Blizzard says the time has finally come to strip back World of Warcraft’s most powerful combat add-ons. As the long-running MMORPG prepares for its next expansion, Midnight, game director Ion Hazzikostas explained in an interview with IGN that the move isn’t about punishing players but about leveling the playing field and restoring a fairer, more readable game experience.
The change will deactivate certain data-driven combat add-ons, including tools like WeakAuras and DBM that automate tracking and warnings many players have come to rely on. Hazzikostas said this shift couldn’t happen mid-expansion and had to align with a full rollout like Midnight, which allows Blizzard to design new dungeons, raids, and class systems around the updated UI.
“We’re going to be paying very close attention in the weeks and months to come to make sure that we land this in a way that’s really satisfying to players,” Hazzikostas said.
He noted that alpha and beta testing would serve as the proving ground for the new systems, adding that add-on authors were invited early to provide feedback and flag any unintended issues. Blizzard’s internal cooldown manager, which will include customizable sound alerts and clearer on-screen cues, is being tuned as a native replacement for many of the most relied-upon mod functions.
Philosophically, Hazzikostas says this is about responsibility as much as design. “Ultimately, if you are standing in something that is lethal and is going to kill your character, and the only way that you are aware of that fact is because you have an air horn that’s playing from an add-on, we have dropped the ball as developers. And that should be on us to fix.”
He went on to acknowledge that Blizzard has “leaned on that crutch” for too long. Visual readability, like the infamous “red on red” or “purple on purple” attack telegraphs, has already been reworked for Midnight, with clearer edges and distinct contrast between ground effects. “We want to level the playing field, and ensure that everyone has the information at their disposal as part of the base experience that they need to succeed,” he said.
The goal, according to Hazzikostas, isn’t to make World of Warcraft easier but to make it fairer. Encounters will be tuned so that raids and dungeons remain as challenging as before, only now with difficulty based on teamwork, awareness, and coordination rather than mod dependency.
Lead UX designer Crash Reed added that Blizzard intends to keep communication open throughout Midnight’s testing phase, encouraging players to provide feedback through official channels. “We want to change the way that we’re engaging with this so that it’s very, very open,” he said. “Players are getting their hands on things very early so that we can react to that feedback.”
The decision has divided World of Warcraft’s community. High-end raiders worry the loss of combat data mods could make progression harder, while others welcome the return to a purer, reaction-based style of play. Either way, Blizzard appears committed to seeing the overhaul through, and Midnight is where it begins.
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