Mists of Pandaria box art (Photo: Blizzard Entertainment)
Here’s a Geo Quiz with a virtual twist. We’re looking for a mythical place, a continent located in the south of Azeroth, a fictional world that figures in the World of Warcraft.
The hugely popular, online game of survival is chock full of blood and gore and requires strategy to play. Millions of users in the real world play Warcraft as often as they can.
Now, about that continent in Azeroth. It’s said to be “shrouded by a magical mist,”, and its inhabitants were carried there on the back of the great turtle Shen-zin Su.
And mythical or not, the place is now officially off limits to online gamers in Iran. Their access to the World of Warcraft network has been blocked to comply with tough US trade sanctions against Iran.
Pandaria is the answer to our Geo Quiz.
The dark and violent world of Pandaria may (or may not) be fine entertainment but its apparently off limits to users in Iran. Gamers in Teheran have posted complaints in recent days saying they can’t access Warcraft’s network. This week Blizzard acknowledged that it’s responsible for more tightly restricting Iran’s access.
The American company says “US trade restrictions and economic sanctions prohibit doing business with residents of certain nations, including Iran.”
US sanctions against Iran are aimed at preventing Iran from developing nuclear weapons.
“This is a direct result of U-S sanctions policies and this is an example of how our policies are hurting the wrong people,” says Jamal Abdi, who is with the National Iranian American Council in Washington. “Our politices are hurting ordinary Iranians and not the Iranian government whose behavior we’re trying to change. It could be something we think is trivial like World of Warcraft but this is a much bigger problem. Every facet of life in Iran is now being impacted by US policies and it’s having a negative impact on the Iranian people who are largely our friends.”
Iranian blogs are buzzing with speculation that the Iranian government was blocking access to Warcraft due to the corrupting influence of violent entertainment.
Instead Abdi says it turns out that Blizzard Entertainment is just complying with US sanctions:
“If we want to stand with the Iranian people, we need to make sure they can be part of the outside world, and communicate freely instead of making their lives harder, and cutting them off from these communications tools,” Abdi says.
Warcraft fans in Cuba, Libya, North Korea, and Syria are in the same boat. US trade sanctions mean they’re all restricted from playing in the misty world of Pandaria.
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