He's right. Patch 1.7 (ZG) came out a month before which could be 10 months since launch. We have both ZG and dragons April 15th 2020, that is 7.5 months since launch of classic wow gold (August 26th 2020) So that I do not know what I am supposed to be looking up if that which I look up tells me he's right and you're mistaken. I really doubt they are going to wait 6 months between AQ and Naxx like on vanilla.

If you check the dates, then you will see that WOW Classic is, except bg releases consistently on a pace with EU launch as a starting point. The timing between the patches is quite vanilla-like. It is a flaw in your justification to utilize NA launch Maraudon was in at WOW Classic launch, following NA release initially Maraudon did not release until a month, so it already doesn't fit.

In the original release, the first raid managers fell 3 months before EU launch, i.e. two months after NA release. In WOW Classic all raid content has been removed within 5 days of release. At the time the raids in the first WoW set foot in WOW Classic casuals have been pugging it. The content drought could be drive people away. Does it make any sense for you to postpone ALL content releases by 3 months due to utilizing NA release when this is actually the state of affairs?

Can you believe WOW Classic contrasts to FFXIV

So lately whenever I have seen a conversation come up debating between FFXIV and WoW, the majority of the men and women who involve FFXIV claim that it blows WoW out of the water, but also seem to only be talking about Retail, or even comparing the graphics and berating the blocky 2004 images of WOW Classic. However from my time enjoying FFXIV it rubbed me off like Retail WoW but with nicer graphics, casing, and more efficient streamlining. The Jobs did not seem to have some"Class Fantasy" or Flavor like WOW Classic does. Black Mages don't have the ability to open portals they can not conjure water and food, folks don't appear to work or communicate and only rush through FATEs and buy classic gold wow dungeons.