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"World of Warcraft Atlas" (Brady Games - World of Warcraft) | 
enlarge | Author: Bradygames Publisher: Brady Games Category: Book
List Price: £16.99 Buy New: £14.00 You Save: £2.99 (18%)
New (15) Used (4) from £13.00
Rating: 8 reviews Sales Rank: 33971
Media: Hardcover Pages: 192 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.6 Dimensions (in): 12.3 x 10.4 x 0.7
ISBN: 0744004411 Dewey Decimal Number: 793.920285 EAN: 9780744004410 ASIN: 0744004411
Publication Date: October 14, 2005 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: BRAND NEW and IN STOCK - dispatched within 48 hours from the UK
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| Customer Reviews: Read 3 more reviews...
dont buy it July 2, 2008 M. Oneill why buy this , there is already an online atlas antd you can just find the information online instantly instead of flicking threw pages
Lost between an Atlas and an A to Z: Utterly useless November 12, 2007 Luis Morais (UK) 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
So you want to have a quick look to see where that lake an archived quest talks about is, or whereabouts the Night Song Forest is? Want to know whether you are walking towards Horde or Alliance territory or like in a real Atlas know a bit of geo-political snippets of races inhibiting the territory, even perhaps a little indication of the friendliness or level of those? At least a few nice illustrations of the characters dwelling the regions? Well, forget it. The strength of an Atlas is in its index. When you are lost in London, you know where you want to go, it is how to get there that you don't. You can bet that you will not find 80% of the locations described in quests in the index of this Atlas. This also might be the only "atlas" that instead of also listing the geographical areas by proximity, starting from one point and then progressing towards neighbouring regions, it lists macro-regions in alphabetical order. The question is, will you know whether Teldrassil is a macro region or a region inside a macro-region as easy as San Francisco is in California and California is in the States or that Westminster is in London and London is in England and England is in the UK? The artwork is incredibly unimaginative, it is maps, and maps... nothing else, no nice drawings of Orcs, or Elfs, or fauna or flora, it is just maps, bleeding maps without icons or faction flags, or anything that could liven up this throw up of "atlas". Just check the cover of the book and you can see what I am talking about, how exciting is it to have a hazy picture of a desert as the cover? Yet this will be one of the few illustrations other than maps you will find in the whole "atlas". Oh, yes, there are no coordinates either. Instead they use the A to Z approach of letters and numbers. Then you will have to guess where in each square (covering several yards) your faction village is. It is sadly unhelpful in all senses. I have found myself using the internet and later the maps add-ons offered for free over the web more than this "atlas", which due to its tight-fisted art doesn't even qualify as a valuable collectible.
Very usefull July 29, 2007 Max Olsen (Denmark) 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
This is a great book if you take questing seriously. Someone compared the Wow gaming area to be the size of Switzerland .. and it is a big game indeed. Adventurning on your own and discovering new places is of cause a large part of the game, but i still find myself stuck searching for hours, trying to find that elusive mob that should be located "north of crossroads" somewhere. This is where this great book shows its worth. Half the book is area/city maps and the other half is a large alfabetic index so you can quickly get the right location on the map grid. Sometimes the index also give you a small hint like "blow horn" or "behind tree". Book also have a handfull of pages listing placement of profession NPC, vendor, flight and those rare and hard to find mobs. Best of all, this book dont SPOIL the game at all. Its is NOT a quest-killer or walktrough, it is NOT a list of vendor-items being sold, it is NOT a faction list or a gold making book .. and thank ye gods for that. Just a nice Atlas that will help you when you get stuck or cant remember the location of one of the 1000+ places or people.
Your road map to WoW April 11, 2006 Mr. Duncan Harvey (Manchester) 16 out of 17 found this review helpful
This is truely a fantastic publication - from your first day in the game it will help you find your way through the world until the very end of level 59 (not level 60+ because a lot of the game is "off map" then. Whether you need a lump of copper ore or to find that evil boss that respawns once a wekk - this book will help you.A must buy!
Lovely to look at but not an essential purchase December 6, 2005 42 out of 44 found this review helpful
Firstly I have to say this book looks lovely and feels more like a "coffee table" book than a game guide. Although it does a good job of telling you where a lot of monsters and NPC's are, it only really duplicates what is in the Strategy guide.This is a little more detailed on town maps and vendor details, whereas the strategy guide gives you all the NPC's that give you quests and their approximate locations. Perhaps worth getting if you want all the information you can hoover up, but personally I feel if you already have the strategy guide then I probably wouldn't bother with this as well.
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