The presence of a Draenei in pirate regalia makes this event seem flirty and fun. Screencap from Battle.net. |
While I have no real opinion on Plunderstorm itself, as it's a Retail only thing and I don't play Retail, I had to admit that Blizzard's art team does a fantastic job of selling the event.
That was when I got the idea for this series of posts, which is intended to be an occasional event meant to highlight the artwork in and about video games.
My sister-in-law's husband received a coffee table book as a present some years back of the artwork for the games for the original Atari 2600, such as this box cover for Atari's Haunted House:
We have this in a box somewhere, but this graphic from Giant Bomb is much better than I'd ever be able to scan. |
Whether or not the game matched the artwork is kind of irrelevant, since the artwork is meant to evoke a specific emotion and intice you to purchase the game. Beyond that, it's really damn good all by itself.
So, I thought, why not highlight a slice of some video game art that I've found that I really do enjoy? I'm not an art museum or gallery, but it's something I want to present here to demonstrate that, well, video game art is just as much art as that found in any physical gallery.
This first installment of artwork comes from screencaps I made from of Battle.net's launcher --which is why there's the 'X' and the 'Back' buttons visible on them-- and show that the Blizzard art team is still at the top of their game. Alas that these aren't the full artwork, because the news entries only show part of the full piece, and if there's an attribution other than 'Blizzard' I can't find it on Battle.net's launcher. I realize that Blizzard likely did that on purpose so that their art team wouldn't be poached by other game developers or graphic art teams, but the artists who worked on these pieces deserve the recognition.
Yeah, don't remind me that I only set foot in Ulduar once. The artwork is still great, because I can appreciate the Lovecraftian nature of the Old Gods. |
Sunrise over Thousand Needles. |
Remember what I said about not quite trusting dragons? How about dragons disguised as gnomes? That's about as close as you can get to someone holding up a sign that says "Danger, Will Robinson!" |
As much as I ended up disliking the Cataclysm expansion, I can't deny the power of the artwork. |
It's that "We are not amused" look that gets me. |
*I know that Blizz wants to call it Modern WoW, but I prefer Retail since it also implies that you have to have bought the current expansion to be current with the present version of WoW. Modern WoW sounds like it covers everything from Legion onward, and at the rate Classic WoW is being released it'll reach Legion in a few years.
I realized how much the artwork and the music have influenced my life in Azeroth. When things are slow I go someplace I particularly liked in the past and just zone out. Sit there feeling the mood.
ReplyDeleteI was kind of surprised that I frequently end up in Goblin areas like Tanaris. I must like those guys.
In some places I get a strong reaction to the music but I think that's more the memories of the time it was current than a deep love of the piece. Anything that brings back Ironsally gives a real nostalgia kick.
The last year or so of Retail, circa 2013-2014, I spent in Outland areas because I enjoyed them so much. And when Wrath Classic came along, I did the same with Grizzly Hills and Howling Fjord.
Delete