Now that World of Warcraft has cross-faction guilds, players are begging Blizzard to drop faction restrictions across the board, especially for casual content, so players can group up with their friends no matter what faction they picked.
Cross-faction guilds were introduced back in Dragonflight’s Embers of Neltharion Patch 10.1, but there’s still many things that cross-faction players can’t do together, including queue up for raids and dungeons or compete in PvP matches. Although WoW‘s long-written lore should prohibit Alliance and Horde players from teaming up, players are simply tired of cross-faction blocks and want them gone—even those on roleplaying servers.
Content merged from July 29, 2024 6:08 am:
Now that World of Warcraft has cross-faction guilds, players are begging Blizzard to drop faction restrictions across the board, especially for casual content, so players can group up with their friends no matter what faction they picked.
Cross-faction guilds were introduced back in Dragonflight’s Embers of Neltharion Patch 10.1, but there’s still many things that cross-faction players can’t do together, including queue up for raids and dungeons or compete in PvP matches. Although WoW‘s long-written lore should prohibit Alliance and Horde players from teaming up, players are simply tired of cross-faction blocks and want them gone—even those on roleplaying servers.