Each update in World of Warcraft, be it an expansion or a patch, is designated with a number. The first number is the expansion, the second one the patch number. The third number denotes whether it is a minor patch. Your installed version of the game needs to match the version running on the server, or you cannot play the game.
For example:
Patch 1.0 was classic World of Warcraft
Patch 2.0 was The Burning Crusade
Patch 3.0 was Wrath of the Lich King.
Patch 3.2.0 noted in the question was the patch in which the Argent Tournament was added in Icecrown.
Icecrown Citadel was added in Patch 3.3, and the current client is 3.3.3.
Well, it's all about the account. If your account is upgraded with the code for WOTLK, then you NEED to play on a PC with the version having installed WOTLK. Although, you can play a TBC/Vanilla(Classic) account on a WOTLK upgraded version of WoW. Yes sir eee!
Yes it does. I just installed WoW (+ Expansions) via the wotlk downloader.
yes it does, has 1 sever for bc and one for wotlk
To install and play a wotlk server all you need is WoW + TBC + WotLK installed Find the server you wanna play and patch to their version Go to your WoW folder and find your realmlist in /data/enUS (file named realmlist.wtf) Replace the blizzard realm login to the IP of the realm you wanna play (you can get that from the server's page) Here's a link to good private server with a detailed guide: http://www.wowpk.org/wowpk-information/4-setting-up-wowpk-private-wotlk-server.html
No. You MUST upgrade to BC then Wrath.
yes
steampowered.com get the client and you can get 1.6 cs version from there.
No - all WoW addons require registration ($) and the previous addon: WotlK requires The Burning Crusade, The Burning Crusade requires a registered version of WoW.
Yes, to play Cataclysm you must have WotLK, like to play WotLK you need TBC.
Wrath of the Lich King
Client outdated means that the client (the software used to connect to the server) is out of date. You need to update your version of Minecraft.
Windows 7 is commonly used on client computers.