| 250 posts found | |
|---|---|
|
10/02/12 4:00:04 PM#221
Originally posted by SnarlingWolf I thought about drawing you a Venn diagram, but since this is well within the reach common sense, I'm not sure if you're serious or trolling. Instead I'm only going to tell you: Those two groups are not the same. Never argue with a fool, onlookers may not be able to tell the difference. -Author unknown, attributed to Mark Twain |
|
|
10/02/12 4:40:20 PM#222
Originally posted by Quirhid Thanks for clarifing something I never said.
The groups are not the same, the groups are also far from seperated. There is more cross over from people who play MMOs to those who play casual games than those who only play MMOs and never touch casual games. |
|
|
VengeSunsoar
Elite Member
Joined: 3/10/04
GRIND DOES NOT EXIST. IT IS ENTIRELY YOUR PERCEPTION. |
10/02/12 7:09:01 PM#223
I actually think that most of the people that play MMO's casually are exactly the same people that do/would play games on tablets and phones.
Just data pulled out of my own rear end :)
You know, in ancient Egypt. One of the hieroglyphics on the walls of the pyramids actually says 'I am upset as my heir will ruin my kingdom' or something to that affect. This is 5000BC stuff and you know what? Nothing has changed. :P |
|
10/02/12 7:20:44 PM#224
What I miss most is the need of other players.
My first game EQ the majority of my enjoyment came from the time I put into my character and the interactions with other players.
The only other MMO I really enjoyed since, DF I enjoyed that I had to rely on other players to help take out other clans.
I enjoyed not being the best (and knowing that) and having to have other people who were not as skilled as many others to try to take a better geared, better skill, better all around player. I like to work towards improving my characters skill, gear, and my skill/ability to play the game. |
|
|
10/02/12 7:29:37 PM#225
I would pay a premium to buy and per month to get what the OP is describing... and that may be what developpers should look into. The current variety of mmos are geared for people living in their parents basement, or kids having their parents pay their subscriptions... If it costs a little more, then you better really want it... I for one, would be willing to pay more for something like what the OP is describing. I DO want difficulty, I don`t care how frustrating it is to the "average" player, charge me extra to make up for the loss...
|
|
|
10/02/12 8:50:56 PM#226
Originally posted by VengeSunsoar LOL, I get it, you think Ryzom is a sand box but you personally do not like it, you should have said that earlier instead of saying BG, LOL ROFL, sorry man every time I think of it I laugh is a sand box. |
|
|
VengeSunsoar
Elite Member
Joined: 3/10/04
GRIND DOES NOT EXIST. IT IS ENTIRELY YOUR PERCEPTION. |
10/02/12 9:19:18 PM#227
Its not that I don't like it. I played for three months, not something I do if there is not some level of enjoyment. But they are very vwey limited on each and every sandbox feature.
The game is incredible limiting. For a themepark that is barely acceptable. For a sandbox Imo ir isn't acceptable. Very limited armor All crafting is the same. From gear to weons to rings. The exact sme thing. All mellee the same All magic thr same. No building at all. very little economy Only outposts owned by a guild for ownership. An incredibly limiting sandbox You know, in ancient Egypt. One of the hieroglyphics on the walls of the pyramids actually says 'I am upset as my heir will ruin my kingdom' or something to that affect. This is 5000BC stuff and you know what? Nothing has changed. :P |
|
VengeSunsoar
Elite Member
Joined: 3/10/04
GRIND DOES NOT EXIST. IT IS ENTIRELY YOUR PERCEPTION. |
10/02/12 9:20:18 PM#228
Bah that was posted on my phone. Too many spelling errors
You know, in ancient Egypt. One of the hieroglyphics on the walls of the pyramids actually says 'I am upset as my heir will ruin my kingdom' or something to that affect. This is 5000BC stuff and you know what? Nothing has changed. :P |
|
10/02/12 9:27:54 PM#229
op:gw2 is a hard mmo!pphi brain puzzle hunting alone will keep you entertained for month(if they stay like they are(level 15 ish)since this is arenanet we re talking about here ,highly unlikly the phi brain puzzle area will stay static .and eve wwhen they do hope that your area is empty because if you are doing a phi brain puzzle area and it is close enough from the ground not to die you can be sure respawn rate is ballistic at minimum.i know i died a feww time in surprise because i had killed an ice golem and suddenly everything spawn at an insane pace ,i am like wtf.and when i die at bottom i see the group coming to my zone (10 player)aahhh that why respawn quickenend soo much lol!in my view gw2 is a true mmo!
