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Greetings. In the past I've played a handful of online games, mostly computer, some console, and I've enjoyed most. But recently, by recently I mean the past year or two, I've lost not my love for the games I've come to known, but I'm without a way to enjoy old content; this meaning I've enjoyed the hell out of the games I've played to the point where there isn't any enjoyment left. I will look at the pros and cons of games and at the end highlight a few aspects I think are important in a game for me, and hopefully you make those connections before you get to the end, or even make a few I didn't notice myself. I believe my very first game was Diablo 2: Lord of Destruction. I spent a large portion of time there and find myself coming back to it every year and a half or so just to bring back old memories. In that game I spent a lot of time talking with friends. I enjoyed the social aspect of the game; there were people there you could trust and people you could get to know and be friends with. I had a very good friend, Vivitheblackmag (missing the i there was probably a cutoff on the number of characters allowed in an account name/ character name) and we spent lots of time going through the game, killing bosses over and over, getting ourselves better loot, making new characters, and just having a good time in general. Eventually we lost contact due to a lost account on his behalf, but we were great friend. I had a few things I liked about that game. * Socializing - Friends lists made it easy to keep in touch with your buddies. Some things I didn't like about the game. * It was nearly all clicking. Click to move, click to attack, click to operate any function really. The only part that wasn't click was pressing F1-F12 to swiftly select skills to use. I spent at least 30-50 days total playing time there, I'm sure. Overall it was a really good game, the PvP was very skill based and fun! My friends made the game more enjoyable, but there was a lack of content and a few things that could ruin my day in the game.
I enjoyed a lot in this game. * Content - it seemed endless. There currently are over one hundred quests. These quests aren't kill x of y. They all have their own story, minus the very VERY basic starter ones you get upon beginning, some of them can take a few hours or even a couple afternoons of playing. There is ALWAYS somewhere new to explore, content is added almost weekly (I think they bumped it up to every two weeks with bigger additions now.) * Socializing - If you were skilling up you would have some time to talk to the guys and gals around ya. Your friends list could hold up to 200 people. On your mini map, friends would show up as a green dot so you could holler at 'em when they walked by. A lot of the game would be talking to your friends and the people around you. Eventually, my awesome game had started to crumble. I found a few things I didn't like. * Grinding - At the beginning it didn't seem like a grind, fighting monsters was enjoyable because I didn't know what to expect. But when I had experienced a lot of the content and I wanted to move on to the strongest monsters, you had to prepare. And preparing in Runescape meant hours upon hours of grinding. Click to kill, pick up loot, bury the bones. Repeat. Replenish health by eating food every other monster. It got too repetitious. Click tree, click the next tree, click the next tree. Bank. Repeat. Skilling up was a constant grind. Very nice game, but Jagex eventually killed it with updates by trying to control the game to make it 'better' for the players. I most enjoyed the content, talking to friends, and the customization. I've spent a lot of my time on there, I'm assuming 100+ days of gaming time.
I enjoyed a couple aspects of the game. * Customization wasn't too bad, your character could look different, but the races looked pretty similar, about the only factor that changed the look was the hair color. But the classes' gear sets made your character look great, and some races fit the look better than others. If you truly wanted to look the part of a sneaky rogue or a holy paladin you could. I didn't like a few things about the game, however. * Trade - Moving stacks around could be a pain in the ass. Also, 6 slots at a time was annoying. But I suppose whatever works. That game was alright, not great, but had its moments where it really shined, but also had moments where I wanted to puke, and moments were I did puke.
The game had really good aspects. * Voice Chat - I have the feeling I need this in any game I play from now on, it gives me a more personal feeling about the people I'm chatting with. I have Ventrilo downloaded. All is good there :) There were some things I really disliked about the game. I couldn't number which ones I hate the most, so just assume I hate them all equally. * PvP - Their PvP was the most gear based, non-skill oriented PvP I've ever seen. You also get ganked a lot, and about 50% of the time you are ganked, if you are solo you are going to get griefed too. Another bad thing is that you can abuse the PvP rules. There was a PvP range depending on the zone you are in, if it was Four levels, you could attack someone up to 4 levels lower than you, and be attacked by those up to 4 levels higher than you. But if you were a group of low levels, and you attacked a higher player, the only thing you have to lose is your time, really. I wont go into the mechanics, but the lower levels would gain something from killing a higher player, and the higher player wouldn't gain anything from killing someone below their range. Basically, what turned me off from EQ2 was 1. The constant fear of change - they're gonna nerf this class, make this class amazing, blah blah blah.
