Community Guidelines

Last updated March 30, 2026

A transmog community works better when the standards are clear

Hall of Mogs is for sharing looks, not farming outrage. These guidelines explain what belongs on the site, what does not, and how moderation decisions are handled when a post, profile, or report crosses the line.

What belongs here

  • World of Warcraft transmogs, screenshots, and profile content shared in good faith.
  • Titles, captions, bios, and comments that help other players understand the look or the creator.
  • Constructive discovery: saving looks, browsing profiles, and reporting genuinely harmful content.
  • Creative presentation that stays within Blizzard fan-site boundaries and normal community standards.

What is not allowed

  • Hate speech, slurs, targeted harassment, threats, or content meant to intimidate another player.
  • Explicit sexual content, sexual exploitation, or any sexualized content involving minors.
  • Spam, repetitive self-promotion, scam links, engagement bait, or attempts to game visibility.
  • Impersonation of another creator, moderator, brand, or public figure.
  • Cheat promotion, hacks, illegal material, or content that encourages rule-breaking or abuse.
  • Uploads you do not have the right to share, including copied media presented as your own work.

Profile and posting expectations

  • Use a username and bio that other players can safely view in a public community setting.
  • Keep screenshots readable. If a post is too low-effort, misleading, or broken, it may be removed.
  • Do not hide promotions, referral links, or external sales pitches inside titles, bios, or images.
  • Tag and describe your look honestly so other players are not misled about what the post contains.

How moderation works

Hall of Mogs uses a mix of automated checks, manual review, and player reports. Some content may be blocked immediately. Some may be accepted but sent to pending review before it appears publicly.

Moderators may remove posts, hide profile changes, resolve reports, or suspend accounts when needed to protect the community. Repeated abuse, impersonation, or clear bad-faith behavior will be treated more strictly than one-off formatting mistakes or accidental uploads.

Reporting and enforcement

Use the built-in report flows when a post or profile clearly breaks these rules. Reports should be honest and specific. Abusing reporting tools to harass other users or settle arguments is itself a moderation issue.

Enforcement may include content removal, temporary review-only restrictions, account suspension, or permanent removal from the service, depending on severity and repeat behavior.