Ok, so bare with me a bit here.
Honorbuddy is a hacker's tool. A great one, to give credit where it's due. Great enough that non-hackers, aka layman's people, can use it with a tad bit of fiddling around. Not super user friendly, but user friendly enough that your average joe can figure out how to make it go.
CodenameG and Tony, much respect to both of you, but it's not really that clear. It's.. giving out too many details.
"This Honorbuddy version only supports
WoW Patch 20490 and you are on
WoW Patch 20574. Please go to
http:www.buddyforum.com/releases/ to check for updates."
Patch Build numbers doesn't help the average joe. It helps the hackers. 20490 means absolutely nothing to joe. Joe might vaguely know the current patch is patch 6.2.. but build numbers are a bunch of mumbojump to him. I know wow displays it as "6.2.2.20574" on the launcher - but honorbuddy doesn't start wow from the launcher. That's even assuming joe could discern that "wow patch 20574" means "6.2.2.20574"
not to mention that "http://buddyforum.com/releases/" brings up a 404 page...
I have two suggestions:
Change the text to something along the lines of "Honorbuddy does not support your current version of WoW (Patch 6.2.2.20574). World of Warcraft may have recently updated. You can learn more about this and check for updates at: http//www.buddyform.com/releases/"
and then, at a working version of the url.. throw up a static page with a few FAQs.
"Honorbuddy says it doesn't support my current version of WoW, what does this mean?"
Whenever Blizzard releases a new patch for WoW, honorbuddy has to be tested and checked that it works with the new patch. This process can take several days, which is unfortunate but unavoidable. You can check to see if a new version of honorbuddy has been released here. (
https://www.thebuddyforum.com/releases/)
As your product becomes more available, you have to start accommodating the lowest common denominator. That means producing things for your average joe.
UX (user experience) is a passion of mine.