There are a lot of the reasons I enjoy games, and a lot of reasons I don't. I think I have a few main things I need in order to play a game. Communication - Really nice communication with voice-chat, but the basic typing chat system should be good. If the game has an implemented voice-chat system that is great, but I can get by with ventrilo just fine! Socializing - A good community. I like friends, good friends I can trust, be friends with, group with, rely on, and have them rely on me sometimes. I enjoy grouping. Money - I enjoy making money in games, personally. I can do it either by a) trading or b) farming and enjoy it, but harvesting around isn't my favorite thing to do. Note that harvesting isn't something I'm looking to avoid, just something I don't want to overdo or have be one of my main goals. Appearance - I like to look different, unique. Rankings - I do enjoy to make my character one of the better, stronger characters in the game. Housing - Could go under appearance, I believe player housing is nice if you can customize it. Not all clicking - I want to use my keyboard as well. :D
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10/18/09 9:28:16 PM#2
you'll be lucky if anyone reads even half of this... |
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10/18/09 9:33:56 PM#3
Wall of Texts hits you for 430849084024284 mental damage.
Anyhow, i was looking for a good game myself, so i bought Fallen earth hoping it would be good, and it was just good. there was nothing that really poped in that game for me. I actually just bought Aion, and lvl 26 and i would recommend it to people looking for a game. Aion is not anything new but its something really well put together it has some of the best aspects of most mmo's out there. my 2 cents if you are looking for a game and dont mind grinding a bit |
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Originally posted by IceShadeX2
Lol @ mental damage. Define the grinding part of Aion? And what is the story like? |
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Originally posted by Vinterkrig
This is true, but it'd be nice if I got at least one person to read it and reply, considering I took the time to type it up and think about it. |
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10/18/09 9:44:07 PM#6
I'm not level 50 yet so i dont know the whole story, but what ive played i like it alot. the first 10 levels were a blast personaly, teaches you alot about differnt parts of the world if u actaully read the quests, and when you hit 9 you do a quest that will level you to 10 and you get your wings, oh and the cut scenes in the game are awesome. alot of side quests like gathering ones, take this there and stuff like that so you dont have to follow the story always, anywho i think the game is worth a try. Best fantasy mmo currently out i would say. Grinding in Aion is like most games, questing or just kill over and over and over. the quests arnt the worse, so it makes it doable. |
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Originally posted by IceShadeX2
I looked at it, the wing concept made me feel like it was a little too fluffy for me if you get what I'm saying. But I watched two youtube videos and now I'm looking at the website. |
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10/18/09 10:43:45 PM#8
If you can summarize that in 2 paragraphs i would gladly help. |
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Originally posted by Gabby-air
How about.. I like content, friendly people, pvp that is more skill based (I really liked Darkfall pvp, but i sucked at melee and the grind to get skills up was a bitch) I hate grinding, a bad community, economy being affected by the creators, i like voice-chat, guilds, yeah.. It really says it all in that essay up there though ^_^ |
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I feel I wasted my time writing that one up. |
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10/19/09 2:44:53 AM#11
Originally posted by Kithablast
I read the whole thing, and it was definitely one of the better things I've read about gaming. Therefore, it was completely wasted in this forum. I don't know if there is a more mature MMO/gaming forum out there, but you might want to repost it if you could find one. Or, maybe you could post it on a blog on this site? Perhaps it would get more attention. As for a game meeting your criteria, not sure if I can help you or not. I am currently playing Lord of the Rings Online, and I think it fits some of what you are looking for, but perhaps not all. 1) LotRO, because of the lore and Turbines care with presenting the gameworld, has some of the deepest content you are likely to find. The world is absolutely engrossing. 