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Copenhagen
Apprentice Member
Joined: 11/11/06
God is great, Beer is good, and People are Stupid! |
12/18/06 6:42:54 PM#21
Ok, half my post got cut off and I had problems posting in the first place...it looked like it double posted for a minute but I guess it did'nt. And it wont let me edit it.
So you'll just have to try and fill in the blanks. Hmm...that is odd I can edit this post...wierd |
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12/18/06 8:41:54 PM#22
"The point of this editorial and many others about World of Warcraft is to try and figure out what is going on with the biggest MMO in the world. " I don't think anyone, not even Blizzard can answer what is going on with WoW now. But the WHY is obvious enough. Remember all those layoffs and quitting that occured right before WoW was launched? Remember all those new companies that have started up with ex-Blizzard employees? Mike Morhaime believes that it is solely because of the culture that he has created at his company that allows Blizzard to create such successful games. He is only half right. You need the right culture, but you also need the RIGHT PEOPLE. Blizzard lost many of those people right before WoW was released. Now after a year with a couple of hardcore EQ-raiding Guild leaders running things, we're in a state with Blizzard flailing around trying to figure out how to fix something that never should have been broken. WoW seems to have no direction because it was lost before the game was ever released. It's success is thanks to 5 years of dedicated work by many people who are no longer there and are no longer calling the shots. The only question is how long will the momentum last?
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12/18/06 9:54:47 PM#23
I'm not 100% certain, but that seems spot on. Brilliant... /golfclap I wonder what WoW would have been like if the original crew stayed on and the EQ devs never got their grubby paws on the source code. Anytime an ex-EQ dev touches a game it withers and dies. I bet Vanguard flounders and stagnates like this too, but the cutomization and player housing will give it a little longevity if the crappy animations don't kill it first. |
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12/18/06 11:27:53 PM#24
Since you asked, I do feel slighted. I didn't win an XPS Laptop in the last drawing. It really bums me out.
binarypc |
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dorobu
Novice Member
Joined: 8/03/03
"Maybe this world is another planet's Hell." |
12/18/06 11:39:45 PM#25
WTB the right edge of what everyone is saying (it's all cut off for some reason regardless of window size) and an editorial NOT on WoW.
Thanks -doro |
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12/19/06 12:03:40 AM#26
"You are not prepared!"
I think that just about says it all. |
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Reklaw
Hard Core Member
Joined: 1/07/06
Freedom is the will to be responsible to ourselves. |
12/19/06 2:48:11 AM#27
Thank you, you saved me time to try and explain the same thing you are explaining, usely i find the topics quite intresting but this topic only show'd once again someone that actualy does not really know mmorpg. People read the artical of -=zg=- a couple of times and see that this person is more right then the whole topic can ever be, really if some of you feel that the topic made more sence then i wonder where gaming is going to and trust me thats not the way that gaming should be, but unfortunaly seems that now a days the gaming communtiy is rather lazy. I'm just very happy that atleast 1 person ( that's -=zg=-) that see's it like it should be ( Reklaw ------------------------------------------------------------ |
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12/19/06 6:41:14 AM#28
As a non-raiding, PvP loving, casual player, I activated my account before BC came out only for this patch. The amount of BG's needed to gain even the slightest honor is ridiculous. However Blizzard has always catered to it's raiders. If you got enjoyment from shutting out the rest of the world so you could run BWL 200 times or found that 21 hours of PvP a day wasn't enough, then you are Blizz's ideal customer. And those were the people that were bitching when the "rest of us" were now able to get epics. I agree with the author. I enjoy this game more than any out right now. However there are a lot of games coming out and a couple more decisions like this, and the WoW era will end.
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12/19/06 7:05:47 AM#29
Well the TBC expansion offers casual players alot, 10 more levels to grind/quest, you call leveling a grind but its how u chose to level, and leveling with a friend is 100 times more enjoyable. Many ppl race to top level bypasing story based quests in favour for the quick kill x amount of y quests... so dont complain.
