In fact, several members are planning even more cooperation between these two factions. Although cross-faction support WoTLK Gold will not initially include cross-faction-based guilds or the ability to group with members of the opposite faction in the open world, the ideas are something more than few players are seem willing to. The question is whether any of these possibilities are actually realized remains to be determined, but it's evident that the blurring of the line between Horde and Alliance is only getting started, and players should be down for whatever comes in the future.

Cross-faction gameplay isn't the sole WoW announcement this week. In another update that's been received well by the community that plays the game, Blizzard is now cracking down on organized "boosting communities" advertising in-game services. Activision Blizzard is also currently on the verge of being acquired by Microsoft in the $69 billion deal, making some wonder if WoW will ever be available on Xbox consoles.

Blizzard Is Cracking Down On WoW Boosting Communities

Citing an "increasing perturbation to the game experience," Blizzard has updated World of Warcraft 's end-user license agreement to prohibit organizations who advertise and offer in-game boosting and other services.

Accounts found to be involved in a number of cheap WoTLK Gold organizations that promote organized boosting and especially those with multiple servers, could be suspended or permanently banned.