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11/13/12 8:03:00 AM#41
Originally posted by ozmono Yes and no. Some of it is undeniably factual, WoW did ease the restrictions on leveling content pretty dramatically over the years. Blizzard was, after all, looking for the biggest $$$ audience they could grab; shallow learning curve, lack of dramatic consequences for failing, ez cap, eventually ez raiding-entry bars. It's there. It's also exaggerated; gamers come pre-equipped with Team Hubris t-shirts, and have always been a home for the braggarts and poseurs. Some of them, without a fairly constant source of ego-boo, 733t trophies, just don't feel manly enough, I guess. It's also a all-time favorite topic of Doom Prophets :P |
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11/13/12 8:06:32 AM#42
The WOW mentality: create your character -> get capped in 3 days through a solo campaign-linear quests -> sit the ass in the town until your time to enter an instance arrives -> have fun in multiplayer room -> sit the ass in town again til the next time.
Have ruined MMOs in west forever, there is no hope for western players anymore. |
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11/13/12 8:07:04 AM#43
Originally posted by Quirhid I disagree. Zerging was not an option. Now it's often THE option. Pug friendly raids? Have you seen that in any old game? New boss downed the same day it is released. Have you seen that in any old game? Player at level cap who needs an explanation on how agro works. Have you ever seen that in an old game? Becouse I have seen that stuff in newer games. It's ok that you need less time to achieve progress in nowaday's MMOs. Not something I like, but I understand why many players prefer that. But, regardless the amount of time needed, games used to be harder, and I am talking plain difficutly. I am not talking death penalties, time invested, group size or anything like that. I am not even talking about depth. I am talking about how difficult the encounters were. They were harder before. |
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11/13/12 8:24:57 AM#44
Originally posted by xDayx This caught my attention the most early in the thread.. I do believe as this poster has explained that old school MMO's were more about knowledge, then just button pushing.. As a spell caster you really had to know your spells and skill limits.. durations times, etc etc.. And I wanted to add to the above post one more critical area of old school vs current games.. With the exception of raids.. Old school you had to be more ALERT of yourself and your surroundings.. Lazy game play in the past will get you and your group killed quickly.. |
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Betaguy
Elite Member
Joined: 12/31/04
The king and the pawn go back to the same box at the end of the day. |
11/13/12 8:27:13 AM#45
They have def. been scaled back since I started. Yes they were much more tedious, not harder imo. They have made them more user friendly lets say.
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11/13/12 8:43:10 AM#46
during the golden age of EQ1 was that around 600- 800 K people were playing MMO's total. That was divided up between a half dozen games. I am sure that if all MMO's would suddenly become "hard" there would still have 400 - 600 K players but there simpley are not "millions" of people interested in that kind of time sink. I think the MMORPG genre has seen it's zenith and in another ten years it be back to a half dozen or so games with less than 1 milllion players playing.
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11/13/12 8:52:03 AM#47
Originally posted by parrotpholk Who does everyone say naked corpse runs in EQ1 did no one every keep a back up armor set like i did incase i died to help retrive my loot back. |
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11/13/12 9:03:23 AM#48
Originally posted by gordiflu For example of game being harder a white mob (same lvl) in everquest was acualy quite and even or challenging fight most of the time while in new games such as rift or WoW you can austo attack it to death and loose 5% hp. |
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11/13/12 9:08:36 AM#49
Originally posted by Quirhid Dont underestimate the power of harsh death penalty's. Harsh death penalties create immersion aswell as fear sometime it made the game feel much more exciting alot of the time, Playing games with harsher death penalty for long periods of time was much easier than games that didnt have a harsh penalty atleast for me. I could play EQ for 5+ hours stright easy, same thing with Darkfall and not get bored at all, In WoW i would be bored before we made it to the first boss even if it was a raid we never been to, and in GW2 its also the same thing i polay WvW for awhile and get bored after an hour or so (unless i was playing with guildies) soly because there was no immersion it just didnt feel real and i think that come down to death penalties. Ive always felt a great deal more immersed in games that had a harsh death penalty. |
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Zekiah
Apprentice Member
Joined: 1/06/07
Hype (noun) |
11/13/12 9:08:46 AM#50
That's a good part of the problem but don't tell the NAO generation that.
