Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Computing
  4. News

Blizzard comments on why it shut down Nostalrius fan server

Add as a preferred source on Google

Blizzard might be one of those mega-publishers that is still quite well liked among gamers, but it recently received a lot of flak for shutting down the Nostalrius fan-run server, which offered a vanilla version of World of Warcraft for players to enjoy. To try and assuage that, it’s now reached out to the community to explain itself: In essence, it felt the need to protect its intellectual property.

This is because Nostalrius, for all of its fan-run amateurism, was incredibly popular. At its peak, it had over 800,000 registered accounts, and 150,000 of those logged in on a monthly basis.

Recommended Videos

Obviously those numbers aren’t a threat to the current retail version of WoW, but is it just the case that Blizzard wants those 150,000 players to be paying customers? Playing on Nostalrius didn’t send any money into Blizzard’s bursting pockets, so was it just being greedy?

Of course that sort of thinking factors into the equation, but the real problem stems from Blizzard needing to protect its IP. In the world of intellectual property law, if you don’t defend your property in one instance, that can be used against you in a court case with another.

While Blizzard did admit that part of its internal discussion had involved keeping Nostalrius open, it eventually decided that there was no way to maintain it without impacting its right with regards to its own IP, and that could harm the game as a whole in the future.

The other request from the community in the wake of the Nostalrius shut down, was that Blizzard simply open its own classic WoW server. While this too had been discussed internally, we’re told, it is considered to big a task to maintain the server to a commercial standard.

It was one thing to play on a fan server with bugs and problems, but if you are paying a company for an experience, you expect it to be far more polished.

Older versions of WoW also ran on much older hardware and were designed to, because of the time they were released. That means compatibility with modern systems might be shaky or people running certain hardware and software combinations may be left out. It’s possible even that Blizzard doesn’t have the very legacy code it would require to make this process at least moderately smooth.

The one glimmer of hope for those wanting a classic experience — other than to jump to another legacy server with its own risk of being shut down — is that Blizzard has discussed the idea of “Pristine servers.” These would operate without some of the more recent additions to the game, including heirloom gear, character boosts, recruit-a-friend bonuses, WoW tokens, and access to cross-realm zones. Power leveling and other boosts would also be disabled, though the content within the game would be largely the same as the latest updated servers.

Jon Martindale
Jon Martindale covers how to guides, best-of lists, and explainers to help everyone understand the hottest new hardware and…
Forget console wars. Steam Machine may help kill lazy PC gaming ports
Valve’s expensive mini PC could become PC gaming’s new baseline
Steam Machine with Steam Controller

Valve’s Steam Machine has become easy to dunk on. The price starts well above current consoles, and the hardware sits somewhere between entry-level and mid-range gaming PCs rather than a monster rig. Early reviews have also talked about how demanding games need upscaling, trimmed settings, and realistic expectations.

With the ongoing memory crisis, it sounds like a rough time to bring a PC to the couch. Though the Steam Machine doesn't need to beat high-end gaming PCs or the big consoles. Its purpose was different from the start. And what really makes it better is how it could shift the PC gaming segment entirely.

Read more
GTA 6 may not get the real physical release fans were hoping for
The game may come in a case, but not on a disc
GTA 6 cover art

Grand Theft Auto 6 pre-orders recently went live, but the excitement came with one frustrating catch. The so-called physical edition of the game will not include a disc. Instead, buyers will get a box with cover art and a download code inside.

That decision immediately caused backlash online, especially among collectors who still care about owning games on disc. For a while, there was some hope that this would only be temporary. Reports suggested that Rockstar could release a proper disc version of GTA 6 in December 2026, giving physical media fans something to wait for.

Read more
The Steam Machine launch hasn’t even happened, but the resale circus has begun
Scalpers are already trying to cash in on Valve’s Steam Machine
Valve Steam Machine Featured Design Coverplate

Valve has started sending out reservation emails for the Steam Machine ahead of its June 30 launch, and scalpers have wasted no time turning the whole thing into a comedy act.

The Steam Machine is already an expensive device, as RAM and SSD prices have made hardware pricing miserable across the industry. Valve has previously said it would like to lower the price if component costs improve. That makes the resale listings even harder to take seriously, because the official price was already higher than many people expected before scalpers added their own fantasy tax.

Read more