Things had smoothed out in the later patches of the Burning Crusade. Ember storm improved the cast time of Incinerate to push it above Shadow Bolt for Destruction, a number of bug fixes and range increases made life better for drain spells and preparation began for Wrath of the Lich King.
With the conclusion of Sunwell, the WoW team began promoting internally and bringing on new faces to take on the ambitious challenges that awaited us in Northrend.
A Change of Path
Things were not going as well in my own career. After having spent an expansion working on exterior content for the most part, I had started working with the WoW Tools team on dramatically rebuilding the tools that were used to create the game world. The first project, the Spell Editor, had been a fairly solid success, so Scott Mercer took a step back and asked me to take point on the new spawn editor, with Alex Afrasiabi periodically supervising.
Unfortunately, I handled some sensitive situations poorly with the engineer involved. We would later toast each other for setting our personal careers back by about three years when we finally made up during the Cataclysm launch. Either way, I was reassigned back to wildlife spawning for the remainder of the launch.
Shoveltusk. Lots and lots of Shoveltusk
Unlike the spawning of quest POI (points of interest), Wildlife spawning is an act of mass production. Back then, it wasn’t possible to even copy and paste monsters into the world, let alone link-up common behaviours quickly. Each point had to be placed by hand.
I don’t know how much you know about me, but for a person who relishes self-expression and creativity, there was no personal hell greater than massive and laborious spawning projects, full of regular maintenance work, with very few opportunities for self-expression – not because they don’t exist, but because the sheer scale of the world and the clunkiness of the tools makes it very, very difficult.
I think Jeff wanted to motivate me to be clever and dramatically improve the tools; but after having damaged that relationship, it was much harder to get changes made. Likewise, the engineers were already heavily trapped under the weight of the previously agreed-upon requests.
Insecurities and Inquiries
So it was a huge surge of anxiety and fear that coursed through my veins when I was asked to come to the office of Jeff Kaplan and Tom Chilton for a private meeting. While I’d interacted with both of them regularly, it was never behind closed doors. Convinced my career was over, I walked in and sat down, hands trembling and shaking as I immediately blurted out apologies for whatever it was I had done, but that I had no idea why I was there *today*.
They both stared blankly at me. Tom put on goofy smile.
TC: “Uhm… this isn’t a disciplinary meeting…”
Me: “It’s… not?”
Jeff: “No.”
TC: “We are calling in all of the designers. We want your feedback on an important decision for the game.”
Jeff: “Specifically, we have three options for the Hero class we want to add to the game.”
TC: “Because everyone’s gotta get behind this decision, we wanted everyone’s opinion.”
Me: “Oh…. oh! What are the choices?”
TC: “Death Knight, Rune Master and Necromancer.”
They went briefly into the pitches for each. The Death Knight would basically be Arthas, but with a focus on tanking magical damage. The Rune Master would be a leather wearer who has a unique power source where different runes could activate different abilities and empower martial arts moves. The Necromancer would raise the undead and send them at enemies like waves.
Me: “Wow, those are some pretty significant choices.”
Jeff: “Yeah… so what’s your choice.”
TC: “And more importantly, why?”
Me: “Well, while at first the feeling of saying Necromancer and DK really match the theme of the expansion… I feel like the most important aspect of class design is mechanical diversity. The rune system sounds significantly different and would change how people think about their abilities.”
Me: “Necromancer… well, it seems like it would be a good class, but it’s already been done and stomps HARD on the same gameplay space as the Warlock.”
Jeff: “But the Necromancer could have many pets – or guardians at once instead.”
Me: “True. But in the same vein, we could also just create a version of Warlock with multiple pets and maybe a lot of little summons. It would hit the same notes and clash hard with their design space.”
TC: “What about Death Knight? It seems a clear fit for this expansion. In fact, I can’t imagine another expansion where Death Knight fits better.”
Me: “Fair. However, they have always been aligned pretty damn evil – how you get them into the Alliance is a pretty tough question. But again, still a cool class. Also, I question if we need another plate tank right now.”
TC: “Well, Tank is the most underserved role right now. There aren’t enough of them.”
Me: “The path I would take would be to encourage more classes to be tanking and handling monsters, but yeah, that makes sense. Tanking is a hard job and it puts a lot of pressure and spotlight on one person. It’s hard.”
Jeff: “Well, thanks for your thoughts.”
