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

'World of Warcraft: Legion' sells more than 3 million copies in a day

Add as a preferred source on Google

World of Warcraft may not be the gargantuan online gaming force that it was a decade ago, but Blizzard’s MMORPG still has quite the loyal following. The game’s latest expansion, World of Warcraft: Legion, launched at the end of August, and it drew a record number of players.

World of Warcraft‘s launch-week player concurrency climbed to its highest point since the 2010 launch of the Cataclysm expansion,” Blizzard announced, “as champions from around the world united to strike a mighty first blow against the fel invaders.”

Recommended Videos

The expansion also managed to match launch day sales figures with Cataclysm, a record for the series. Within the first 24 hours, Legion sold more than 3.3 million copies.

It remains to be seen, however, if the game’s massive launch and sizable player base will contribute to a rise in subscriptions. By this time last year, the game had 5.5 million paying subscribers and Blizzard made the decision to no longer report these numbers at all. By comparison, when Cataclysm launched in 2010, the game had 12 million subscribers.

Lately, Blizzard has still seen considerable success with its Warcraft franchise through other projects. Hearthstone has more than 50 million players and continues to generate revenue, and this summer’s Warcraft film, though far from a critical darling, was a smash hit overseas. The film earned nearly $150 million in its first four days in China, balancing out its lukewarm performance in the United States.

World of Warcraft: Legion is now available for the PC and Mac, and marks the return of Burning Crusade baddie Illidan Stormrage. It also introduces new Artifact weapons, the new Demon Hunter — a dual blade-wielding class — and increases the game’s level cap to 110. New players can boost one of their characters to level 100 instantly, as well.

Gabe Gurwin
Gabe Gurwin has been playing games since 1997, beginning with the N64 and the Super Nintendo. He began his journalism career…
Steam Machine confirmed to land this summer, but we’re still in the dark about its price
Steam Machine is getting closer to launch, with broader game verification arriving before Valve reveals what it’ll cost.
Steam Machine with Steam Controller

Valve has confirmed that Steam Machine is shipping this summer, giving PC gamers a real launch window for its SteamOS living room PC. The missing piece is still price, and that’s the detail many buyers need before they can decide whether it fits their setup.

The update came as Valve expanded its Verified program to cover Steam Machine and Steam Frame. For Steam Machine, games will be checked for default controller support, default graphics settings, and how well they run without manual setup. Valve says the hardware is roughly six times as powerful as Steam Deck, while still using SteamOS, the Steam interface, and Proton.

Read more
Corsair fitted the Elgato Stream Deck’s soul into a hotkey on its Nightsword v2 mouse
Stream Deck macros, Discord controls, and app shortcuts move to the mouse
Corsair NIGHTSWORD v2 Wireless Stream Deck gaming mouse side view

Corsair has launched the Nightsword v2 Wireless SD Stream Deck gaming mouse, a right-handed wireless mouse with a dedicated Stream Deck launch button, at Computex 2026.

The Stream Deck support is an in-house integration rather than a third-party collaboration, since Corsair owns Elgato. It brings Elgato’s shortcut system directly to the mouse, letting gamers, streamers, and creators trigger app, gaming, and workflow controls without reaching for a separate desktop panel.

Read more
Nvidia confirms more RTX Spark processors are coming with N2X and N3 series lined up
Huang confirming a multi-generation roadmap before the first device has even shipped is the clearest signal yet that this is a decade-long commitment.
nvidia-rtx-spark

The PC and laptop industry has run on Intel and AMD silicon so long that most people don’t even question whether these are the only options. 

Nvidia just answered that question at Computex 2026, in the form of the RTX Spark superchip, and Jensen Huang’s comments about what comes next suggest that it wasn’t a one-time experiment. 

Read more