2) Socially, probably the most mature community in MMO's (probably because it is Tolkein). Guilds (Kinships) are hugely important to the social experience. That being said, social interaction seems to take place out of official channels (which can have a few idiots). But if you take the initiative (which is appreciated) you'll be astounded how many regular people you'll meet (as opposed to epeeners). I think there is ingame voice chat. 3) Economy. I haven't played long enough to understand it completely, but there doesn't seem to be a huge player economy. I assume because crafting is done within kinships and there isn't a great need for trade. There is an auction house, but I have no idea what is in demand, or what is rare. But I'm sure there is something. 4) Almost no grind. LotRO has quests coming out of its ears. Some of them are epic, long storylines where you interact with heroes from the books (Dwalin, Strider etc.) -- these have actually given me shivers. Others are more mundane. So far the only thing you may have to grind are "deeds" -- secondary skill bonuses that you really only need for high levels (i.e. no grind to level). 5) PvP is currently limited to "Monster Play" . In this, you can create and level special monster characters that can fight other players in their normal classes. Some people love it, but it is secondary to the PvE portions of the game. There are rumours Turbine is developing PvP servers to be tested in the Chinese market, but these are unconfirmed. Overall it strikes me that LotRO descends from "old school" fantasy games like Runescape and Everquest, rather than more arcade style games like WoW. Most of the veteran gamer playerbase seems to have come from that stream instead. It lit a spark for me, it might for you. There is currently an excellent subscription deal for North American customers. You can download the Trial Client, upgrade for $9.99 for the complete game (includes all current expansions) with a month's free time. Then you can commit to a 3+ month subscription for 9.99/month (regular $15). If you commit to this multi-month subscription by October 31st you get the Siege of Mirkwood expansion when it comes out in December for free. |
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Originally posted by GidSlack
I read the whole thing, and it was definitely one of the better things I've read about gaming. Therefore, it was completely wasted in this forum. I don't know if there is a more mature MMO/gaming forum out there, but you might want to repost it if you could find one. Or, maybe you could post it on a blog on this site? Perhaps it would get more attention. As for a game meeting your criteria, not sure if I can help you or not. I am currently playing Lord of the Rings Online, and I think it fits some of what you are looking for, but perhaps not all. 1) LotRO, because of the lore and Turbines care with presenting the gameworld, has some of the deepest content you are likely to find. The world is absolutely engrossing. 2) Socially, probably the most mature community in MMO's (probably because it is Tolkein). Guilds (Kinships) are hugely important to the social experience. That being said, social interaction seems to take place out of official channels (which can have a few idiots). But if you take the initiative (which is appreciated) you'll be astounded how many regular people you'll meet (as opposed to epeeners). I think there is ingame voice chat. 3) Economy. I haven't played long enough to understand it completely, but there doesn't seem to be a huge player economy. I assume because crafting is done within kinships and there isn't a great need for trade. There is an auction house, but I have no idea what is in demand, or what is rare. But I'm sure there is something. 4) Almost no grind. LotRO has quests coming out of its ears. Some of them are epic, long storylines where you interact with heroes from the books (Dwalin, Strider etc.) -- these have actually given me shivers. Others are more mundane. So far the only thing you may have to grind are "deeds" -- secondary skill bonuses that you really only need for high levels (i.e. no grind to level). 5) PvP is currently limited to "Monster Play" . In this, you can create and level special monster characters that can fight other players in their normal classes. Some people love it, but it is secondary to the PvE portions of the game. There are rumours Turbine is developing PvP servers to be tested in the Chinese market, but these are unconfirmed. Overall it strikes me that LotRO descends from "old school" fantasy games like Runescape and Everquest, rather than more arcade style games like WoW. Most of the veteran gamer playerbase seems to have come from that stream instead. It lit a spark for me, it might for you. There is currently an excellent subscription deal for North American customers. You can download the Trial Client, upgrade for $9.99 for the complete game (includes all current expansions) with a month's free time. Then you can commit to a 3+ month subscription for 9.99/month (regular $15). If you commit to this multi-month subscription by October 31st you get the Siege of Mirkwood expansion when it comes out in December for free.
