How in the world do you have so many items to restore? You sold or deleted over 4k items in the last 2 weeks? That's outrageous. Anyway, this process is still much faster than waiting for a GM to answer your ticket and then dig around for the item; although, the restore system doesn't go back as far as the GMs used to which was more like a month plus.
Man, i looked at my item recovery list from playing classic and theres hardly anything on there
Retail sure is saturated with welfare loot lol
I do in fact think it should only list the last one, maybe two weeks and/or 50 items, whichever is more generous (since you could accidentally delete/sell something, go on vacation etc. for three weeks or more, and only notice it afterwards)
It should help restore accidentally deleted items, but not something you intentionally vendored/scrapped months ago.
Just because you were not aware of an issue does not mean there wasn't one.
It could've been a rare issue that e.g. caused the search to clear the item list, or certain items were never displayed, so they chose lessened functionality over a serious bug.
That's just frontend issues visible to the user. The search could have caused issues on the backend server which would at best be noticeable via secondary effects (someone mentioned it was slow)
Last edited by Nathanyel; 2019-12-06 at 11:01 PM.
But your duty to Azeroth is not yet complete. More is demanded of you... a price the living cannot pay.
Which we would know if they gave a reason, which was what I was specifically replying to. The other poster said they gave a reason, that it was broken. They didn't. They cited a vague "issue" without giving us the reason. The poster said "it didn't work". The search did work. You could filter and search and it returned data. Did it have bugs? likely. Few (no?) pieces of software are bug free. That doesn't cause us to say no software works. That's beside the point though. The point was that he claimed they gave a reason it was removed when they didn't. Saying there is an issue is so vague as to be pointless. It could mean anything from enabling item duplication somehow, to Bob in accounting not liking it (both of which would be actual reasons).
Last edited by Occar; 2019-12-06 at 11:17 PM.
How specific should they explain this to you? "Certain circumstances caused the backend server to crash." and you'd ask "which ones?", which is already something they may not want to disclose, because other parts of the website could be similarly attacked. It would also at some point shift blame to the developers and/or technicians, which they would also not want to do.
They don't have to disclose anything, they didn't even have to state there was any issue, that was to our benefit, but they're not willing to go into further detail, which would not really help anyone but rubbernecks that want to know everything, since the system was changed already.
But your duty to Azeroth is not yet complete. More is demanded of you... a price the living cannot pay.
Eh, this is more one of those 'first world' problems. In my mind, I've always seen this as the trash line, last thing to worry about. The desgin is fine, for its actual purpose, to restore things recently lost.
FOMO: "Fear Of Missing Out", also commonly known as people with a mental issue of managing time and activities, many expecting others to fit into their schedule so they don't miss out on things to come. If FOMO becomes a problem for you, do seek help, it can be a very unhealthy lifestyle..
Meybe its like this to discourage ppl and force to thinking while dealeting their items.
This "feature" only exists as a way to get something back that you accidentally vendored/deleted. While the search function was outright stated to have been removed because it wasn't functioning properly, I would not be the least bit surprised if it was also to discourage the attitudes seen in this thread. Unless you for whatever reason didn't play for months after deleting the item in question, then there is absolutely no reason to reasonably expect to have the item restored. Though in that case the search most likely wouldn't be needed since if you hadn't been playing for months then the item ought to show up on the first or second page anyway.
I suppose in the case of some random quest items I could see someone not noticing they had deleted them, or realized they had any use for them, until months later. So in that event the search would be crucial to have back. However, as many others have noted, the item restoration is not some extra bank storage. Willfully vendoring gear and expecting the ability to retrieve it after months of active playtime is one seriously unprecedented form of entitlement.
seriously: dont know whats funny about that. its cheap shit and filters and quality costs effort and effort costs money. and no, its not just „har har har, it takes 10mins and 1 dev to add a few filters there“. by doing nothing and accepting cheap shit (and op is totally right here) they indeed save money.
so, i personally do not get your har har har shit. but maybe thats just me.
So essentially, instead of storing the item in a bank you deleted it and you are now salty that it's not very convenient to restore it?
The items are listed chronologically. There's honestly not much more you need.
Well of course, this isn't something you should be doing regularly, so there are measures in place to discourage people from doing it often.
Well, it's not supposed to be used for getting back items you destroyed/vendored ages ago. As allready stated it's for restoring an item you accidentaly deleted recently.
This is the issue with retail, no pieces of loot hold any meaningful value, so you just slam them to the vendor as they get handed to you, because you get handed a million of them every month.