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6/13/10 5:31:34 PM#141
Thanks for the well written and informative article. I haven't played anything free to play yet, so I appreciate anything that presents the pros and cons logically and without being heavy handed. |
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6/13/10 5:50:19 PM#142
Originally posted by Hellmarauder And then when you order clothes and food (and let's not forget beer) from inside the game you are spending time in (of course getting paid while doing so) the time limit for a free order is down to 4.5 miliseconds from the 30 min of today. That is why Flower for the ps3 is such a nice tale. And let's not forget to give Kudos to the ones making it happen. Really great post there Hellmarauder. |
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6/13/10 7:26:08 PM#143
Good article. I guess because this is an article we are allowed to talk about F2P vs P2P. Wow, MMORPG is getting pretty heavy handed these days. Anyway, I think the two can co-exist. I have no idea why some of the fanatics of F2P get so hostile so often when some crticizes the model. parrotpholk-Because we all know the miracle patch fairy shows up the night before release and sprinkles magic dust on the server to make it allllll better. |
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6/13/10 10:01:01 PM#144
Originally posted by aurick Just stop saying if you sub you don't lose anything. Everyone knows that. This isn't about now, it's about October and F2S. The argument presented by you and the Turbine Defense Squad is that if you bought it you don't lose it. I'm losing my 2 slots from I bought from the AdPack. Will I have to buy back my shared storage too? How much else that I already purchased, not through a subscription, but from BUYING SoA, MoM, and the AdPack, will I lose out on? Remember the subscription only buys you access to the servers. You have to buy the content and always have. Lifers never got content for free. They had to buy buy it just like everything else. In the future VIPs won't get all access to all future content, they will have to buy it. Let's look at it again - I bought: SoA - 5 slots MoM - 2 slots AdPack - 2 slots 5 + 2 + 2 = 9, but I'm only getting 7 which means 5 + 2 + 0 = 7. They're taking my AdPack slots from me. Am I going to lose my shared storage? Am I going to lose my in game purchased storage that I've spent over 100 gold on?
See you can't use the argument anymore that if you sub you get it, because Turbine is choosing a hybrid model where you purchase some stuff for good. Let's say you have 5 slots as a Free customer because you bought extra and then you subbed for a while to get "all access". Do you lose your slots when you unsub later because you're a Premium player with only 3 slots? By you logic if you don't sub you don't get anything. We know that's a bunch of crap because that former Free player paid for it, but their purchase counts "more" because they bought it after the F2S period. I paid $120 for content. I paid 3 years subsription at about $9.55/mo for server access. When the game goes F2S I should have access to all the quests, areas, and any other content I purchased. I shouldn't have to repurchase stuff I've already bought not matter how hard they try and tangle it in marketing speak and logic. If they add new quests or content (whether it's in an existing area) I fully expect to pay for them. |
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6/13/10 10:37:11 PM#145
i DO think it will be one or the other (billing style) that survives. I do not see the market supporting both types. i think when a clear majority of successful game becomes dominant, there will still be the usual smattering of independant or foreign games leaking through that use the minority system, but it really all hinges on what the big dogs do in the next 6 months, or so.