Well, first off, thank you for that compliment. I spent a little while putting that together. Lotro I've heard nothing but good things about, and it's I think the third highest on the overall rating/hype list and first in ratings (the other two ahead of it are un-realeased games, or something of the sort.) Second, I've downloaded the trial before, and I forget what it was that I didn't like, but I think it had something to do with the graphics? Now that I've read a little about it, I've heard nothing but, "The scenery is amazing!" So maybe I'm wrong. Also, is there a need to have a good knowledge of the lore, or will I learn about it in the game? Personally I've never picked up the books, but I've seen the movies and not followed too closely. Third, Can it support a casual time frame, because I do attend school with a few hours of work each night, plus a girlfriend I love very much who I try to spend as much time with as possible. So a couple afternoons a week would allow me to push myself at a moderate speed? Fourth, Can I get through the game without having top-notch gear because I wont be able to play every night? And if not is it soloable for getting gear? I cannot do raiding; I'm sure the game doesn't have it, but just making sure. It sounds like a reasonable game. Maybe you can give me your server/character name or even ventrilo info and we can talk a little more about it? Let me know! Appreciate the feedback. |
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10/19/09 3:39:09 AM#13
Op, i read your entire post and i thought it was a very good biography of your mentionable gaming history. i would sugjest that you check out a few game, based on your want of A) community, B) non-grindy ness ( i guess everything is a grind if you REALLY think about it ) and C) Economy. The first game i would offer up is EVE-Online. this is by far one of the most community driven games on the market at the moment. every aspect of the game is pretty much controlled by the players. now some people may disagree with me but the the real key is finding a corp or alliance that really fits your RL personal morals, because that in the end i think will give you the most enjoyment. the character progressions is done through training of skills that take RL time to complete. no more killing NPC after NPC for experiance, if RL things come up just log out... your char is still gaining in ability. the only real need to play is for enjoyment and money, because lets face it everything takes money. also if your looking for a game with an awesome economy this is the game for you, every aspect of the game economy is manipulated by the players for profit, and reading what you wrote about runescape i think the "buy low sell high" model will work very well for you. The second and final game im going to offer up to you would be any of the current "Sandbox" style games, weather it be Darkfall, Mortal Online, or even WURM. now, being a runescape player i dont think that graphics are really what your heart is set on, its more the community and game mechanics so i think these games will do you nicely. as with any sandbox game most aspects are manipulated by the playerbase, and in the case of WURM you can even teraform your area to suit your needs ( i one time dug a massive tunnel system, much like the vietcong had in vietnam, it was awesome, and for no reason at all ) at any rate i hope you can find a game that you enjoy!
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10/19/09 6:50:20 AM#14
Originally posted by Kithablast
Well, first off, thank you for that compliment. I spent a little while putting that together. Lotro I've heard nothing but good things about, and it's I think the third highest on the overall rating/hype list and first in ratings (the other two ahead of it are un-realeased games, or something of the sort.) Second, I've downloaded the trial before, and I forget what it was that I didn't like, but I think it had something to do with the graphics? Now that I've read a little about it, I've heard nothing but, "The scenery is amazing!" So maybe I'm wrong. Also, is there a need to have a good knowledge of the lore, or will I learn about it in the game? Personally I've never picked up the books, but I've seen the movies and not followed too closely. Third, Can it support a casual time frame, because I do attend school with a few hours of work each night, plus a girlfriend I love very much who I try to spend as much time with as possible. So a couple afternoons a week would allow me to push myself at a moderate speed? Fourth, Can I get through the game without having top-notch gear because I wont be able to play every night? And if not is it soloable for getting gear? I cannot do raiding; I'm sure the game doesn't have it, but just making sure. It sounds like a reasonable game. Maybe you can give me your server/character name or even ventrilo info and we can talk a little more about it? Let me know! Appreciate the feedback.
The one thing a certain segment of people object to in LotRO graphics are the avatars (landscape seems to have been uniformly praised). The avatars themselves aren't heroically handsome or endowed; but seem to be homely, almost caricatures of the races. (Women, however, like the modest female models, and lack of skimpy armour). Combat animations aren't overly flashy either. I've played other Asian-style MMO's with arcade-like fight graphics, and they are fun. LotRO just has a different sensibility, and it does grow on you as you play. It is also much calmer. There is also no need to be expert on the lore. I've read the books years ago (haven't seen the movie), and not really even a Tolkein fan. But it probably is the best fantasy world there is; and if you are generally familiar with the main characters and events (what Frodo, Bilbo, Gandalf did etc.) and some of the landmarks of Middle Earth it just gives an extra dimension when you encounter them in game. The entire story though is also explained through quests and cut scenes as you progress. LotRO is probably the most casual-friendly game on the market. And I'm not far enough long to confirm it, but people say gear doesn't matter like it does in WoW. (And from my experiences so far, it just doesn't seem like that sort of game; the whole atmosphere is laidback). Turbine did add a kind of a mini-WoW-style raid endgame with the Mines of Moria expansion for the people who wanted it (again optional). But even that was too much for some of the playerbase, and it looks like Turbine may tone it down a bit in the next expansion. The most populous server right now is Brandywine (Landroval is the most popular unofficial RP server). My main character is Thrumdi (Dwarf Guardian) on Brandywine. I don't use the ingame voice chat, but send me a tell if you want to talk more. (Also note: the game is down for maintenance today the 19th from 7am-12pm EST). |
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Originally posted by GidSlack
Well, first off, thank you for that compliment. I spent a little while putting that together. Lotro I've heard nothing but good things about, and it's I think the third highest on the overall rating/hype list and first in ratings (the other two ahead of it are un-realeased games, or something of the sort.) Second, I've downloaded the trial before, and I forget what it was that I didn't like, but I think it had something to do with the graphics? Now that I've read a little about it, I've heard nothing but, "The scenery is amazing!" So maybe I'm wrong. Also, is there a need to have a good knowledge of the lore, or will I learn about it in the game? Personally I've never picked up the books, but I've seen the movies and not followed too closely. Third, Can it support a casual time frame, because I do attend school with a few hours of work each night, plus a girlfriend I love very much who I try to spend as much time with as possible. So a couple afternoons a week would allow me to push myself at a moderate speed? Fourth, Can I get through the game without having top-notch gear because I wont be able to play every night? And if not is it soloable for getting gear? I cannot do raiding; I'm sure the game doesn't have it, but just making sure. It sounds like a reasonable game. Maybe you can give me your server/character name or even ventrilo info and we can talk a little more about it? Let me know! Appreciate the feedback.
