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2/23/12 3:00:29 AM#101
I'm beginning to think I'm the only one that finds GW2 combat to be disappointing, not bad, but disappointing. Because it is the least innovated system in the game. They've done so much to improve everything else in the game (bar crafting), but the combat is pretty much the same as every other MMO we've had in the last 15 years. Shame, will enjoy the game, but I know the combat is going to drive me away from it eventually. |
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2/23/12 3:26:04 AM#102
I have high hopes for GW2. Time will tell of course. I'm an old timer from several other MMOs such as AC2, WoW, War, LOTRO, EVE, AoC, RoM, Rift. Like anyone else I have my own likes and dislikes, reasons I reached "thresh hold" with the other games and left. In EvE's case it wasn't that I disliked the game even, they've done a superb job on EvE. I started playing the original Guild Wars, and expansions, in a move out of Rift in prep for GW2. Get some Hall of Monument achieves set so I can get some stuff with it in GW2, etc. At first it's disappointing, doesn't feel smooth with their overdone landscape mazing, some rough edges in the game. Of course the original GW, NIghtfall, and Factions expacks are several years old, so what should I expect. Then I got out of the starter instance, actually started learning the game more. I started having a good time, was engaged, found much of the gear artwork stellar, a community that's actually still around even if not millions of subscribers and who knew how to put a sentence together in chat. I found several functional abilities in the game that I thought very neat, more indicative of "evolution" artifacts than I've seen in some recent releases. "Theme Park" versus "Sandbox" I'm coming to believe are basically misunderstood artifacts. What people believe is these are game-defining Titles they like to throw around to make themselves sound like a gaming critic xtreme. Le Expert. I've come to the conclusion they are simply descriptors for two "metabolic" attributes of the body of a game, if you will, and will vary in proportion in a game based on how that game was designed. GW 2 I'm hoping will be great because I see lots of signs of it in GW now, even with some rough edges in it. Wherever you go, there you are. |
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2/23/12 5:11:47 AM#103
Well, this is for sure best post here. Like you said --now is everything fine and great :) Now fanboys don't have any problem with quest animations and with rest of things. Well said, well said |
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2/23/12 5:28:39 AM#104
It could and should revolutionize mmo industry. I hope it will deliver everything they say and more. |
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2/23/12 5:55:16 AM#105
Agree, everytime I start to get on the hype train for this game I take a deep breath and remember how many times I've been run over by that hype train and left utterly disappointed. There are some fun sounding features, but then there are others which I often would consider game breaking: your points 2, 4, and 5 above to me are extremely disappointing. 2) Loading screens completely dash any kind of immersion, and are either exploitable or you will get the message "Sorry cannot leave zone while in combat" which is equally bad 4) No real ingrained PVP, only via e-sport instances or the prefab realm vs realm vs realm instance. E-sport instances are yawntastic, while there is some hope for the realm vs realm vs realm, but even if successful does not change the fact that all the PVE is completely isolated into carebare PVE only servers. This to me is utterly gamebreaking and may be enough for me to pass on this game. 5) Tokens for loot is so uninspiring and completely takes away the joy of finding that elusive loot. Sure, some may say striving to find a rare drop is "tedious" but I liken it to a slot machine. Every pull you get that little rush of anticipation, will I finally get that uber sword of kick ass this time? But instead it will be "Bueler? Bueler? Another token. Bueler?" GW2 "built from the ground up with microtransactions in mind" |
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2/23/12 6:10:25 AM#106
just for the record, in daoc you had feared enemies, people you knew from their look, their team, and especially their dmg.
