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4/17/12 4:56:38 PM#21
I think of MMO's as advancements in computers. Try ask someone to uninstall WIndows 7 and use Windows 95 instead, you would get the same reactions as asking a kid who just played WoW to play a text based MMO. Text Based MMO's were good in their time, but gaming has evolved, and the players have along with them, sure their are a great many people who know the value of those type of MMO RP games, but with the new generation, those games are considered the topics for a college paper on gaming history and not a game you rush home to play. The gaming industry is evolving so fast, the day in the future that VR is invented and mainstream, the games we play today with a keyboard and mouse will be the next topic for gaming history papers.
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4/17/12 7:26:47 PM#22
Nevermind. |
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4/19/12 12:47:28 AM#23
Achaea is a great MUD for roleplaying and very welcoming and inviting to newcomers. The tutorial is easy to follow and most cities and houses are great at welcoming and training newcomers. Cyrene is a pretty big RP city. |
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4/19/12 12:52:11 AM#24
Originally posted by Dragonantis
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4/19/12 12:52:18 AM#25
Originally posted by ferndip They have a wheel of time mud/text game that looked pretty cool. Had all the major factions. |
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4/19/12 1:25:23 AM#26
I used to RP a ton back in the days of WBS: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebChat_Broadcasting_System I'm not sure how it relates to what you guys are talking about, but it was a lot of fun. This biggest problems were godmoders and egos... because some people were crappy RPers but thought their characters were like the messiah or something. |
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4/26/12 10:46:37 AM#27
Interesting thread. I think people make a mistake if they think of MUDs as just like graphic MMOs, but with a description of what the picture WOULD look like instead of the actual picture. If that's what you think a MUD is, then sure, it's inferior....but MUDs allow for tons of things that graphical games can't. You can customize your character and other things exactly how you want them, because it's just text--you're not dependent on the artist to give you your options. And roleplay isn't just about what you say, it's about what you do, and in text you can describe your actions with the kind of detail you need. That said, there are a lot of crappy MUDs out there. I spent plenty of time playing some of them when I was younger because I didn't know any better. But I play Achaea now and it's a lot of fun, and 100 times richer an environment than any graphical MMO, lack of pictures notwithstanding. There are also some very good roleplay-intensive games out there where the combat system is not very good but the roleplayers tend to be great. |
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5/01/12 8:56:35 PM#28
I'm with Danadana and the others who play achaea. Many MUDs don't have huge playerbases, it's true, but I play in a pretty hardcore faction and there is always someone around even in the wee hours, high times of day the city of Ashtan is populaterd the Order and House are busy and there is always something to do, someone to roleplay with. (Or a Shallam to raid, hi boys!) On top of this there are clients now that really push the interactive broader view of the world, some amazing player art to support our imaginations and an administration that really offers us the chance to do great things. http://www.achaea.com/
Go on, give a not so old fashioned MUD a try. |
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lifesbrink
Novice Member
Joined: 1/22/09
There are 2 kinds of people in the world: those who don't like dragons and those who enjoy living. |
5/01/12 10:36:30 PM#29
Although I am not bashing the player choice to play a MUD, I will say this: MMO's are not restricted by graphics, allowing MUD's to do far more...the only difference is that most MMO's just choose not to include the stuff that makes MUD's popular. Choice, not technology. I would love a virtual world that allows for the wide range of choices MUD's can allow.
My blog is a continuing story of what MMO's should be like. |
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5/02/12 3:46:09 AM#30
MUDs allow really intricate combat too. Everyone on Achaea ends up working with elaborate scripts that I don't know if they would be considered "cheating" on another game.
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5/02/12 3:48:52 AM#31
Apart from the old board game of Dungeon and Dragons, text based MUDs were part of the legend of how MMO's came to be. I didn't think they were still around. They were fun to play as your imagination of what you read played a large part of your being immersed in the MUD |
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5/30/12 11:36:46 AM#32
MMUDs are still very active out there. This year, due to financial problems, I finally stopped playing Gemstone4, by SIMUtronics. They also have Dragonrealms. Both have a good player base, and are good for rping. I think DR is a bit heavier on it than GS, but, I may be prejudiced. Graphic games are great eye-candy, and cheaper now with the ftp ones, but, I miss the ability to "fling a troll-buger at the crowd" and watch the different reactions! Amazing at how green, gooey, slimey, huge, etc., that people make that buger! Or, they look at what you are wearing, and give you opinions on how long, or short, or decorated items of your clothing are. Yes, I admit, I'm a clothes hoarder! I guess that's why I'm playing Aion now. All the different outfits! And they're cute! mostly.