i think in any case, 15/month will be a thing of the past. If a company can make chicken feed of that with item shops by appealing to new demographics, the ancien regime will have to shove a cheek. this is how i see it. the traditional MMO elite is losing their grip on the community, and soon any schmoe off the street will be able to pay for the same rank and priviledge that only 5+ year veterans of whichever MMO (ie the Beta testers of every game that has ever been released) I cant say im sad to see things change. while "earning" your place in an MMO had some kind of charm, it really drove alot of support from the MMO genre away. |
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6/14/10 12:05:50 AM#146
Originally posted by Cruoris You sound pretty bitter, and I think you missed the point of the article entirely. parrotpholk-Because we all know the miracle patch fairy shows up the night before release and sprinkles magic dust on the server to make it allllll better. |
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6/14/10 12:17:16 AM#147
Originally posted by Torvaldr
Read the bloody chart: http://www.lotro.com/betasignup/vipchart.html Character Slots */** VIP get 5 Premium get 3 Free get 1 But the * and ** tell the rest of the story: * Purchasers of the Mines of Moria™ expansion get access to the Mines of Moria region and content, premium classes (Rune-Keeper and Warden), legendary items feature, Tier 6 crafting feature, 2 extra character slots and a level cap of 60. Purchasers of the Siege of Mirkwood™ expansion get access to the Siege of Mirkwood region and content, a level cap of 65 and the Siege of Mirkwood skirmishes. ** Purchasers of the LOTRO Adventurer's Pack get 2 extra character slots and 20 slots of shared bank storage across all characters on the same servers. Did you buy MoM? If so, then as a VIP you get 5 + 2 slots for a total of 7. If you also bought the AP then you get 5 +2 +2 slots for a total of 9. As a VIP you lose no slots. If you then cancel your subscription you drop to Premium. (Current and past subscribers will never be reduced to Free.) So then you have 3 +2 +2 slots for a total of 7. So once again: If you have bought MoM and the AP as you obviously have then you have 9 slots now and you will continue to have 9 slots for as long as you continue to subscribe. If you cancel your subscription you will drop to 7 slots but will have the option to buy those two slots back separately without resubscribing. As a subscriber today, your $15 a month buys continuing access to the content that you've already purchased. Am I wrong? If you cancel your subscription you lose access to that content that you have purchased. Am I wrong? This holds true with every single pay to play MMO out there. Am I wrong? Under the new plan you can keep access to that content even after cancelling your subscription. So rather than losing all access for no longer subscribing, you lose partial access. As for the Free player -- who is ONLY someone who has NEVER subscribed to the game before -- we don't know the whole story. I have some assumptions, and you clearly have some of your own. But it's all speculation. All we know for sure, due to the placement of the * and ** symbols, is that anyone of any account type who purchases MoM or the AP will permanently get all of the benefits listed under the chart. Bounce from free to VIP to Premium all you want, you'll still have permanently purchased those specific items and have full access to them. Meanwhile, we know for certain that those of us who play the game now and have purchased those items will continue to have them. You will NOT have to buy your character slots back unless you wish to permanently go Premium and in that case you only have to buy two slots back. Does that finally make sense? Please explain how this makes Turbine evil. ![]() ![]() |
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6/14/10 12:31:21 AM#148
I get what you're saying. My point is they aren't taking my purchase of SoA into account. Yeah premium get 3, and VIPs get 5. My MoM and Adpack purchases count, but they're taking away SoA content and game featuers I PURCHASED the same as I purchased Moria and the AdPack. They can do whatever they want, but that doesn't mean I have to roll over. They're taking features away from me out of SoA because it was a long time ago and they think no one cares or no one will make a fuss, or even worse the Turbine Defense Squad will come in and forum lawyer for them. I don't like that they are removing features I purchased and making me buy them back. That is a really shitty thing to pull on your existing customers. |
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6/14/10 12:33:22 AM#149
*Chuckles* I love this discussion, I always have, because it shows people still CARE and are PASSIONATE about MMO's. I have grown a bit old and jaded about MMO's since my daughter was born. (Hard to play anything online with a 2 year old attacking you. KID AGRO! :) ) Which is why I like the idea of Hybrid games. Or even the "Unlimited Trial" games. Why? Because unlike "normal" players I may not hit level 10 in a 10 day free trial, that's how little I get to play. The pure subscription model really doesn't work for me anymore as I cannot see making the investment because I don't have the time to enjoy it. $60 box price just to try the game for 30 days. In that 30 days I'll probably get 7 "good" days of gaming in if I'm lucky. Versus before the wife and child I drop $60 on a game and play the heck out of it for those 30 days and make it worth my wile and probable subsciption. Then tack on the $15 a month when, as I recently did, played all of ONE day for that $15. Yeah, you can see how the subscription model really doesn't work for me for the forseable future. (I figure in 8 years I'll have a CHANCE to play again. :( ) Now Free To Play, and Unlimited Trial games on the other hand give me a chance to enjoy a game on my terms. I don't feel as pissed by paying for something I'm not using. I'll admit it, I'm a key demographic for the F2P market and darn it I'm GLAD they're bringing more games into this format. Don't get me wrong I'm not advocating a full move to the Hybrid model, or even the infinate free trial (though I wouldn't mind that. :) ) I'm just glad that the OPTION of the Hybrid or F2P model is there. More games for me to try! Plus if it can breath life into some older games isn't that a good thing? DDO is the perfect example as I tried it in Beta, post launch, and then in the F2P era and have been happy with it in F2P era the most. (Though I will full admit that is partially due to all the upgrades in the interveining time.) In the end I'm all about giving players choices. If the industry goes full F2P and many of you live up to your promises and never plays them then MAYBE the industry would adapt. Realistically though I have a feeling that many of the companies going F2P could care less if thousands of us don't play their games. They'll be happy with the thousands of others who do. :\ Current Game: Asssasins Creed 2(PS3, Gamer Tag: Happy_Hubby) |
