1st WoW Minis Expansion Now in Stores

Spoils of War, the first expansion for the World of Warcraft Miniatures Game, is now in stores. Upper Deck has added 51 new prepainted miniatures to the lineup, including such characters as Lady Vashj, Lady Jaina Proudmoore and Prince Kael’thas Sunstrider.

In addition to the new characters, Spoils of War adds new Action Bar cards to the mix. For example, Shamans can now use Chain Heal or a Wrath of Air totem, while Druids can buff their allies with Mark of the Wild. Custom equipment will also help your characters prepare for battle.

Booster packs containing three random figures are now available for a suggested retail price of $14.99. Each minis booster pack also comes with a free pack of cards from the World of Warcraft Trading Card Game. More information on the expansion can be found after the jump.

North Las Vegas, NV (May 6, 2009) – The Upper Deck Company is pleased to announce the release of Spoils of War, the first expansion set within its hugely popular World of Warcraft® Miniatures Game. Featuring 51 new premium collectible, prepainted miniatures and available in three-figure randomized booster packs, the Spoils of War collection features iconic World of Warcraft® heroes and monsters including the sought-after Lady Vashj! Visit WoWMinis.com for a hobby store near you!  

Each of the 51 new figures reflects the imagery and style of the popular World of Warcraft® online game characters. Each miniature can be mounted on a uniquely engineered, removable base, allowing it to serve as both a game piece and a standalone collectible. What’s more, action bar cards and new equipment cards let you customize your characters’’ action bars for a personalized play experience. The suggested retail price for each three-figure booster is $14.99.

In the World of Warcraft Miniatures game, you are the party leader, commanding your army to conquer the lands of Azeroth. You can recruit from the ranks of the Alliance, Horde, and Monster factions. Yes, for those of you who have dreamed of playing the part of Naga, Elemental, and Worgen, we have the faction for you! If your loyalty and allegiance lie with the Horde or Alliance, you can use your influence to recruit legendary characters like Thrall and Leeroy Jenkins! Use hills to blast your opponents from up high, or hide in forests to dodge spells and attacks.

With the release of Spoils of War, you can own mighty characters like Lady Jaina Proudmoore and her Water Elemental, or you can ally with Prince Kael’thas Sunstrider and unleash the power of his monster Flamestrike! The pet bear Misha is here, and she never strays far from her half-Ogre, half-Orc master Rexxar. If you’re a fan of the World of Warcraft TCG, you can find some familiar faces like Ryno the Short and Marlowe Christophers to send into battle. Show those legendary characters that they’re not the only ones who can wield a weapon and fight—this time in 3D!

Use new Action Bar cards to customize your party before the battle begins! In Core Set, your Shaman could choose to interrupt abilities with Earth Shock, dispel buffs with Purge, or blast an entire group of opponents with Chain Lightning. Now, with Spoils of War, your Shaman can also choose to mend friends Chain Heal or buff your team’s die rolls with Wrath of Air totem. As a Druid, you can use Mark of the Wild to make your party stronger, or you can bring in Kick as a Rogue to take a cheap shot against any spell-casting parties. It’s all about how you want to play and each class supports endless strategies and play styles!

If new legendary characters and Action Bar cards weren’t enough, players can also gear up their characters with custom equipment! For the paltry cost of a few extra honors, you can add weapons and armor to your Minis characters just like you do to your online characters. Strike with Sulfuras, Hand of Ragnaros or defend with Bulwark of Azzinoth—and you don’t even need to fell any dungeon bosses to get either item! Just conquer the legendary boss known as “booster pack.” You can also collect the unique crafting materials in each booster pack and turn them in to the UDE master crafters, who can make even more epic equipment for your party! All materials also come with a unique code that can be redeemed for points to be spent at the UDE store!

And, of course, you can still crack all your favorite Loots in Spoils of War booster packs. Share your Sandbox Tiger with all of Dalaran, sport the only epic shirt in the game with Center of Attention, or bring the grand melee of Minis into the MMO with Foam Sword Rack!

 Whether you prefer the grace of a blinking Nexus Stalker sniping enemy while dancing from hex to hex, or the brute force of Cairne Bloodhoof pummeling opponents off of the map, Spoils of War has armaments for all types of military tacticians. It’s easy to be mesmerized by the beauty of the new figures, but don’t be blinded by their sheer awesomeness. You might miss some of the Action Bar cards, equipment, and everything else that comes with Spoils of War.

In addition to offering the best quality figures in the pre-painted miniatures market, the World of Warcraft Miniatures Game booster packs provide players with a sample pack of cards from the World of Warcraft Trading Card Game, which might include a Loot™ card from the Blood of Gladiators expansion. These rare cards give players access to exclusive cosmetic in-game upgrades for their online World of Warcraft characters.  

Upper Deck has planned a robust Organized Play structure for the World of Warcraft Miniatures Game. For Organized Play details and the latest news and information about the exciting World of Warcraft Miniatures Game, visit WoWMinis.com!