|
|
|
10/02/12 11:30:20 PM#230
MMORPGs these days are like footraces where all of your opponents are drooling savages. It's depressing just to do. The stupidly easy content, completely unenjoyable and formulated, why would anyone think this is a good idea? It seems like you're working towards something but what? If a game isn't fun you put it down. Classic WoW was fun, classic EQ was fun. Both were built on the idea that players were playing to enjoy and experience the world. Building an MMORPG like a tiered pyramid with the early game here and the end game there is designing by numbers not by thought. Developers these days don't seem to understand the history of MUDs and MMOS. The 'end game' was just an indulgence for a very worldly playerbase. Never has a good MMORPG been designed with the end game in mind, not EQ, EQ2, FF XI, or WoW. I agree about the hard RPG. In fact, with spoiler sites these days, MMORPGs need to be harder than ever, employing randomization in addition to the old tricks. That they aren't is a lack of good developers.
This is beyond wishful thinking, though. There will never be another good MMORPG. It's been, what, 7 years since WoW and EQ2? The failure of Vanguard was the nail in the coffin. If you've played Diablo III you will get a pretty good idea of the state of RPGs today. Games like that make modern WoW look good. These are dark, dark times indeed. The glory days of MMORPGs were far too short for most of us. I would have been playing non-stop back then had I known how things would turn out. 5 dozen RPGs today and every one of them is the damn same. Compare that to AC, UO, EQ, DAOC. |
|
|
10/02/12 11:55:23 PM#231
Originally posted by Salahudin I agree. For a very long time I had three paid SWG accounts, because the game had only one slot per account. $45 per month and I didn't even blink. |
|
|
10/02/12 11:58:19 PM#232
Meh, After i quit SWG pre-cu i was never really happy with any mmo's. I played WoW for a while but it was pretty boring. DarkFall released and i fell in love, but it had WAy too many underlying problems so i left it. Kinda as if i was dating Andriana Lima and after all the foreplay i pull off her panties and shes rockin a solid slong, Kind of a bummer.
...Annyyywhooo I'm looking forward to |
|
|
Then and now......What I fell in love with, is not what we have now. A short story of what was : My first mmo was World of Warcraft. I had no one to talk to or ask questions about the game. In fact I don't think I had ever talked to another gamer in my lifetime. I had no idea what to expect. In fact the guy at my local EB Games store tried to talk me down on a high end PC game because of Video card and ram issues. I ignored his advice and did the minimum up grades to get my computer ready for WoW. Well, after purchase and loading Vanilla WoW. I was amazed that other real people were on my screen. I was on the island of Teldrassil and made my way to the level 4 area called Dolanaar. It seemed like forever to reach a single level because of both leveling was slower, and I had no clue, and I guess you could add I did not even care what level I was, I was that intrigued. Anyway, living in Dolanaar was like a dream. This is where I made some friends and learned how to spell :). Since leveling was wayyyy slow, I met others and we were in this area for days if not weeks. Even the players I have not chatted with I would remember seeing day after day. I REALLY FELT LIKE I WAS IN A COMMUNITY. World of Warcraft was somewhat new and it only had the basic features. None of that mattered anyway, I was hooked on immersion of the zone and COMMUNITY !!!....We were like a family. Moving ahead a little, I reached about level 22 and had a friends list of about fifteen people. Around then, I was questing in South Shore when I got a /tell invite from a stranger asking if I would like to go to Shadowfang Keep....I like what ?...well, ok. Next thing I know I was in a group of five running across the land of unknown with out a clue. We reached my first instance, went in and I got my group killed twice. It's obvious I got yelled at, and I was scratching my head as to why !!. Well, things just stopped right their and group members began asking me if I were new. We chatted, and they explained how to play. No auto kicking, in fact that was out of the question for the group. THEY EXPLAINED EVERYTHING, and after that we worked like a well oiled group. I knew my place as a Rogue. At the end I had four new friends. They even told me to need the nice dagger at the end....We stayed friends, and I ran many dungeons after that.
Now the point of all this : Sure it was my first love, but that was not it !!!!!........It was more about community, in a low featureless mmo. WE MADE OUR OWN FUN........Guild Wars 2 is not like this. SWTOR is not like this, The Panda Bear thing is not like this. You could argue that players are not like that anymore, this is true. But come on....Developers are wayyyyy more responsible for the non social experience we have now. 1) easy, no dependence 2) auto group features 3) chain quest and cinematic 4) personal stories 5) cross realm crap 6) Kick-a-buddy feature How many friends do you have on your friends list in GW2 ?........WHAT IN THE HELL HAPPENED !!!!!!!!! |
|
|
10/03/12 4:42:03 AM#234
Originally posted by delete5230 What happened depends who you ask, but can take wow since thats your first game.