TBC also offers 7 new dungeons most of which can be run by 5 man groups... upto 25man raid groups, so casual players can raid too, blizzard obviously realised that 40man raids where a bad idea. TBH any MMO's end game is boring after a while, not sure why ppl always slate WoW. Im looking forward to TBC, a new world to explore, new dungeons to enjoy, PvP arenas (like GW ladder but 1,000,000 better, cus we all know guildwarz PvP is a joke). |
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xanklar
Novice Member
Joined: 4/07/04
Credo, quia impossibile est ... me transmitte sursum caledoni |
12/19/06 8:21:09 AM#30
WoW is a game that I keep coming back to - I've been through a number of MMO's, starting when The Realm was advanced technology (!!!) and WoW is the game that I keep quitting and coming back to at the moment in the MMO market. I think that is where Blizzard get their (imho) misguided drive from - at the moment there is less competition for their base market. I'm not stating opinion, but fact when you look at the market figure break-up for MMO's. However, there are a number of MMO's that are getting close to release, principally focusing on a smaller initial market with a view to expansion - eg. Vanguard, Conan, etc. that I believe will eat into the core population that WoW currently enjoys. There was an interesting post early in this thread referring to McDonalds - and basically that is what Blizzard has developed with WoW, an MMO that endeavours to cater to the largest group of people possible without really satisfying any of them. WoW is likely to stay the broadest appealing of MMO's on the market - the future is for companies that see the niche that isn't yet catered for, nails that market, and builds on that success. At present I think that any MMO that aims for the "McDonald's" approach will fail (DDO anybody?). As I said at the beginning, I do keep coming back to WoW - please don't take me for a flamer - but you always lose out on quality in the end if your principle focus is on quantity. Unfortunately I believe that WoW will suffer from the bland standardisation that effects all mass-marketed successful products. It is up to the consumer to support the quality 'niche' market when it develops and allow it to thrive if you want to overcome mass-market standardisation of your MMO experience. |
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12/19/06 8:49:22 AM#31
I disagree that the 30% adjustment is a bad thing. If everyone can get everything quicker than Blizzard expected then there is no point in it being a "reward". If everything were easy then you would all be complaining that the game is easy mode, the fact that they adjusted to make it slightly (30%) more difficult is a good thing.
I really do not get people who complain about adjustments. They are the same people, it seems, who complain about certain classes being overpowered or underpowered. They do not seem to understand that with balance and adjustment the game becomes more fun for more people rather than more fun for fewer people or less fun for more people. I think that Blizzard has done a wonderful job so far and I hope that they continue to adjust things and tweak things here and there to keep things fresh (or as fresh as they can) so the game does not stagnate and get abandoned. |
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12/19/06 9:35:25 AM#32
I dont like Mcdonalds food. I try it just one time, and no I never again step in a McDonalds again. When I start to play WoW, I just did because a friend just put some effort, for a year telling me, that this game is gonna be "The Game", I start play in the open beta, and I am still playing. I am not a raider player, I didnt like to do instances, this is boring.... I have 7 chars that hit level 60, some of with crap gear, but I still enjoy to play, but start to get bored. Ah let me tell my opinion about this 30% less honour. I dont care, I still can do some PvP sometimes and I will get this PvP stuffs in the future. The only thing I dont like is the queue system, is not fun wait around almost half hour to enter a BG.
WoW, Warhammer, Ashen empires and other games, its just a game. Some people transform this things in a way of life, but remember real life is more challenge, and much more fun.
PS.: English isnt my first language, so I could make some mistakes. |
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12/19/06 10:27:50 AM#33
I just didn't think that much of the editorial. This is the way I read it: WOW is the biggest game ever, MMORPG improves their net worth by having people active on their site, post a poorly written rant as an editorial, people respond and it doen't matter what they say. Oh and look, here I am falling for it. If you took out every sentence that had a variation of "What is going on at Blizzard?" what would you have? I was tricked into wasting my time reading this article by the thought that this "review" might have some really interesting insight into the largest patch in a long time. Nope its just a PVP rant. Don't get me wrong. I agree with the writer's feelings. But the content of this article could have been summed up with: "What's going on at Blizzard? They overhauled the PVP to make it easier for non-raid people to get good stuff, then they pulled the rug out from under us!" Even the tag line on the end: "Post if you want to complain too, or say anything, just post!" is annoying. Maybe the article was written poorly just to annoy people like me enough to post. "Just because I am paranoid doesn't mean they aren't out to get me" Reviews of talent changes, the arenas, which characters got love and which ones not so much - that would be a review worth reading. If this is the quality of MMORPG articles, I'll be cancelling all my notifications soon. It all started with a lantern, a sword, and a trap door... |
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Ponico
Novice Member
Joined: 2/01/06
Can you imagine what I would do if I could do all I can? - Sun Tsu |
12/19/06 10:46:09 AM#34
Seriously, someone said it took about 20 hours to get Grand Marshall.
That's maybe 2 or 3 hardcore days of playing of let's say a week for an
adverage player. Keep in mind that i'm saying if you only PVP.
30% increase is what... 2 or maybe 3 weeks for an adverage player. It's not that that bad.