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6/14/10 12:56:54 AM#150
Originally posted by Torvaldr I can see where there might be some confusion because of how the upgrade to SoM was handled. The actual SoM expansion included the region, the cap increase to 65 and all the skirmishes. In addition to that was the AP which included the extra character slots, the cloak, the shared storage and the goat mount. The first * covers the first half of this: the region, cap increase and skirmishes. As a current subscriber, you will still have it after the conversion, regardless of whether you continue to subscribe or drop to Premium. The second ** covers the character slots and shared storage. As a current subscriber, you will still have these as well regardless of whether or not you continue to subscribe. What is not mentioned are the goat and cloak, but it seems safe to assume that you'll continue to receive them. If you continue to subscribe after the change is made you will still have everything you have now. You lose nothing. In point of fact you actually also receive 500 free Turbine points every month which are equivalent to as much as half your subscription fee if you purchased them yourself. Those points can be used to buy any extras they bring out in the future; cosmetic items, maybe more character slots, maybe new expansions -- we don't know yet. If you stop subscribing then you go to Premium. In that case you will continue to have everything you have now in terms of purchased content from MoM, SoM and the AP. You will lose two character slots. You will also have some other limitations such as fewer trait slots and a gold cap. But again, this is a huge sight better than what would happen if you stopped subscribing today because today you lose all access to the game including everything you've purchased in the expansions. In fact, it's a safe bet that if you just took all the different bonus points they're going to give out between now and when this change goes live you would be able to drop to Premium and buy most of the limitation removals. In other words, you could very possibly cancel your subscription after the change is made and continue to play completely free. At least, until the next major content release. ![]() ![]() |
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6/14/10 1:54:56 AM#151
Originally posted by aurick So how exactly are premium members going to remove the chat, mail and auction limitations... according to the chart, they can't. parrotpholk-Because we all know the miracle patch fairy shows up the night before release and sprinkles magic dust on the server to make it allllll better. |
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6/14/10 2:07:31 AM#152
Okay, I wasn't going to say anything, since a lot of people seemed to enjoy this piece and I may be in the minority, but I've read a couple responses praising this article for how "logical" it was - which is not at all the case. This article is riddled with informal logical fallacies, including strawman arguements and ad populum. Infact, the whole article is pretty much a big ad populum: the author acts as though she speaks for the supposed majority of the mmo community, but cannot. She also rallies everyone against some faceless menace and constructs "their side" of the argument out of nearly nothing. This is not a good example of a logical work. Let's treat it like what it is: an opinion piece. |
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6/14/10 7:59:11 AM#153
Originally posted by desiriel |
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6/14/10 8:48:21 AM#154
Originally posted by twrule Okay...? Examples? Reasons? Anything at all to illustrate and support your statements and why you dismiss the entire article wholesale?
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DKWFirstborn
Novice Member
Joined: 5/05/10
It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice. |
6/14/10 9:38:10 AM#155
A very bold yet self explantionary profecy/statement. I do however disagree in many aspects. Whilist all that has occured is truly a triumphant move for F2P scene. It's also situation that doesn't evolve nearly any fields of mmorpg itself. Subscription methods are more and more going from "paid cable tv" To commercial " free advertisement filled tv" It is a good thing as game makers are finally able to generate revenue other than paid subscriptions. However, it doesn't change the facts,
All this flag waving for Western F2P game glory is a bit overshot due the mass production of F2P on exactly same engines and graphical style. No mater how you put it the quality of gaming suffers due revenue is largely based on item shops, However I do admit that Western style of producing F2P games is far better and likely far more succesfull, however we eastern people play far less F2P games than the western counterparts.
It's noted fact that Eastern game studios produce masses of identical games that wave flag for one single playstyle, generally the games drain their styles from common JP Rpgs however, those games never were very suited to be turn into mmorpgs. And the Eastern mentality has allways been a bit different from Western. Those things are largely due different culture and different political lines. Eastern gamers also for far larger aspect enjoy geargrind and challenge of hard work. Their hard work defines many of them as players and people, therefore we can't truly speak of invidualism.
