| 49 posts found | |
|---|---|
|
Quake was followed by a string of so-called "quake killers", which were always evolutionary clones trying to duplicate the original's success by duplicating it's foundations. Quake's success was never duplicated by something that came along which was not simply a better version of quake, but also very new and different compared with what the original offered. WoW will ultimately be killed only when some MMO publishers have the courage to not only push the genre into new territory, but is willing to put enough resources behind it to get it done in a polished way. |
|
|
7/02/09 1:24:15 AM#2
Yes but you can kill counter strike source with combat arms. Lotro will eventually kill WoW as time passes by.. well.. not kill.. but take a majority of subs |
|
|
heartless
Hard Core Member
Joined: 1/05/04
Imagination will often carry us to worlds that never were. But without it we go nowhere. -Carl Sagan |
7/02/09 1:40:45 AM#3
I agree with the OP. I have been saying the same thing for a while now. WoW is bound to run out of steam eventually and another game will take over as top dog. Right now though, it looks like WoW will not be killed by innovation but will rather die of old age. After which the shiniest WoW-clone will take over.
|
|
7/02/09 2:30:50 AM#4
You can't kill the WoW killer threads by cloning them either. :) |
|
|
7/02/09 2:32:57 AM#5
You cannot kill that that does not bleed. |
|
|
7/02/09 2:51:46 AM#6
Originally posted by Trenchgun
This thread is funny. Coffee is the only person so far who has actually typed anything even vaguely original and sensible. Everyone else in this copy-cat thread is simply retyping old borrowed thoughts which they have seen everyone else typing for years in the billion other rehashed versions of this tired old attempt at a debate. Its a prime example of how most of the so-called discussions on these forums are in fact the result of nothing more than mindless zombies basicly copy & pasting the words of other posters. Heartless cant even tie his borrowed thoughts together as he blatantly contradicts himself by first agreeing with the OP by stating that he has been saying the same thing for years and then saying as his last sentence that a WoW clone will eventually take over. If you're going to pretend to have an original thought at least make it look like you have thought about it. This thread is the perfect example of a bunch of bored human/sheep hybrids emulating each other. |
|
|
7/02/09 2:57:32 AM#7
World Of Warcraft is not the first game out there. I am in my 30 and have played many games. In that case i say Wow is a Lineage 2 Clone. All mmo has the same basic, Collect , grind, kill , group, well you get where im going. Eaven Lineage 2 is not the first one, i played my first MMO 1998 with Ultima Online. There was a life before you i i have to say. System Specc |
|
|
7/02/09 3:00:08 AM#8
Also quake was not the first one. ID Software created the first wich was Wolfenstein 3D followed by Doom, Doom 2 , Heretic 1 and 2 Man se if you can se those titels in the forum the last couple of days =)
IDDQD , IDCLIP, IDKFA System Specc |
|
|
7/02/09 3:15:56 AM#9
Originally posted by luckypotato
Lotro taking maj of wow's subs. I'd like to have what you're smoking. :) |
|
|
7/02/09 3:16:35 AM#10
Actually the combination of strong marketing with solid gameplay reinforces the position. At the moment there are plenty of games with good gameplay but very little exposure to media and new players. Bottom line, your formula is flawed in our case, because the players are not equal. Regardless, us players need a strong P2P quality game on top with massive appeal, else the market will deteriorate into the low quality F2P games offered today. Whether this game is WoW or some other title is of little importance, as long as quality is promoted and reinforced. |
|
|
7/02/09 3:46:36 AM#11
Being bored with the game is a pretty powerful element for MMOs and something not to be readily dismissed. After all, P2P is all about retention of players over long periods of time. AoC and WAR had their chance to cut a very big slice out of WoW when they launched. Were those games complete at launch and with all the gameplay elements in tact, the MMO chart would be radically different right now. The downside of these early failures has unfortunately an negative aftershock on all future games produced later on (see the mistrust towards Aion, SW:TOR and Champions online. Also look at how differently these games are advertised, compared to AoC and WAR, ie varying from very little info to complete silence.) |
|
|
7/02/09 3:54:38 AM#12
WoW nearly perfected the quest/raid based mmo's franchise Other games can try, but they will never overcome their master. |
|
|
7/02/09 3:56:12 AM#13
Originally posted by luckypotato
I play LOTRO and though a fantastic MMO it will never meet or surpass that Blizzard has achieved with WOW. However silly the PVP is in WOW or games like Warhammer at least they have PVP far superior to the monster PVP in LOTRO. The hardcore MMO genre of players like myself who have seen and done all in most games are moving on to greater pastures meaning we don't play like we used to. We've gone from marathon play to a few hours a day or every once in awhile now.
