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WoW Director Defends Controversial Addon Restrictions Six Months After Midnight Launch
World of WarcraftMMOAddonsMidnight

WoW Director Defends Controversial Addon Restrictions Six Months After Midnight Launch

Jul 12, 20262 sources0 comments

World of Warcraft game director Ion Hazzikostas is standing behind one of Midnight's most divisive changes: sweeping restrictions on what combat-related information community-made addons can access. Speaking to PCGamesN, Hazzikostas acknowledged the controversy head-on, saying "I know this may be a controversial statement, but I will say that, overall, the new UI has been successful so far." He argued the old addon ecosystem had forced Blizzard to design encounters around third-party tools, which was pushing class and encounter design in a bad direction and disadvantaging newer players unfamiliar with addons like WeakAuras and Deadly Boss Mods.

Nearly six months after the changes took effect, Hazzikostas says the data backs up the decision, noting that "the vast majority of people are completing the same level of content they were before, and far more are doing it without feeling like they need to seek out external tools." Blizzard is not abandoning addons entirely, and the upcoming Update 12.1 will bring what he describes as a "more comprehensive overhaul" of the addon security backend, aiming to make development easier for creators while closing loopholes that have allowed access to restricted combat data.

Key Insights

  • 1Ion Hazzikostas defended Midnight's combat addon restrictions as broadly successful, despite significant community backlash.
  • 2Blizzard's core concern was that addon prevalence was forcing encounter and class design to be built around third-party tools rather than the base game.
  • 3Hazzikostas cited player completion rates as evidence that the restrictions have not meaningfully hurt the playerbase's ability to clear content.
  • 4Update 12.1 will overhaul the addon security backend to help legitimate addon authors while closing loopholes for restricted data access.
  • 5Blizzard has no plans to adopt a full no-addon policy like Final Fantasy 14; the goal is a more level playing field, not elimination.