Blizzard is suing the purported operators of private World of Warcraft server Project Ascension. The move marks the latest episode in the company’s crackdown on popular World of Warcraft community projects that have gotten too big to ignore.
Blizzard had sued private World of Warcraft server operators before, most notably in the 2009 Scapegaming and WoWScape case, which ended in an $88.6 million default judgment. However, the company’s activity on this front has historically been difficult to predict, with sustained enforcement efforts spiking at irregular intervals. The latest such push began in earnest in August 2025, when Blizzard sued Turtle WoW operators, alleging a multitude of trademark and copyright violations. The case was followed by a series of similar crackdowns against private WoW servers, with no clear end in sight.
Blizzard Targets More World of Warcraft Private Servers
Blizzard continues its legal campaign against World of Warcraft private servers, as the company shuts down two more player-run projects.
Continuing this trend, Blizzard has now set its sights on Project Ascension. According to a June 12 complaint uncovered by Aftermath, the developer alleges a myriad of intellectual property infringements on the part of the group behind the server, positing that the initiative has grown into a large-scale, for-profit operation that it can no longer ignore. Copyright breaches, DMCA violations, false designation of origin, intentional interference with contractual relations, and federal racketeering claims tied to the alleged development and monetization of the server are all mentioned in the 51-page lawsuit filed with the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California. The company is seeking damages and a court order that would permanently shut down the unauthorized World of Warcraft server.
More Than a Mere Private WoW Server: Project Ascension’s Popularity Explained
Part of what makes the newly threatened initiative stand out in the private-server community is that it does not simply recreate an older version of the iconic MMORPG. Instead, Project Ascension delivers a decidedly different take on World of Warcraft by allowing players to mix abilities and create builds without the limitations of Blizzard’s class system. It also offers older WoW content alongside custom additions, a potentially compelling combination for many veteran players unhappy with the modern direction of the game. Underlining the appeal of this opinionated overhaul is Ascension’s own website, which states that the project has “over 226,000 community members on Discord and averages 60,000+ concurrent online.”
Blizzard’s Argument(s) for Shutting Down Project Ascension Mirrors Earlier WoW Lawsuits
Blizzard argues that Project Ascension’s features still rely on copied World of Warcraft code, art, music, environments, and other copyrighted material. The lawsuit also alleges that the Ascension Client was altered to bypass checks that normally connect users to official Blizzard servers. Moreover, the complaint frames Project Ascension as a well-realized for-profit initiative rather than a fan hobby endeavor.
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The complaint names several individual defendants, two U.S. companies it describes as shell entities, a separate group it says collects donations, and unidentified “Doe” defendants tied to online aliases. The company accuses them of operating as a coordinated enterprise, alleging that they have distributed millions of copies of the Ascension Client and that more than one million players have used their servers since the project began in 2016. The overall legal strategy mirrors the company’s other recent lawsuits, largely because its underlying claims are similar across cases. The same approach helped Blizzard shut down Turtle WoW and Stormforge Project in mid-May 2026, a mere month before going after Project Ascension.
- Released
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November 23, 2004
- ESRB
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T for Teen: Blood and Gore, Crude Humor, Mild Language, Suggestive Themes, Use of Alcohol, Violence (online interactions not rated)
- Engine
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Unreal Engine