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12/19/06 12:08:22 PM#35
So, now I have read the stuff posted after my post and I believe some folks are just not understanding what I am saying, though some definitely do. Let me try another tack. What does MMORPG stand for? It is Massively Multiplayer Online Role Playing Game. To start off with, let's just remove the first three words. OMG, he is talking about role playing! Smash him down, Chew him up! Chill a minute and listen to what I have to say, please. Taking the last word from the remainder that I left, I want to take this opportunity to remind everyone, this is a game. It is not a life or death struggle against the forces of light or darkness. It is a means to find some relaxation. As the tips say, take all things in moderation, including World of Warcraft. Now that I have that off my chest, let's look at the two remaining words, role playing. To me, this does not mean that you must run around spouting prose at every combat opportunity to ensure that you have validated your right to "...smite those damnable creatures soundly about the head and shoulders until I have appeased the great Pumpkin's need for blood and destruction..." well, you get the point. Role playing on an MMO to me means taking my time, finding out new things, finding my equipment, taking what I get, immersing myself in the story that many of the "hundreds of programmers" (someone in a previous post) put together for our enjoyment. I am not looking for a hack and slash environment where it is all endless combat in order to get one piece of uber armor or some "Godhammer" weapon. I think of an MMORPG as a different universe, one that I can partake in freely (as long as I pay my subscription) and one that I can allow myself to enjoy without the feeling that I must have the ultimate character. I mean think about it, if this was a real place (it is not for those of you who might not know that), would you and 4 of your closest friends think you could go and put the beat down on Onyxia? I think not. You would take along 39 of your friends and associates and anyone else brave enough to take the chance to kill one of the great creatures of your land. Rightly so! And then, once you got there, would you want the same Bastard Sword of Unbelievably Hard Hitting that everyone else that ever raided a dragon's lair got? I think not! I want something unique, something mine, something that is not something that every other Tom, Dick or Harry has in his pack. Well, frankly, that last is not possible. I cannot see the game having 7.5 million unique items drop from one, albeit huge and old, dragon. So, because of the nature of the game, some duplication is unavoidable. However, that doesn't mean that because Johnny-Joe has the above mentioned Bastard Sword that I must have it. But too many people seem hung up on having to get some predetermined item or set. The beauty of an RPG is that you can take what you get and make the most out of it. Okay, so my weapon use level is 4 below mine, and the DPS is .6 less than yours, so what? I don't care if I can piss further than you can or not. Why do you? Can't you come up with some originality on your own? Find something that no one else has and step away from the cookie cutter Talent trees. You do know the people that come up with those had to think, right? Try it on, thinking is not that hard and it can be very rewarding. Maybe someday someone will post your new idea as the new best gear setup around. You know, it all comes down to this. If you are playing the game and think that Blizzard screwed it up because you cannot get to level 40 in less than 10 hours of play time, you are looking at this whole thing wrong. You are setting yourself up for unhappiness. You are making it impossible to achieve happiness. Then, to top it all off, you post your reasoning as if it was the only way to think on forums in a vain attempt to STEAL OUR HAPPINESS. I say, let it go, take a breath, find something else to fill a portion of your life, like a girl/boyfriend, spouse, children, job, hobby other than online. Take some time to stop and smell the roses and stop trying to be a wet blanket thrown over the rest of us. Have you ever heard the saying, "If you don't have something good to say, don't say anything."? -=zg=- -=ZG=- |
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12/19/06 12:12:40 PM#36
Actually, if you are talking about a 30% increase in play time to achieve a goal and the base is say 3 days, that would mean it would then take 4 days. If you are talking about online time, then 72 hours would turn into about 96 hours. At say 6 hours per day (I would say that is hardcore, but I may be low) that is 16 days of play versus the original 12 days. I agree, not that bad. -=zg=- -=ZG=- |
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12/19/06 2:35:04 PM#37
This editorial is nothing more then a "I want my cookie and I want it NOW!" rant. Why not ask for instant level 60's in full epic gear while your at it?
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12/19/06 3:56:17 PM#38
Geez, another ill-informed half-baked whiny editorial. I only come to MMORPG.com any more to register for the contests and donwload trial games. The editorial staff here is a joke. In fact, most of the stories here aren't any more insightful or better informed than a random World of Warcraft fanboi 1337 post on their forums. Learn to be journalists guys.
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12/19/06 4:17:06 PM#39
Slighted?! No way, not me! hehe Yeah right! My account is cancelled. In fact: it was cancelled a couple days after 2.01 came out. Once I let it sink in that Blizzard is still all about hardcore players (who scream that x is too easy to get and y is too easy to get...), my second account cancellation was so easy. I took two people down with me too... 3 accounts activated 2 months ago because of boredom and just wanting to get well geared and do some PvPing. And all the "hardcore" players who "put in more effort and deserve to be better [than me]"?! rofl My friends and I have been chain killing idiots in tier 2 epics since we hit level 30. Now that is fun! Like I've said before: I guess the afk fighting "skill" they learned for raiding doesn't apply vs. skilled players in PvP! Have fun with your raiders Blizzard. I'm going to look for a game that doesn't reward dumbasses and no-skill-slackjaws. |
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12/19/06 4:43:59 PM#40
Copenhagen,
If it's possible for you to edit your post on page 2, could you remove the long line towards the bottom. Apparently for some people its cutting off the right side of the page. Thanks. |
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