rd 2009 1:03PM
Yes. After all, as Stephen Colbert states, all knowledge derives from the gut.
Para Aug 23rd 2009 7:20PM
How many lead designers does wow have :s
Stephen Aug 24th 2009 1:19PM
Wrath WAS playable at the 2007 Blizzcon.
They had Howling Fjord and Utgarde Keep up at the demo stations. I played it.
Mike Schramm played it and blogged about it on Wowinsider.
http://www.wow.com/2007/08/03/first-impressions-wrath-of-the-lich-king-and-utgarde-keep/
jealouspirate Aug 23rd 2009 11:14AM
I want to play Cataclysm as much as anyone, but we'll see. They may be farther along in development than Wrath was at last year's Blizzcon, but I think it's pretty clear that Cataclysm is a much larger undertaking, which means a longer development time overall than Wrath.
Gilgamesh Aug 23rd 2009 11:43AM
Nonsense. It's cheaper and easier to revamp old stuff which is the majority of this expansion. The original plan for the Maelstrom was a lot more interesting - which got scrapped in favor of a faster development cycle. gg Activision
seanthehorde Aug 23rd 2009 11:50AM
By faster you mean has taken 2-3 years right?
Oh yeah and don't forget that Activision has only recently bought Blizzard. This means that it wasn't Activisions idea.
Dahras Aug 23rd 2009 5:59PM
Ummm, revamp? Actually they are REMAKING most of the old zones...
Gareth Aug 23rd 2009 6:15PM
Playing Everquest 2 these days they do go back and revamp zones since the game was released initially at the same time as WoW.
The revamped zones where all the quests were tidied up, mobs tidied up, art redone etc to improve the gameplay are released as free content patches, every 3 months, for a game with less revenue hen Blizzard has and that shows what can be done.
Some paid expansions also then recieve redone areas (the February expansion does include a revamp area but only because the new continent includes a new starter area), based on this I wouldn't think that revamping would take a massively high amount of effort.
Graham Aug 23rd 2009 6:46PM
The Activision merger has no effect on Blizzard. They continue to say this to everyone who insists on blaming Activision for everything they don't like.
This is WAY more than a revamp. This is the Maelstrom expansion we were hoping for and more. Blizzard is not just dusting off the cobwebs by returning to old Azeroth. The zones are completely CHANGING. There will also be seven brand new ones (nearly as big as Wrath already), two new races, a whole new talent system, a new profession that is tied to it, a new Wintergrasp, a new battleground, and TONS of new functionality for guilds.
And everyone seems to forget....Blizzard said that there will be a much bigger focus on endgame for this x-pac. People seem to think that Cataclysm is just for people who are leveling. Not the case. Don't worry. You will still be able to spend hours and hours killing things to get le3t purps. ;)
Mackgyver Aug 23rd 2009 11:08AM
inb4 QQers
Clydtsdk-Rivendare Aug 23rd 2009 12:52PM
Why'd this get downrated? People DO QQ about everything (just ask Onyxia post-3.2.2)
Lethality Aug 23rd 2009 11:09AM
Um, I played the Blood Elf starting area in October of 2005 at the first Blizzcon... and we didn't see the Burning Crusade until January of 2007.
It's at least a year away, and if the Wrath schedule is comparable, we'll see this in November of 2010.
Nazgûl Aug 23rd 2009 11:26AM
It's not. Wrath didn't start development until well after the Burning Crusade was finished. Cataclysm has been in development since before the Wrath closed beta.
March-May 2010.
Thenightman Aug 23rd 2009 11:32AM
The Wrath and BC schedules are not comparable here. Did you not read the post. "the game is farther along in development than Wrath was when it was announced."
"Blizzard have told us how they plan to release expansions every 12-14 months"
Going by this the game should be ready for release early 2010 but i think Q2 of 2010 is a fair estimate
lethality Aug 23rd 2009 11:29AM
I'm simply rebutting the reasoning that the author of the article used to assume that it was somehow "far along."
We are at least 5 months away from the release of Icecrown Citadel, the supposed last patch of WotLK. Then, you can assume there will be a big "bridge" patch at least 5 months after that, to connect everything and get it ready for the expansion. Mind you these times are conservative.
So right there you have AT LEAST 10 months before you will have a release date in sight for Cataclysm... which is why I am sayin November 2010.
Just. Like. Wrath.
therealbowser Aug 23rd 2009 11:46AM
If this doesn't come out until November 2010 we are going have nothing new to do for almost a year. Think about that for a while.
Snuzzle Aug 23rd 2009 2:10PM
@Lethality:
Even if it's ten months away, that's still a summer release date, not November 2010. Since we're in August here.
Not releasing it till November 2010 would mean that we are celebrating WoW's 6th anniversary. Think about that for a second. I strongly believe that we will get this patch in late Q1/early Q2 2010.
I'm also hoping they'll drop 3.3 before the holidays. Why? 3.3 means the fixing of the instance server problem. With the holidays, everyone is going to be home and a lot of people will be playing WoW to relieve some of the holiday stress. Which means the instance problem will be even more strained. If the fix is in before that happens, it will be a godsend.
Snuzzle Aug 23rd 2009 2:12PM
I said patch, I meant pack. We will get this PACK in early Q2/late Q1. Bleh.