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Milk that cow.
# May 10 2009 at 7:12 PM Rating: Decent
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681 posts
And the whoring around of the Warcraft franchise keeps going on. It seems like everytime you turn around WoW is being slapped onto another totally unrelated item to try and sell to fans of the game. Next thing you'll know you'll be eating WoW cereal, "It'll make you say 'WOW!'"

And while they've been out a few months, I still think the Warcraft minis were one of the dumbest things to break into. If Upper Deck wanted to make a mini game, they should have made an original miniature game rather than slap WoW on top of it and hope people would flock to it because of it. I hate the card game for the same reasons. Really the miniatures feel like more a slap in the face. They already stole many of their character designs by blatantly ripping off Games Workshop properties, but it almost feels they are trying to hone in on GW's turf but expanding into the miniature field (refering to Blizzard on this one).

As for the miniature game itself, now I'm pretty new to the world of miniature war gaming as I just starting looking into it a few months ago and have been working on my army in my free time, but even from a novice's view I ask "Why?" Why would I waste money on a game like this? So much more to Warhammer in terms of how it's played along with the large number of game terrain it can be played on that brings new variety to the game. Plus like it's already been pointed out, the ability to pick and choose your pieces is much more satisfying than hoping for luck to get the ones I want to base my strategy around. And is it just me, be don't the WoW minis sort of look like they were sculpted and painted by an amateur? I don't sculpt, but good god I swear I can paint them about just as well and I suck at painting.

Don't get me wrong, I like Warcraft. They have been some really fun video games, but they should just stay as is. If I want to play WoW, I'm not going to play a card game or miniatures game when I can just play the real thing. If I want to play a card or miniatures game, I'd rather just play Warhammer Fantasy or 4Ok or go back to Magic the Gathering.



Edited, May 10th 2009 11:14pm by OnimenoJason
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# May 09 2009 at 8:31 PM Rating: Excellent
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6,678 posts
You're all not being completely fair.

I am not a miniatures player for precisely some of the reasons that some of you have indicated make a miniatures game -- lots of little tiny miniatures all over, the need to paint them, etc. I have not, and will not ever play Warhammer, WarMachine, or any other traditional miniatures game. WoW mini's is perhaps not a great game, but it is a good game, and it is good for what it is -- a CCG in the form of little figurines. Some of you mentioned how the actual TCG is a Magic knock-off -- which it is -- and having interviewed with Upper Deck myself, my guess is that they wanted to make a card game that *wasn't* that. (In fairness, I enjoy the WoW TCG way more than I do Magic, and if you think there's no incentive to try it out, you clearly haven't looked into it.) The WoW mini's game is not a traditional miniatures game. If it was, you'd be able to buy the specific figures you wanted, you'd have to paint it, the scale would be smaller, etc. You're holding the wrong standards to it.

Am I telling you that you should play this game? No, not necessarily, and definitely not if you are a miniature enthusiast. This isn't really a "miniatures game" so much as a game that uses miniatures. However, if you're like me and casually dabble in different games that have the potential to be very competitive, it's worth a shot.
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Only the exceptions can be exceptional.
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# May 09 2009 at 10:22 PM Rating: Decent
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132 posts
Quote:
You're all not being completely fair.


We're being completely fair. You're just either disagreeing or not understanding what is being said.

You enjoy it. That's great for you, and no one is saying you shouldn't. What I'm saying is that you are in the minority, and that the business model is failing because it is not attracting a significant number of players.

Having worked in the hobby / gaming store business, I can tell you that games like this are made to try and attract players from both the collectible and miniatures sides of gaming, and it fails on both ends.

The collectibles guys, by and large, do not like miniatures. They don't like regular minis games like Warhammer or War Machine, and that dislike extends to pre-painted minis as well. Why, I don't know. As a CCG player, I don't like regular minis and I have no interest in even trying pre-painted.

The miniatures guys HATE the randomness and pre-painted aspect. They see it as a kids version of regular miniatures games, and they're pretty much right.


As for the WoW CCG... if it didn't have lottery tickets loot cards, it would have died long ago when Upper Deck was displaying their incompetence by not even printing enough product to fill initial orders.


Quote:
You're holding the wrong standards to it.


No, I'm not. I'm explaining the intent behind the business model and why it's failing. Every pre-painted minis game that has come down the pike has thought that they would succeed by appealing to (a) CCG players that like randomness and don't like to paint and (b) miniatures gamers that want to play something on a smaller scale. There are not enough of these people to make these games succeed, and the fact that EVERY pre-painted miniatures game has failed horribly (no matter what license it's based on) backs me up on that.

