HotR is committed now more than ever to neutral and cross faction RP! To this end, we highly recommend the Cross RP addon. This is an addon that utilizes communities for cross-faction RP. Unlike ones that use raid, this allows for /say, /e & /y to all be read on either side (though you must use Orcish or Common!) This is a game-changer for our community! It is not against the ToS, and if that concerns you, the creator has an entire section on curseforge explaining why.
Please join HotR’s community at https://blizzard.com/invite/amv9G3oSYkl once you’ve downloaded the addon. You can connect to it with the minimap icon the addon gives and BAM! We understand each other!
We ask that you do NOT use this for griefing other players at our events. Keep addons like this useful to RP servers and respect the reputation of the establishment you are visiting. Thanks!
a little over three years ago i was in a sweaty conference room in manhattan visiting the now defunct WP NYC studio (which was in a shared space sort of… tech venture situation??) sitting in on what was usually a remote meeting. I nervously stood in front of andrew and my director at the time (whos name was also james come to think of it) as well as a handful of other people. Toby was conference calling in like we both usually did.
They said since i was visiting from out of town I didn’t have to present anything at this weeks meeting like i usually did. I said I had something to show them anyway, since I didn’t like to sit around idly and wanted to make the most of my studio visit. I stood there half-moist with gross air-dampness only new york in summer can really provide knowing I had one opportunity to wow them in person.
“alright. remember all those sound effects for that highblood minigame? like… seltzer water? light bulb? honks? squeaks? ok well, I made them into a beat and added some airhorns and tuba-”
“more tuba?” said toby over the call
“hell yeah brother more tuba”
anyway this was that song. It was going to be for a minigame sequence (somewhere in act 2) but i wanted to use it here. originally it didn’t have a melody so i wrote a melody on banjo since you should definitely be reading all of chahuts lines in a very slow, methodical louisiana genteel southern accent.