On March 30, all 30 teams will compete in five matches of Plunderstorm<\/em><\/a>, earning points based on their final placement and number of eliminations in each match. Starting with match six, teams at the top of the points leaderboard will have an opportunity to win the event if they can finish first place in the next match. If no team accomplishes this feat by the eighth match, then one final decisive free-for-all match will determine the event winner.<\/p>
Competitors will compete and stream from Blizzard HQ during the event. Viewers can either follow the event by watching their favorite streamer, or they can catch the official stream on both the Warcraft Twitch<\/a> and YouTube channels<\/a>.<\/p>
Plunderstorm<\/em>, despite only being out for a few days during its current limited time run, has been a divisive talking point among World of Warcraft<\/em> players<\/a>. One portion of the community seems to enjoy the mode, with some claiming it should be added to the free-to-play version of the game in order to attract new players. Other players though don’t see the value in the mode, and claim Blizzard and WoW<\/em> <\/a>are just trying to copy other popular games rather than genuinely improve the game itself.<\/p>
Regardless, the quick launch of a competitive event featuring big creators is a sign Blizzard could be considering Plunderstorm <\/em>as a permanent addition to the game. Now they just need to nerf Fire Whirl<\/a>.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"