Paladin stuff
Something I
quite like about the Orcs, and to an extent the Night Elves and Undead, is that
some of their hero units are strictly speaking a more powerful practitioner of
what is also a regular unit.
The Far
Seer, Tauren Chieftain, Shadow Hunter, Priestess of Elune, Keeper of the
Grove, Lich and Crypt Lord are “powered
up” versions of the Shaman, [regular] Tauren, Witch Doctor, Archer, Dryad,
Necromancer and Nerubian.
Given the
extent, say, a group like the Knights of the Silver Hand is spread in the
Alliance at this time in Warcraft history, I find it quite odd that you only
see the Paladins as a hero unit. It would have made sense to me to have a
“regular” Paladin unit as the tier 3 human melee fighter, a mana based warrior
akin to the Druids of the Claw.
I get that
some classes, like the Death Knight, wouldn’t make sense to have so common, but
Paladins weren’t really uncommon, were they? Even after Arthas destroyed much
of the Knights of the Silver Hand there were enough Paladins to have the
Scarlet Crusade, the Argent Dawn and the Blood Knights (taking basis in the
ones with ties to the Alliance specifically), in addition to the Knights of the
Silver Hand living on, albeit diminished.
It would
also make sense that more than 2 Paladins (Uther and Arthas) are involved in
fighting the undead after the effects of the plague are shown. You first get
access to Knights in the Scourge of Lordaron campaign in the Culling mission,
when Arthas purges Strathholm. The same mission when he relieves Uther of
command and tells the ones with the will to save the land to follow him. Given
that Uther is the leader of the Knights of the Silver Hand and he brings forces
assigned to him, I would have expected at least some Paladins to stay behind
and follow Arthas. Alas, you only see more Paladins when Arthas has already
become a Death Knight.
And, like I
said, it is not like you couldn’t have “proper” Paladin heroes even with
regular Paladin units.
Don’t get
me wrong, I really like the Knight unit in W3. I think that having
units(Footman and Knight) with high armor and fast attack speed to compensate
for lower per-hit damage and hit points is a good way to bring across the
different physique of the humans compared to Orcs, Tauren and powerful undead
fighters, like the Abomination, in gameplay alone. This way you show that
humans have less raw strength to being to the table and has compensated for it
by crafting better armor and being faster. I just wish there was a Paladin regular
unit for the human armies.
Rebalancing the Paladin
and Death Knight heroes
In my
previous take on these two, I argued that it would fit thematically to have
them be agility heroes because of how human melee units in W3 works and I stand
by that. But I do see a problem that could emerge.
The
Paladin’s Divine Shield when coupled with a higher attack speed would make it
really fucking dangerous. So I’d favor reducing the duration a bit. Or a lot.
The other
problem is that I think the way the game restricts Holy Light and Death Coil
very unfairly benefits the Death Knight. On most maps, when fighting most of
the other factions, the Death Knight will have a very flexible Death Coil
option, as it will be able to damage most foes. This is not the case for the
Paladin, since most maps and most enemies do not allow for Holy Light to be
used offensively. My thinking would be to make both heal allies and hurt
enemies, irrespective of whether or not they qualify as undead, demons or
living. Basically different animations and names for the same ability. Which is
not all that out of place with the Paladin and Death Knight to begin with.
I think
this would help the Paladin see more competitive play. The Death Knight already
sees a fair bit of competitive play, as far as I could tell (actually quite fun
watching 1v1 matches by professionals, it turned out), and I think this is
largely because Death Coil is simply more versatile against most enemies.
Also,
Agility based Paladin hero with a Holy Light able to damage things strikes me a
bit like a Retribution style Paladin, which is my favorite style of Paladin. In
principle anyway. Never actually played World of Warcraft myself, though I’ve
had friends who did during the Burning Crusade and the Wrath of the Lich King.
I dunno. I just like the “being the damage dealer” side of it better.
Samurai Orcs
The Blademaster
is one of my favorite heroes in W3, especially Grommash with his unique model. However,
I do have to say I dislike the way the Blademaster speaks. I don’t mind their
weapon or even the flag-thing their have on their back, but the comically bad stereotypical
accent is quite annoying.
Founding of Durotar
Quite a fun
campaign, which nicely shows the W3 gameplay at work in a more RPGy setting.
Too bad there isn’t more stuff like that. One where you could choose your own
hero would’ve been nice.
Horribly bad models
Talking
about horrible models might be a lost cause with this game, as it’s graphics
are not that great. Things are meant to be viewed at a fair distance. So, when
a model in this game makes you go “what the fuck happened!?”, you know
something is seriously wrong. The generic Far Seer hero appearance is, in my
opinion, completely mystifying. How could they have decided that that was the
model they wanted to go with?
Eh,
whatever. Going to give my opinion on the Thalmor next time. Probably. Should
be fun, if brief.
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