you saw them, and you knew there was a storm comming! no idea how that shall be achieved with random enemies each month, but i surely look forward to it ^^ just saying, this ain't daoc. "I'll never grow up, never grow up, never grow up! Not me!" |
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2/23/12 8:12:49 AM#107
Don't believe the hype..." Hahahah I almost quoted Chuck D yesterday.... allthese points are pretty good, most of all I am excited for a game with changes in it. WoW Raids got old for me which is why I stopped playing, the battlegrounds were okay but eventually became a grind. The lousy part about the Lich King Warzone was that it was timed. so if you only had a few minutes to play and a battle was not going on....you were out of luck. I always hated that. |
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2/23/12 8:19:45 AM#108
What I always find interesting, is that when people attempt to understand what Guild Wars 2 is, they almost never remember that the game at its core is Guild Wars. |
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2/23/12 8:31:48 AM#109
Originally posted by Dredphyre 1. If you actually read sites other then this one, you would know that most of the GW2 fanbase actually hates the idea of consoles. 2. Can't argue with this, people suddenly seem to be ok with having portals when previously they didn't. Though we still need to see how much we will see those portals afterall. 3. The reason people find story in this game okay, is because it's just a bonus. An extra feature for those who want to do it. Whereas in SWTOR it was basically the whole game built around it. 4. How would PvP servers make sense in this game? How would they be different then normal servers? 5. Only dungeons drop tokens (and only the last boss i think), and they still drop normal loot aswell. I don't know how it works in SWTOR, but you'll only need 1 token per armor piece. Come up with better reasons if you want to bring the community down |
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2/23/12 8:44:47 AM#110
Everyone keeps worrying about being disappointed by hype. GW2 has not giving us one thing on the game until it is in their game. So if you read about it it is there, follow up to the Dev and site to ensure it. All the excitement at this point is confirming of media who just had their weekend closed event and they are hyped they enjoyed it. Some new hype will soon be out there as they pick and we have public open beta. I was clicking the links yesterday watching all the diffrent sites in game player videos. I was thrilled when I got my invite in email yesterday afternoon to go to sign up for a closed beta event. Now I will be banging my head wondering if I will get in. The PvP/PVE I saw yesterday displayed all that I had read about, and I am so looking forward to a look and the release even more now. Look for the Rose with the Thorn. |
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2/23/12 9:06:51 AM#111
Originally posted by smh_alot
What a sandbox is, is clearly defined by what liberties you have within the game. Those liberties are DIRECTLY related to the TYPE of SERVER the game is being played on. In the past (EQ) was loosely a sandbox, even though by todays standards EQ is a themepark, when it was released it was a sandbox. It later turned into more of a themepark design, because every expansion was predicated on cost and not stressing the server, so more zones & instances were added over the 12 years... thus making it a themepark. UO had one ZONE... and the game world was super... super small. but it was 100% sandbox from the ground up.
Understand, there are 2 elements when discussing "sandbox". Is the game world a sandbox and is the gameplay sandbox..? You can easily have a sandbox, that has gameplay like a themepark, but that doesn't make the whole game a themepark! It is just presented in a way, that the developers thought would save them alot of money and could skimp by adding a few "themepark" features in their sand, to help add value to their game, or lure in children who need a path to follow. Now, given todays technologies and the character hooks allowed (abilities/liberties given) today, it may be hard for an average joe to clearly define a Sandbox game. You can have an open world design, that you cannot swim under water.. it would still be a Sandbox game, but highly restricted movement. You cannot say, because you cannot swim under water that the game is now "themepark"... that is totally dependant upon the actual game world, not the mechanics within that game world.
It does cost Millions (upfront) and it's at least 3x as much, to make a Sandbox game, because the server structure to support open worlds cost ALOT of money. So YES, "themeparks" are cheaper to make... that is why you've seen so many since Vanguard.
Lastly, the term "sandbox style" means like a sandbox, but not! Nobody is talking about "sandbox style features".. you either have a sandbox open game world, or you don't. Doesn't even matter if your whole world is 100% pure sandbox and everything else is "themepark"....! <-- then you'd just have a Sandbox game that sucked, or nobody liked, or catered to a specific crowd. So, even though a Sandbox may be filled with "themes", it is still a Sandbox... just one that many people would not want to play in. Again... It does not matter if the game has "themepark" features.. if it is based on Open World design, then the game is a sandbox.
The term Sandbox directly & indirectly relates back to server design. I can tell you that EQ Next will be a sandbox without knowing anything more than it uses SOE's new Forge Light engine. Thus Open world design, thus Sandbox!