So I truly hope that western F2P games will keep up their quality and fight the masses of Eastern games by customization options and keep offering superior quality gaming. So either the prophecy comes true, but judging from the reaction of people this prophecy might be either selfexplanationary fact that comes to reality. OR failure due the irritation and bad experienced people obtained from Eastern studio games.
I do know that my writings will cause some degree of annoyance and counteropinnions. But that's how it works! Kindest regards, DKW |
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6/14/10 12:39:04 PM#156
Originally posted by WSIMike First off, I did not dismiss it wholesale, I dismissed the assertion that it is "logical" and objective like some others seem to think. I already named the fallacies commited, but didn't have time to give specific examples. I'll restate my reasons, since I was not specific enough. The author commits ad populum and other fallacies throughout the entire article by appealing to the reader's need for belonging. Half her wording creates an illusion that most people agree with her and that's why you should accept what she's saying. Ironically, she accuses "the media" of hoping on bandwagons, when she herself uses a fallacy nicknamed as such. For just one example out of many: "This is exactly what many 'experts' are claiming, however. 'It's inevitable that we go to a free to play MMO model,' the chant cries; but this isn't a matter of death or taxes." The above statement commits atleast 3 separate types of fallacies: ad populum (because she's trying to rally the audience against some supposed united opposition that may or may not even exist), strawman (because she puts words in the mouth of those who might be on the other side of the argument and uses an extreme form of their case), and begging the question (because she presents us with no evidence that any of this is the case, only her own word for it). These are running themes throughout the piece. She cites no "experts" and only points to her fellow blogger's opposing opinion piece for a representation of a supposedly dominant industry perspective. She acts as though she is the voice of the entire mmo consumer community with many of her statements. She uses charged language to appeal to the emotions of the reader without also supporting why we should feel a certain way with any sort of evidence. Hence, my assertion that it is an opinion piece, and should not be looked to as an example of logic in writing. There isn't necessarily anything wrong with the piece when viewed in the proper perspective though. I merely wished to point that out. |
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6/14/10 2:00:28 PM#157
there no such thin as free to play any way you paying for market items market place to get stuff most of the free to play games have stuff you need from market? so no such thin as free any ways it will take you money one way or other |
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6/15/10 12:02:40 AM#158
Alright, pissing into the wind here, but seriously... "Free to Play" is your web based email account. You maintain full usage of it while the providers make use of other revenue streams. Your email isn't delivered slower just because you didn't pay for the cash shop item to speed it up. Your ability to add attatchments doesn't vanish because your week rental expired... Your email is, by and large, fully functional whether you ever pay into the system or not. What the current crop of trialware devlopers are insisting is free to play- including and especially LotR Online -simply isn't. It's free to log in. It's free to grind a few monsters. But serious advancement and competition? That's where your freedom stops. One look at LotR comparison chart confirms this all day long, and if you doubt that, look at DDO as an example of a ready made blueprint. Back in the day, this was called Shareware: You use a crippled version of a piece of software and pay to unlock it's full abilities. Sound familiar? Believe it or not, I don't have a problem with this, but dammit, call it for what it is. Whatever f2P was supposed to be, I'm pretty sure it wasn't a panzi scheme to lure gamers into a title under the false pretense that they wouldn't pay- or even be expected to pay -anything into a cash shop of any kind to normalize their advancement to compete with paying customers. And even if you were one of the ones that survived the cashless grind to the top, the game still wasn't built with you in mind. It was built in the expectation that somebody else would pay in, and the leveling curve, mobs, etc, are designed with that in mind. That alone is a shady business practice. True free to play doesn't build a game around paying customers. It doesn't expect its gamers to pay into a cash shop. It doesn't try to lure them in with a promise of non-monetary gameplay while the host website pushes the top-up button on every page. It's possible to make real, free to play gaming... Your email proves that. Just the suckering of people thinking they're going to get a free MMO experience while subtly weening them onto the teet of the cash shop is easier and much more profitable. |
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6/15/10 1:02:46 AM#159
Originally posted by Nesrie I didn't say all limitations. I only said most of the limitation removals. And again, I come back to the question: What happens today if you cancel your subscription? How much chat can you do once your paid time has run out? How much mail can you send? How many auctions can you post? Under the new system you will still have some access to all those features and as DDO shows, "some" is still a fair bit.. ![]() ![]() |
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6/15/10 7:14:09 AM#160
Originally posted by twrule Dude, this isn't a college thesis, or a scientific paper, or a great philosophical debate. It's a ARTICLE based on OPINION on a GAMING SITE. FFS lighten up. |
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