It is 40 days since World of Warcraft has been down in China. The accurate relaunch day is still a mystery. But the world's largest MMOG finally looks to be back on track in the area, for some positive news came out recently. We don't hear any authority announcement yet, but we believe the Relaunch day is approaching.
Good news came as Chinese WoW agency Netease received approval Tuesday from the Ministry of Culture to offer the World of Warcraft. The government agency's Web site showed the game had passed its content examination. However, the General Administration of Press and Publication (GAPP) in charge of regulating print and online publications has found content it finds objectionable that must be removed or changed before it can be released to the general public. Blizzard will be required to make the changes and resubmit the game for further screening.
A special WoW data testing was allowed by GAPP before the changes are in place. Players who already have accounts will be allowed to play the game starting late next week, but new players will be barred from signing up until the game gets final clearance, the report said. The testing was scheduled to be completed in one week. NetEase will not be allowed to charge subscription fees during that period, which is meant to ensure a smooth transition of user data from the operator switch, the official was cited as saying.
At one point during the WoW downtime, the flood of Chinese users temporarily playing on the Taiwan server caused hour-long waits to log into the game, according to local media. This partially relaunch event can certainly save Taiwan server from being too crowded. Enjoy WoW to its fullest if you don't encounter any of these troubles. WoW-gold store has massive cheap WoW gold stock on server EU and US. Whenever you need gold to enhance your game experience, please let us know.