Cataclysm Glyph and Inscription Changes
June 13, 2010 by Zuggy · Leave a Comment
The following are the recent Cataclysm glyph changes and updates to the glyph system, including the removal of the Path of Titans. These changes were announced at the recent Blizzard press event.
edit: added more specifics about the new glyph system
- Path of the Titans has been scrapped and will not be implemented.
- Instead Blizzard will focus on improving the glyph system, as they feel it didn’t quite hit the intended goals in Wrath.
- Glyphs will now be available in 3 categories: Major, “Medium” (PH name) and Minor.
- Major glyphs are core to each class and will be expected to be used to perform at maximum level.
- Medium glyphs will be to provide “fun” alterations to abilities.
- Minor glyphs will largely function as they do today.
- Based on the mockup shown, you’ll be able to have 3 glyphs of each type at level 85: Major, Medium and Minor.
- The glyph UI will now display all of the glyphs available to your class, even if you haven’t learned them yet, to the right of the section where you apply your glyphs.
- Blizzard wants to make glyphs permanent so you don’t have to carry a stack of them around. Simply learn the glyph and then you can swap it whenever you want.
Cataclysm Glyphs / Inscription
More on the updates for glyphs and inscription
Glyphs in Cataclysm
Minor glyphs are fine in our opinion. They weren’t intended to offer power and they are certainly much more flexible than major glyphs. Some classes need some better minor glyphs though (e.g. warlock).Medium glyphs are the kind of glyph you’d take if you had more choices. For example, a Fury warrior these days in PvE probably takes Execution, Whirlwind and Heroic Strike. Why wouldn’t you? You hit all of those buttons a lot. The glyph of Cleave isn’t bad, but you just don’t find yourself in situations where you would use it as much as Heroic Strike, so it just never competes. If it wasn’t competing with Heroic Strike though, say it was in a different category, then it might be worth considering. Bloodthirst would be an excellent medium glyph, because it is useful but doesn’t contribute to dps. Medium glyphs are good for situational abilities, cooldowns, defense and utility.
Now having said that, we are also taking a hard look at the major glyphs. Glyph of Sprint (movement speed) is a pretty interesting one. It is probably a dps increase given that it helps your time on target, but it’s hard to put a number on that. It’s very easy to put a number on Glyph of Eviscerate (crit chance). It’s a math problem. That glyph is either going to be demonstrably better or worse than the other majors, leading to the cookie-cutter mentality. We already have plenty parts of the game where there really isn’t a wrong choice to be made — with enchants and meta-gems for example, there is typically a right or wrong answer given that we don’t make several per spec. We do make several glyphs per spec, so we think they can be cooler. Customization was our original design for glyphs, and frankly we just didn’t deliver on it. They feel like talents, and pretty simple talents at that.
The challenge for us is that ALL glyphs have to follow this model. If they don’t for some classes, as happened in LK, then eventually the whole thing unravels. We have a much better feel for what makes an interesting gylph now. I’m not going to promise we’re going to deliver on it this time around, because we weren’t able to the first time. But it is a goal and we’re going to spend a lot of time on it.
Non-Consumable/Learnable Glyphs in Cataclysm
Making glyphs more interesting to every player is more important than making consumable glyphs a reliable money-maker for Inscription, given that there are plenty of other ways to handle the latter.