"Censorship is never over for those who have experienced it. It is a brand on the imagination that affects the individual who has suffered it, forever." - Noam Chomsky |
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11/13/12 9:19:27 AM#51
Again, games weren't 'hard' per se, but they were different. MMO vets are like MTV viewers from 20 years ago - you know, the people who watched it for music. News flash - you're not the target demographic anymore! You're getting older, wondering why nobody is targeting you and your needs anymore. A new generation of MMO gamer has come to the forfront, they are avid consumers and will spend a crap ton of money on whatever's put out. While most of the 'gamers' you used to play with now are married, have jobs and families -you are still here thinking that it's the bad games that drove your friends away - when, nope - Real life did. Developers have to make games that will get attention, appeal to more people and are profitable - and that 'hardcore, classic' jive is nothing more than a grab at a past that is long gone - like MTV that played music.
If in 1982 we played with the current mentality, we would have burned down all the pac man games since the red ghost was clearly OP. Instead we just got better at the game. |
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Kyleran
Bitter Vet™
Joined: 9/13/06
Fools find no pleasure in understanding, but delight in airing their own opinions. Pvbs 18:2, NIV |
11/13/12 9:26:30 AM#52
Originally posted by Roxtarr Well, it's true, early MMO's were designed for players with an abundance of the character traits (dare I call them skills?) of patience, perseverence and persistence, which of course, not really that many players are wired for. I actually think modern MMO's deliver exactly the quick in and out experience that the majority of the player base favors, it's only the players who wished for a longer term experience in their MMORPGs that really are getting shortchanged. What you call a timesink, I call gameplay mechanics and we just differ on what they should be and what makes a game "fun" ( a truly over used and misunderstood term if there ever was one)
"What gamers want ... is new game play patterns different from what they've experienced before" - Axehilt |
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11/13/12 9:28:57 AM#53
Originally posted by Kyleran True, so I do stand partially corrected in that regard. The reason I play MMO's is because of the long-term reward of knowing that I've invested in a character and have something to show for it that I am proud of. Time is required, no doubt. I think you are right that patience and endurance are qualities that should be rewarded and can add difficulty to the mix. Sadly, these are not proving to be profitable skills to reward if you talk to most of today's developers. I'm not saying I like it, I'm simply making an observation. If in 1982 we played with the current mentality, we would have burned down all the pac man games since the red ghost was clearly OP. Instead we just got better at the game. |
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11/13/12 9:29:03 AM#54
The problem is most modern mmo players actually HATE what mmorpgs used to stand for. I will not defend wether it was worse or better but the point is those games were our type of games and now they have been shifted into something else for a whole different kind of customer, as opposed to making diff games for both groups.
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11/13/12 9:29:55 AM#55
Wizardry Online my friend. Not the best looking mmo coming out, but definitely one of the "hardest". If your old school be sure to check it out. :D BigCountry | Head Hunters | www.wefarmpeople.com |
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11/13/12 9:33:05 AM#56
The more challenging something is, the more people will try. Goals feel like victories instead of a checklist thats readily getting marked off. I remember playin the EQ way back in the day, whenever someone would level up they would shout "DING" and everyone in the zone would send them a congrats, because it was a big deal. Developers after that created new "ding" affects with lights and sound, then with leveling made easier it happens constantly. The leveling example I put is just a small part of it. and developers still took that away. Another part is what WoW did with end game. Why not make the entire game with dungeons, places to explore, and "epic" mobs to defeat rather than waiting until after you've maxed your character so people don't feel that it's a must to be maxed out. Anyone remember LFG to kill crush? heck, that was waaay in the beginning and you didn't see people just leveling up and soloing that part did you? So much fun back then, too bad. |
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Yamota
Elite Member
Joined: 10/05/03
There's a beast within every man that stirs when you put a sword in his hand |
11/13/12 9:34:09 AM#57
Originally posted by BigCountry Perma-death is not hard, it is stupid in an Internet game where you can have disconnections and lag not to mention just crashes. I would prefer the middle ground where dying stings but dont wipe your character. |
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corpusc
Hard Core Member
Joined: 7/25/03
CHATTANOOGAN contact me if you are seriously interested in |
11/13/12 9:34:50 AM#58
no. the problem is that they aren't MMOs anymore.
and a whole generation of gamers has come in and taken over the scene who never played a real MMO and have no idea what one is. The End |
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corpusc
Hard Core Member
Joined: 7/25/03
CHATTANOOGAN contact me if you are seriously interested in |
11/13/12 9:35:58 AM#59
Originally posted by IfrianMMO
yah The End |
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11/13/12 9:36:36 AM#60
Originally posted by BigCountry the controls in this game are what keep me from coming back, they just havent put any thought into that at all. |
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