#1. People foreign to mmorpg have a hard time getting started in the game. Blizz: Make the first levels a lot easier.
#2. People started to talk about how the game started at cap:
Blizz: Let's make levelling a lot quicker
#3. People complain that its hard to get groups for quests.. Blizz: Let's remove group quests
#4. People complain that it takes too much time to find people for dungeons. Blizz: let's create a dungeon finder.
#5. People wants to see raid content but don't want to be part of a raid group Blizz: Let's create a raid finder.
The effect is what you see in dungeon finders, people that cares about quick loot and there is little to no socializing in dungeons. If someone makes a mistake you kick them, and the game finds you a replacement. All the tools and current gameplay has removed the need for social interactions, and online games needs the social aspect to be interesting for more than three months |
|
|
10/03/12 5:34:36 AM#235
Although most people would disagree I feel a true MMO should'nt a themepark but a sandbox with PvP. I just feel that themeparks are glorified multiplayer games rather than true virtual worlds - which is something I feel MMOs should be. However the domination of themeparks shows that I am in a minority. |
|
|
Kyleran
Bitter Vet™
Joined: 9/13/06
Fools find no pleasure in understanding, but delight in airing their own opinions. Pvbs 18:2, NIV |
10/03/12 6:44:46 AM#236
Originally posted by delete5230 I know exactly how you feel, even Vanilla WOW was a huge improvement over the communities I find in more modern MMO's. I've given up pugging anymore, not worth the anxiety of screaming arses and getting kicked for making a mistake because you didn't learn the fights back in beta. People call it nostaligia, but the communities back prior to 2006 were more forgiving, more helpful and more friendly. Things have definitely changed for the worse and your only real survival technique is to find a good group of guild mates to hang with to insulate you from the rest of the mostly broken community. People don't believe me in this, but right now EVE has one of the best communities out there, once you learn the ground rules and how to integrate yourself into it. (I've had better conversations with pirates who killed me than those in recent MMO's)
"What gamers want ... is new game play patterns different from what they've experienced before" - Axehilt |
Originally posted by Kyleran Next week I have to go to Germany for a month, when I come home I may give EVE another try. I know the learning curve is hard, and never gave in much of a chance with the trial. So its a toss up between EVE and trying one a World of Warcraft free realm sites or both :) |
|
|
10/04/12 4:14:38 AM#238
Sorry but the idea that todays locust gameplayers go back to MMO's they have played is making me laugh. How many players here go back to a MMO they have not played for a few months? Todays players are locusts, they land at launch, eat all the content and are gone in two to three months. This behaviour is a result of design changes but feeds back on itself to ensure the "polished for launch but little end game" MMO model remains the only game in town. And remember there are a lot of old school types on here and I still recon very few will say they do. How many of the Facebook generation do you think are playing games their mates moved on from two months back? |
|
|
10/04/12 4:37:58 AM#239
Ive been reading this forum and im glad we see this topic risen. Very good questions and points. I have played UO (Im a Ultima Online fan myself), Shadowbane, WOW and Iam playing GW2 (thou im not THAT excited) Someone mentioned Shadowbane etc, if there would be a sequel etc. Look what I just found:
http://www.jeuxonline.info/actualite/35170/changyou-ressuscite-shadowbane (translate from french to read) and check this out: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadowbane ( i didnt knew the MUD creator have design this game, MUD was a great game...)
Anyone remember MUD? Lol, that was a HARDCORE GAME! ps: I really wish UO was back with better graphics, I dearly wish that. I miss this game so much... Chears
|
|
|
10/04/12 11:53:10 AM#240
Originally posted by Loktofeit Thanks a lot for this.
I registered for the BETA.
As for the OP, I tend to agree. I've been let down by every MMO I've played for the past few years, sadly culminating in my resubbing to World of Warcraft or Dark Age of Camelot. But, even WoW has become a completely different game from when I really enjoyed it. The game is too easy.
I'd be, at least temporarily, happy with a Vanilla or Burning Crusade official server in WoW. (I don't like playing on EMU servers) It really grinds my gears that Blizzard is too greedy to even consider this. I feel like I supported a game, that they changed beyond recognition. It doesn't seem fair, but that's life. |
|