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2/23/12 10:00:49 AM#112
GW2 ~is~ going to revolutionize the genre. You guys seem to think by being revolutionary means it's going to please everyone and take 100% of the playerbase away from every game out there. Being the best is not the same as being different. GW2 only needs to be a moderate success to prove that new payment options and new gameplay styles are possible. Companies have stuck with the safe, WoW-established gaming because it was all about turning a profit, and less about making a decent game. If you need proof, read the dev interviews for games like Rift and SWTOR, they openly admit it. They know it works, they didn't see a need to try something new, they just wanted their own version so they could milk the playerbase as well. GW2 will be at the very least moderately successful, and that's why it will be revolutionary. It's going to remind game developers that it's okay to think outside the box, and it's going to remind them that, if your fan base loves you, they will support you and will not let you drown, sub fee be damned. "Forums aren't for intelligent discussion; they're for blow-hards with unwavering opinions." |
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2/23/12 11:50:28 AM#113
Guild Wars 2 heralds the much needed dawn of a new age. |
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2/23/12 7:21:16 PM#114
While I am really looking forward to the game, is the bathing yourself in GW2 butter just a bit excessive? ;) Now hey, it might not be. This might indeed be that damn good. I just hope if thats the conclusion, you guys are being pretty strict with the editing and vetting process. The letdown that was TOR still burns fresh in my mind. That being said, hopefully more companies can bring forth innovations. The genre really has gotten freakin stale. |
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2/23/12 7:32:47 PM#115
Originally posted by gainesvilleg You guys should save your etherial ink. I mean, you're right, and add in the instanced territories per player "story", a veritable instanced history, to make it worse. But my initial point is, you know, some few will love it, and the rest are largely the same people who were taken in by the hype multiple times already and still will fall for it again. Once upon a time.... |
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2/23/12 7:37:03 PM#116
Originally posted by EvilGeek And I honestly think this, if GW2 works, is what is going to be so exciting. Everything being on rails is what is making the MMO genre stale. Everyone found it most offensive when TOR in space was so blatantly on rails. But really, it just did explicitly what most MMO's have been doing behind the scenes for the past 10 years. Play your toon only one way, use only these skills, go to only these areas It seems with GW2, it is "go here, but what you do to get there is up to you." "Do quests, but the best quests will rely on you seeking them out." Play your toon whatever way your heart desires, stop limiting yourself to the tank/dps/heal mode of the standard RPG. Now this might not work. But it's once again refreshing to see someone make a serious stab at saying "you know what, we are tired of everyone falling in line and doing what the system says. So we are looking to innovate, heck, we might even start a system of our own if we get our way." |
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2/23/12 7:40:46 PM#117
Originally posted by Nikkita Yet is it really? For the most part, you've only got one path to level, upon a certain pre-defined quest route. Even the crafting is tied to the combat, and since the majority of the combat comes through the quest hubs, there really isn't much "freedom." |
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2/23/12 8:00:55 PM#118
Originally posted by gainesvilleg For me, load timers aren't killer. As someone else said, it's something you gotta roll with if you want sexy graphics. I am not big on that, but I can't get too bent out of shape about loading screens either, unless they are really excessive. (i.e. the insane amount of load screens required in TOR when you first enter, or the incredible amount of loading screens in POTBS when flipping a port) If you put together a tight pvp squad, and you go out busting heads, you will get noticed. For the person who loves pvp, that beats any "reward" a dev squad can think of. In POTBS, we didn't need this or that. What we had was when our group showed up, you ran unless you wanted to get farmed. When i start out in pvp games, I look for those kinda groups. Learn from them, follow them, and heck, try to join em if I can, or start my own. And also, if I read correctly, World vs World vs World will also have some pve stuff in it. With upwards of 300 people, grindmonkeys who are good at grinding will be at a premium in certain spots i'm sure. The servers that win the most will be those who can mix the two. As far as the gear, there will be gear you get, but not the obsession over the latest OP this or that. Instead, the point is to have you focus on the combat more than the gear. |
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2/24/12 12:34:16 AM#119
Originally posted by bobfish GW2's combat is actually quite different, though it doesn't always look that way in video because of the inexperience of the players and that a lot of it has to do with how player interaction. I once made a list of ways in which GW2 combat is not like WoW's. This is what I got. Everything except channeled abilities can be cast while moving On top of it there's some underwater stuff as well. Both player and mob skills can change to make more sense underwater, and skills can use the Z axis like to sink your enemies. There's also underwater specific weapons and even ranger pets. |
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2/24/12 12:41:42 AM#120
Like many of us already said nuerous times. GW2 will not be a perfect mmo, there wil never be a perfect mmo. There is always some things you wont like or dont find attractive.
But when you check out all the cons and pro's you cannot turn your head away and compare GW2 to any other fail promised hyped up product that came out after 2004 when WoW was launched. WoW in 2004 also combined the best of all worlds and GW2 will take that role in 2012. Not saying WoW is any good after TBC as i lost more and more interest in WoW. But after WoW i havent had any serious jaw dropping moments.
I had multiple jaw dropping moments in GW2... And i havent even played it. http://speedtest.net/result/2112016336.png |
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