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5/30/12 11:40:59 AM#33
I used to love playing MUDs back in the day. There were so many to choose from that you really could find something that catered to your taste. However, it is pretty hard for me to play a text base game after having spent a grand on a graphics card. I think the future of the genre will be in game mods, kind of like what happened with Neverwinter Nights 1, there are a ton of mods of that game that function as graphical MUDs for the most part. Are you a Pavlovian Fish Biscuit Addict? Get Help Now! |
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Slampig
Elite Member
Joined: 12/29/03
Whatever you do, do NOT speak ill of Asheron's Call 2... |
5/30/12 11:41:17 AM#34
Originally posted by Carduus I think with the emergence of World of Warcraft and it bringing in a ton of people that might not have traditionally played RPGs, getting into a MUD is creepy. I like them myself, but I have grown up playing RPGs, from D&D to the single player RPGs to the MMOs. You get a cat coming from a console background, it might be daunting to jump in to a text-based, roleplaying situation. I mean, I see donkey after donkey talking down to people that try in role-play in the various MMOs I play which never made sense to me. They think the RPers is some kind of dorky nerd and they spout off, all the while they are playing the SAME ROLE-PLAYING GAME as the person they are deriding. That Guild Wars 2 login screen knocked up my wife. Must be the second coming! |
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5/30/12 11:47:13 AM#35
Not for me. I want a 3D client. |
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5/30/12 11:50:28 AM#36
Most of the text based tgames I worked on really were combat and quest oriented, so i am not sure what the RP community is really looking for in a text based game. Gemstone 2 and 3 andf Dragons Gate, whcih I played but did not develop for, were great, and had some RP opportunities, but I think most of it (At least in my time) were centered aroud GM interactions, and not specifically at the playerbase itself. Some of the game I did work for and the Muck I created and added combat to again were more combat and quest oriented. So what is it that the RP community is lookign for in a text based game. Is it just emotes, ways to script events, or even the ability to create their own enviroments and stories. I have been toying with startign developing again, and am just interested in what people really want. |
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6/21/12 4:04:29 AM#37
One thing that really stands out to me in the text-based games that I've played -- mainly through Iron Realms Entertainment -- is that the smaller base of players allows for the administration to become a part of the community and a part of the roleplay in a way that isn't really feasible in a large-scale graphical game. During my brief forays into WoW, I noticed that the only interaction players really have with the people running the game is when they have a customer service complaint. There are next to no worldwide RP events, and players don't really have many avenues to effect change within the game. Any attempt to RP is largely limited to personal storylines. There is no way a player can really leave an enduring impression upon the game at large. To me, that's a huge turn-off. I like options. I like versatility. Raiding and grinding are fine, in moderation, but if I'm going to stick with a game in the long-term, I need an engaging environment. Graphical MMOs just don't do the trick.
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7/25/12 2:45:15 PM#38
I'm not sure if it's still around or not - but there was a MUD with partial graphics (maps etc) called "Castle Marrach" it was deisgned around RPing, and thats pretty much what you did. You could explore, fight etc - but all within the confines of a gigantic castle - the story was great and made sense - and the developers changed the world around us - even reacted to events players had.
The problem was it was filled with cliques. And if you weren't in one you were screwed. And if you were in one, heaven help you if you tried to reach out to anyone else. I myself was one of the core active players - and had a good amount of influence at the time. I chose to branch out away from my dueling comrades and interact with others. The OOC drama hit the proverbial fan, and I was left ostracized from the community - and all for the sake of trying to bridge it. Irony - it soured me then, it amuses me now. Did it fail? I don't know - it ended for me. But it proves it can be done - I"m not sure if it can be done right - but for a damn good story - I'll go where the game is. Until then, I'm happy to entertain myself with whatever game my friends are playing, I can find a way to work within it. If they are still around - I'd recommend giving them a go, Skotos was the developer. |
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7/25/12 5:14:22 PM#39
Originally posted by Carduus We discussed it (to death) as UO's opening day approached. Expected the genre (with fancy graphics) to introduce a different kind of world, including the inherent limitations on roleplaying necessitated by the use of wireframe models. Yes yes M59 dude, we know you're watching, hush. We were right, and wrong--both too conservative and too extreme in our efforts to predict the future. The industry moved on. Time passed. In 1998, I encountered my first player who'd never even heard of a RP game that didn't have graphics. He disconnected rather than even give it a trial. Time passed. Today, players bemoaning the death of communities and the death of roleplay would frequently refuse games with elderly graphics, let alone no graphics at all. Life goes on. I really don't miss Space Invaders very often. Ignore the nattering of beldames, enjoy whatever you like. |
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7/27/12 3:19:23 AM#40
Best RP online I have done was in text based Mud's. But when AC and DAOC came out, more and more went there to RP. Without going into a lot of history Rpers went from being the driving force in MMO's to an unwanted minority. But with Mud's populations so down, how could we go back? What's the situation today, do Mud's or text based MMO's have a decent popualtion at all? |
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