Me: “Sure. I think DK and Necromancer fit the expansion, but I wouldn’t let the potential for an awesome game mechanic get passed up. Put my vote down as Rune Master.”
A few weeks later, they called the team together for a few announcements. First off, the new class was going to be “Death Knight” – it would be using a Rune-Based power system, raised ghouls as minions – and that new promoted Cory Stockton would be taking point on the new class.
Foundations
Spawning was still rough work, though things got more interesting when Alex Afrasiabi came in and asked me to bring some specific POIs to life – a great topic for another blog post – but much of the work was still pretty mundane.
So it was a huge breath of fresh air when Cory Stockton came in to my office one morning to ask me for help.
Cory: “Blizzcon is coming up soon and I really want to Dazzle the players with some awesome abilities.”
Me: “Whoa!! That’s awesome.”
Cory: “Yeah! Anyways, I barely know the spell system and scripting is not my forte. I’ve been playing around with stuff for a while, but I just can’t figure some stuff out. Can you help me?”
Me: “Of course!!”
Cory: “Great. I already have some slashes and stuff. I just need you to make two abilities for me. “
Me: “Just… two?”
Cory: “Yeah! See there isn’t a lot of time to show off abilities in the reveal video, so I just want a couple done. I already made a spell that spawns ghouls, so that’s done.”
Me: “Okay, that makes sense. What do you need?”
Cory: “Well, first off, we know we want the DK to be a caster tank. However, taunting a caster sucks. They just stand there. You can’t reposition them. So I want you to make a spell that teleports them to the Death Knight.”
Me: “Just… teleports them in front of you.”
Cory: “Yeah. If you have a problem with that, go talk to CK, he is working on a spell like that for Warlocks.”
Me: “Okay… what else?”
Cory: “Did you play Warcraft 3?”
Me: “I loved it.”
Cory: “I feel like we need Army of the Dead.”
Me: “Whoa! That’s awesome. Have you figured out what i will do yet?”
Cory: “Nah. For this I just want it to be nostalgic and super flashy. Can you handle that?”
Me: “You got it.”
Sidebar: Death Knights and Warlocks
At this point, you might be wondering why I’m spending a whole post devoted to how Death Knights came to be. The answer is because it was an important turning point in WoW class design. As an AoE casting, pet summoning, ally resurrecting, evil class, Death Knight was a huge risk of making Warlock gameplay obsolete.
The Grip of Fear
Using the Dwarf Death Knight – the only model finished at the time – I set out to create a flashy, epic intro for Army of the Dead. Using the generally forgotten “SpellCastOmni” animations, I made the DK hold his arms up in the air. Then using some techniques I’d learned while creating Nightbane, I made invisible missiles fire at the ground, each one summoning a skeleton.
This didn’t feel like enough; using the beam technology created by Dan Reed, one of my favorite programmers in this industry, I created arcs of lighting that struck the ground. This was getting somewhere. I called in Cory.
Me: “Cory, I really like where this is going, but to do much more, it’s going to need some art.”
Cory: “Art? Don’t worry, I got you covered.”
Cory only said this to me three times in our career. The result was the DK VFX, Destructible Buildings for Wintegrasp and the support needed to finish the visuals and quests for the Pet Battles feature of the game in MoP.
Needless to say, the result was great. Terrie Denman, a talented prop artist stepped up, made some new beam textures to match the undead purple eruptions. The animation team upgrade all of the ghoul models into the game to dig themselves out of the ground when spawned and the programming team fixed a number of de-sync issues that causes ghouls to appear above ground for a for a frame on the client.
The result was fantastic. Chilton came by while we were looking at it.
TC: “This is great…. but what does it DO?”
Me: “uhm….”
TC: “Cory?”
Cory: “Uh, well, it sends in a lot of minions. Maybe you can tank for them. Your own private army.”
TC: “…”
Cory: “…”
Me: “Maybe we just flip that one around backwards. What if we gave them 1 hp each – and then they taunt any monsters nearby. Kind of a Death Knight AoE taunt.”
TC: “Huh. That’s kind of crazy, but give it a try.”
Me: “Alright.”
TC: “… by the way, we *are* giving them Death Coil, right?”
Cory: “Of course!”
Me: “Wait, what?”
This had its own set of problems, which we resolved by renaming the Warlock spell, but that’s a story for another time. I set my attention on figuring out the problem of the caster-taunt. But first, I had to understand the nature of the new Warlock spells and why they were being made.