Edited, May 10th 2009 3:19pm by Yngvie

Edited, May 10th 2009 3:19pm by Yngvie
Annoying.
# May 09 2009 at 1:07 PM Rating: Excellent
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2,590 posts
I wouldn't mind buying a Jaina figure (/fangirl) but I do NOT want to spent 15 bucks on a package of randoms I will never use or care about, even if it comes with TCG cards (I actually do play that a bit). Smiley: mad
Nice but no...
# May 09 2009 at 12:00 PM Rating: Decent
Despite wanting to like this game... I can't for many of the same reasons that Yngvie mentioned. I don't like prepainted miniatures and I don't like random packaging... and there is another big turn off not mentioned above...

The wrong scale to the miniatures... the only reason the Dungeons and Dragons pre-painted miniature game sold at our Local gaming stores is because we play ALOT of table top fantasy games and it was the right scale for the most part for our 25mm to 28mm miniatures... the scale that most metal fantasy miniatures come in. Its the same reason we ate up Reapers pre-painted figs... they were great for us GMs who wanted painted monsters but didn't have the time to do more than just a few hero/villain figs.

I know this doesn't sound like much but when operating under the constraints of a grid system, figs that don't fit well into the grid or who are completely the wrong scale when compared to the other models really feels off. Had the WoW mini game gone with a more traditional 25mm or the newer more heroic 28mm, it might have gone over better at our local store... the sad part is...

The old WoW board game's 100+ plastic minis were the right scale, meaning someone in the past has bothered to sculpt traditional scale miniatures and while pretty cheap looking, they actually painted up nice. So, the board game actually sold a few copies, just to be scavenged for monster figs... not to actually play it.

So, in essence, they are making a big mistake trying to push the miniature game on multiple fronts... the largest was a mistake in scaling in my opinion, had they been a bit smaller and comparable to traditional figs, it might have sold a great deal more to fantasy role player... and not be collecting dust on a shelf or in the sale bin at a video game store.

I know I would have bought boosters for the game had I known that I could get a Thrall or a Kael'thas or any number of other characters in a scale that would match all the other figurines I have gathered over far too many years of gaming... and to have a fig that with a bit of repainting and touch up would of looked close to an existing character or two of mine... but sadly no.

Maybe this is an isolated case for my two local gaming stores... maybe not though.
Nice but no...
# May 09 2009 at 12:54 PM Rating: Decent
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132 posts
Quote:
The wrong scale to the miniatures... the only reason the Dungeons and Dragons pre-painted miniature game sold at our Local gaming stores is because we play ALOT of table top fantasy games and it was the right scale for the most part for our 25mm to 28mm miniatures... the scale that most metal fantasy miniatures come in. Its the same reason we ate up Reapers pre-painted figs... they were great for us GMs who wanted painted monsters but didn't have the time to do more than just a few hero/villain figs.

I know this doesn't sound like much but when operating under the constraints of a grid system, figs that don't fit well into the grid or who are completely the wrong scale when compared to the other models really feels off. Had the WoW mini game gone with a more traditional 25mm or the newer more heroic 28mm, it might have gone over better at our local store... the sad part is...

The old WoW board game's 100+ plastic minis were the right scale, meaning someone in the past has bothered to sculpt traditional scale miniatures and while pretty cheap looking, they actually painted up nice. So, the board game actually sold a few copies, just to be scavenged for monster figs... not to actually play it.


Good point. At my store, the only reason the D&D minis sold was as a game accessory to the RPG. We found that we could actually get more money by opening all the booster boxes and selling the singles, rather than wait for the 3 or 4 D&D minis guys to buy a couple boosters. A small premium was added to things like kobolds, gnolls, goblins and undead, because those are the monsters every GM wants en masse. The rares even brought in decent prices, and on the average we made more per booster box by selling singles than we did selling the box.

If pressed to make an estimate, I'd say maybe 5% of our D&D minis sales were to people that played the minis game, the other 95% was to people that needed props for their RPG.
Nice press release, but...
# May 09 2009 at 10:02 AM Rating: Decent
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132 posts
The game is a massive failure. The Gamestop chain has been blowing out the first series boosters for a couple bucks because no one buys it. At my local store we tried everything to get the game going, but no one wants to play it or the CCG.

The sad fact is that even with how big World of Warcraft is, there is no interest in a pre-painted minis game outside of getting your favorite character. I've been around miniatures players a long time, and there are certain truths...

1. They do not like pre-painted models. For the most part, they want to paint their own miniatures.

2. Most importantly, the vast majority of miniatures players have a massive disdain towards any "collectible" game. The random packaging of a game like WoW minis or Heroclix turns them off immediately.

Those two reasons are why Heroclix and D&D minis failed, and they're why WoW minis will fail as well.

On the CCG front, the WoW CCG is failing for the same reason that every supposed "WoW Killer" (Age of Conan, Warhammer Online, etc) has failed - trying too hard to copy the top game. People looked at AoC and Warhammer Online and said "it's just like WoW, so why should I abandon my character I've spent years working on to play a game that's just like WoW?" Same thing with the CCG... people look at the WoW CCG and say "It's a clone of Magic the Gathering... why should I abandon my collection of Magic cards and start a Magic knock-off?"
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