Another Brick in the Wall

Another Brick in the Wall

How can you have any pudding if you don’t eat your meat fish?

If you’re shopping around for a World of Warcraft gift for your faux WoW girlfriend, you might want to farm A Steamy Romance Novel.

Steamy Romance Novel Pg 1

It starts off strong, but becomes rather formulaic.

Steamy Romance Novel Pg 2

I’m a little disappointed with my fan mag’s Issue #2. Page 75 of the online AFK Magazine:

Who Are These People

Rating every game on a scale of 8.0 – 10.0 is to be expected, but CMON, L2Edit or disband now.

12 thoughts on “Another Brick in the Wall

  1. Haha! I was pickpocketing those things off of BEs and sending ’em to all my friends for the amusement value. Then selling them at AH for nearly vendor-value just so non-rogues who don’t have rogue friends could read ’em.

  2. ha! reminds me of the book you can pickpocket off the ogres, ‘How to serve man’.

    What a classic read that was. 🙂

  3. Oh! Just another thing,

    exactly which class can carry a 2h broadsword and have a frost armor spell?

    😛

  4. About “How to serve man”. I’ve never seen that book in the game. Wow.. that easter egg reaches way back. Which Ogres can you get that from? I can’t find it on Thottbot.

  5. It’s a pretty obvious English grammatical error in an English publication, glaring error, one might say.

    If your first language isn’t English, that might not be so apparent, I dunno.

  6. For those who don’t kill the BE’s (because were aldor faction farming :P) but rather kill the cabal’s over by the bone wastes you get something completely different :P. But imagine my suprise when I step into Arcatraz (still keep wanting to call it Alcatraz, I suppose that was the idea) pick pocketing a lvl 71 elite and getting…

    http://www.wowhead.com/?item=29570

    Makes you wonder what they are doing with them.

  7. maybe they are using them as voodoo dolls or just dolls.. xD
    that book, is it only two pages long? Belinda must have used it pretty much

  8. Actually, ‘hots up’ is correct in British English, but not in American English. Maybe they have a Brit editor…?

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