WoW was nothing special in my book. It took the missing parts of alot of other MMO and put them in theres. WoW in effect was an easy mode clone of every game that came before it. |
|
|
7/02/09 4:00:07 AM#14
Originally posted by coffee
yes your right, we must drive a stake made of pure sandbox through its server heart before the next full moon MMO wish list: -Changeable worlds |
|
|
7/02/09 4:04:57 AM#15
Originally posted by coffee
so you can't kill a robot? |
|
|
7/02/09 4:13:03 AM#16
Well, the three games I mentioned have different gameplay elements than WoW, just not radically different. Of course, the gameplay execution is yet to be witnessed.
I mentioned these games, not because they have the potential to be WoW killers (or x-game killers), but because they have the potential to fill a gap similar to what EVE is doing, something different and something fresh. And in the end, something enjoyable for a while. |
|
|
7/02/09 4:30:10 AM#17
In all these threads on all the various fora I visit, where the subject of "WoW killing" is brought up, every one of them fails to mention a core reason for the sucess of WoW. The setting has existed for going on 15 years now. The World of Warcraft (that is, the Warcraftverse, not the game) is familiar to many PC gamers who got their start in the early to mid 90's. It dominated RTSes until Starcraft, another Blizzard IP, came along. Even though the lore behind the Warcraftverse was added to, retconned, and molded around new interpretations of old in-game events, by the time WoW opened for business, there was already an established fanbase of millions waiting to get in on the action. Millions of players who were already familiar with the world of Azeroth; who already knew who the major players were; who experienced a form of active gameplay within the setting; and who now eagerly awaited the chance to get into the world as opposed to looking down on it from the bird's eye view of a real time strategy game.
That was a head start that no other MMO could possibly replicate, unless a company takes the time to start their IP small, nurture it, develop a fanbase, and then hand that world over to the fanbase to become a part of. LOTRO enjoys a similar success, but the main difference is that for every Tolkien fan that actively plays computer games, there's probably 1000 more who are literature buffs that have zero interest in gaming. Warcraft got its start in gaming, so there's no disparity in the fanbase.
The only other game I can think of that has this going for it would be SW:TOR. It's got the two KOTORs before it, and the fans that were created by those games. You can bet that at least 50% of the people who enjoyed and have multiple playthroughs of the KOTORs under their belt will be guaranteed sales and subscriptions within the first few months. And then there will be the disgruntled SWG players looking to grab ahold of another SW based MMO. Needless to say, TOR's release will be interesting to observe. Whether or not it enjoys the runaway success of WoW remains to be seen.
I can say, however, that it's going to take something REALLY special to be developed as an MMO with no prior gaming establishment to reach the kinds of numbers as WoW. "You'll never win an argument with an idiot because he is too stupid to recognize his own defeat." ~Anonymous |
|
|
7/02/09 4:38:27 AM#18
Well, Aion brings world wide PvP with no/little framerate loss and modern graphics. Last game to do that was DAoC or L2, take your pick. Champions online bring a one shard world, similar to what EVE has. I don't recall any other non-space game that has this feature. Remains to be seen if the world is seamless as well. In comparison to the two games above, we know very little regarding gameplay as far as SW:TOR is concerned. We do know that the storytelling element will be strong, but that's it. Most of the optimism stems from Bioware as a company, not the game features themselves. |
|
Originally posted by Zorndorf That's a good way of putting it: Each new game like WOW only reinforces it's position at the top. Nobody can out-WoW WoW. They've got the resources to keep up and have had more time. The only way to break the cycle is to change the paradigm, to introduce a new set of circumstances by doing something completely different.
|
|
|
7/02/09 4:53:13 AM#20
Originally posted by Zorndorf
Sorry... hehe... that's just a point I've been wanting to bring up, and this thread seemed as good a place as any vis a vis WoW.
Your point about not having come in via the other Warcraft games is valid, but I have a theory about that, too. The game comes out and becomes a blockbuster thanks to the established Warcraft fanbase. Blizzard starts raking in the money, which goes into marketing. Their marketing people, obviously good at what that do as we can see, get the game out everywhere. Product placement, celebrity commercials, billboards--- EVERYwhere. Meanwhile, the "Hey, check out this cool game I'm playing" effect is going on. Back before I became jaded, I loved the game. It was easy to pick up and dive right in. This, coupled with the marketing, coupled again with the friend 2 friend spread and before you know it, 11 million+ subscriptions.
But anyway, that's a topic for another thread. I'm quite enjoying the current direction of this thread. :) "You'll never win an argument with an idiot because he is too stupid to recognize his own defeat." ~Anonymous |
|