BlizzCon 2010: The view from fourth grade

What you won't find at BlizzCon, though, are kids. Blizzard has set a minimum age of 5 to attend the event, but most parents opt to leave even older kids at home. It's a pretty logical decision; $150 is a pretty steep price to pay for a child who doesn't have the patience for long programs, the endurance for long lines or the interest in ancillary things like hardware booths. Most of the few kids WoW Insider has spotted at the con have been traipsing dutifully along behind their parents, noses plastered to their Nintendo DSes or cell phone games. They're not the true WoW fans of the family -- and it shows.
Not young Ethan, who plays a just-under-level-cap death knight and is a fourth-grader from Torrance, California. Ethan's attending BlizzCon with his dad this year and loving every moment of it.
Ethan, who's been been playing WoW for three years now, doesn't mess around when it comes to World of WarCraft. "I experiment with tons of different characters," he says. "Usually, people who've played three years have a level 80. I don't feel it's as fun as playing with different characters."
That's not to say he follows the typical young player's pattern of low- to mid-level characters who spend as much time in town as they do in instances and log in most frequently in the company of Mom or Dad. Despite the pink plushie clutched in his hands, Ethan's a big fan of PvP and battlegrounds. "I like getting to high levels," Ethan admits. "I don't play with Dad much. I more just go around and do quests."
Ethan spent his day at BlizzCon playing the Cataclysm demo several times, enjoying the constant stream of cosplayers, watching some of the PvP tournament play and buying his new murloc plushie. The father-son pair, both long-time fans of the Warcraft and Diablo games, also enjoyed a thorough turn through the Diablo area in anticipation of playing Diablo 3.
Visit our galleries covering the opening line in pictures, costumes and characters and WoW Insider Reader Meetup here at BlizzCon 2010.
BlizzCon 2010 is upon us! WoW Insider has all the latest news and information. We're bringing you liveblogging of the WoW panels, interviews with WoW celebrities and attendees and of course, lots of pictures of people in costumes. It's all here at WoW Insider!





Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Eddie Oct 24th 2010 9:06PM
Aw damn. Night Elf Death Knight. Fantastic.
RogueJedi86 Oct 24th 2010 10:21PM
Where does it say anything about him playing a night elf? I see the DK reference with him playing one, and the blood elf cosplay references, but nothing about him playing any sort of elven DK.
Eros Oct 25th 2010 12:21AM
@RogueJedi86
the article gives his character name and server. its not hard to find out
Eros Oct 25th 2010 12:26AM
Errrr when i first read the article it gave his toons name and server. seems like it was edited later.
Moeru Oct 25th 2010 8:14AM
Stranger Danger
ColbyWolf Oct 25th 2010 8:20AM
The more important question is... who cares? What race would you prefer his death knight--and many other characters--be? Is there some horrible stigmata against Night Elf Death Knights? Would you prefer a gnome? or a blood elf? perhaps a forsaken? Tell me, please, what race would make this little boy's game play acceptable to you?
Eddy Oct 25th 2010 1:23PM
Probably a dwarf or a troll. Whenever I'm playing with someone who is a dwarf or a troll, I just know that they're awesome.
(That being said, *I* play Elves. >.>)
DavidiousofAzeroth Oct 24th 2010 9:25PM
Not sure posting the photo and information about a boy and where to find him in the world of Azeroth is the smartest thing. I mean I know your not giving his address and phone number out but still, with 11 million players there are determined to be bad people online and who knows how many will create a toon to "talk" to this young boy.
On a positive note, nice to see parents and children playing together and spending some good times at Blizzcon!
JMW Oct 24th 2010 9:37PM
Ditto. His toon name should be blocked from this article. I know if my 4th grader played WoW I would not want the player base to know the name of the toon, or where to find them. There is enough trade chat craziness to worry about, let alone some jerk sending them tells and harassing them.
Yancee Oct 24th 2010 9:44PM
I completely agree. Although it is a nice profile article, having his name, photo, character name and server is way too much. I actually do therapy with people who would use exactly this type of information to try to target this boy if he were their type, and I really hope nothing bad comes from this article. While I have no problem with kids his age playing online with some level of supervision, I'm disappointed that his father would allow this much information to be included.
Schadenfreude Oct 24th 2010 9:50PM
This. Better be safe and remove some of that info. Keep the kiddies safe, aight?
Jenny Oct 25th 2010 3:42AM
Huh, everyone's worried about some jerk harassing the kid. Wouldn't it be possible for some nice person to be nice to him as well? Among 11 million players there's sure to be a real saint or three. His life could be changed by some chance meeting. He could have become the next Buddha.
I'm not saying protecting his privacy was the wrong choice. I'm saying why are we only considering the worst that could happen?
Mike Oct 25th 2010 12:28PM
I doubt he's playing unsupervised at that age - I wouldn't sweat it too much.
Picadillo Oct 24th 2010 9:09PM
Oh no. Oh no.
This kid has ganked me before.
I died to a ten-year-old!
/delete account
Aris Oct 24th 2010 11:44PM
I've watched my 6 year old daughter in BG's on her DK and she's pwned more than one player in there. She absolutely LOVES Arathi Basin and has leveled her DK on her own from 58 (we did the starting area for her... some of that storyline is a little more full on than she needs to be dealing with) to 67 now. She can't wait to get to 68 so she can quest in Northrend! =)
She's not allowed to talk to other players and cannot run random dungeons unless mom or dad goes with her but she really doesn't care. She looks forward to the time with us in dungeons when we go and spends the rest of her time either doing "real life RP" in town and starting areas with her sister or in the BG's. It makes me more than a little proud every time she proclaims to me "Dad! I just pwned another one!"
Simandl Oct 24th 2010 9:11PM
THIS is awesome! Funny too, my little brother is in 4th grade and is named Ethan. He doesn't play WoW though.. he's more of a Halo kid..
Tolkfan Oct 24th 2010 9:19PM
WoW is for 12+ children, the kid is in elementary school and he's been playing it for 3 years now? Way to go dad.
Matt P Oct 24th 2010 9:26PM
Given that the article doesn't go into great detail on any one subject, I think you're jumping to conclusions. You don't know what parental settings his parents employ, if they heavily supervise his interactions with others, or even if they use his experience as a teaching tool in some manner.
Eregos ftw! Oct 24th 2010 9:27PM
So? I know a kid who is 6 and has been playing since he was 4. He is the best speller in his class, and knows the most words. He has a level 80 rogue (Mind you, all he does is spam sinister strike) and he enjoys his time.
roseclown Oct 24th 2010 9:34PM
Oh for heavens sake. Different parents will think different level of stuff are good for their kids. The dad is aware of what is in the games, and (hopefully) thinks his kid is ready to handle it.
I mean, heck. Starting at 9 I watched Law and Order and CSI as a kid with my parents. Murder, sex plots, etc. And I turned out perfectly fine.
/tries to push morbid stories about graveyards and fae of death beneath the bed
Ok, maybe a little odd. But my sister had the same treatment and she is miss sunshine mcpop bubbly. So I think it is more just me.