The one thing a certain segment of people object to in LotRO graphics are the avatars (landscape seems to have been uniformly praised). The avatars themselves aren't heroically handsome or endowed; but seem to be homely, almost caricatures of the races. (Women, however, like the modest female models, and lack of skimpy armour). Combat animations aren't overly flashy either. I've played other Asian-style MMO's with arcade-like fight graphics, and they are fun. LotRO just has a different sensibility, and it does grow on you as you play. It is also much calmer. There is also no need to be expert on the lore. I've read the books years ago (haven't seen the movie), and not really even a Tolkein fan. But it probably is the best fantasy world there is; and if you are generally familiar with the main characters and events (what Frodo, Bilbo, Gandalf did etc.) and some of the landmarks of Middle Earth it just gives an extra dimension when you encounter them in game. The entire story though is also explained through quests and cut scenes as you progress. LotRO is probably the most casual-friendly game on the market. And I'm not far enough long to confirm it, but people say gear doesn't matter like it does in WoW. (And from my experiences so far, it just doesn't seem like that sort of game; the whole atmosphere is laidback). Turbine did add a kind of a mini-WoW-style raid endgame with the Mines of Moria expansion for the people who wanted it (again optional). But even that was too much for some of the playerbase, and it looks like Turbine may tone it down a bit in the next expansion. The most populous server right now is Brandywine (Landroval is the most popular unofficial RP server). My main character is Thrumdi (Dwarf Guardian) on Brandywine. I don't use the ingame voice chat, but send me a tell if you want to talk more. (Also note: the game is down for maintenance today the 19th from 7am-12pm EST).
Good thing I slept through that. Hahahaha :P It looks like I may give the game a shot, but let me read the website first, it might lack a few things I like. But it sounds altogether like a nice game I can enjoy :) |
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Originally posted by Navydt I appreciate you reading the whole post, but allow me to address a few things. First, who is Op? Hopefully you were addressing me when you wrote this. Second, I have looked at EvE online, never played it, but a) I'm not really into the Sci-Fi category of gaming, b) I've heard stories from friends about being scammed by a corporation?? I'm not one to judge something before I've tried it, but I don't think it fits my style. I have looked in to the game previously, and thought it wasn't suited for me. Third, I have played Darkfall. Actually, I waited years for the beta to come out (Didn't get in of course) and the day it was released without a cap on how many people could buy it, I jumped in. I went through the world, found a clan with ventrilo (I still have theirs and talk to them from time to time, funny guys), stole some things, killed some people, defended from a siege on my ally city, and then after about a month of playing I realized how bad my character was. He hit low hits, had bad gear and weapons, his magic was terrible. And I thought to myself, "Alright, well let me just try to grind this out whenever I get bored." This is the game that made me hate grinding. This isn't kill x of y to go get 8 pelts and return to get another kill x of y grind. This is click (swing), click (swing), click (swing), click, click click, move to the next person on the wall of death, rest for stamina once you're out. Absolutely terrible. The whole game was a grind on stats. So I left the European server. But knowing how much I loved the game I planned to return once the NA (north american) server was out. And I did, and they recharged me 50 bucks for the American version of the client, and then 15 a month. I was angered because when I got their, my clan was divided between the servers, and I wasn't enjoying the game as much. I may have needed a new start, but it is so hard to give up friends, you know you will see again. Maybe there is a chance if you play it, know someone who has, or want to help me get back into it I can give it a shot? But the grinding is my major issue there, I can't stand all the clicking, it actually started to ware at my laptop's mouse and it's almost broken now (I have to click pretty hard, but it gets the job done) so I may use my auto-clicker program I found. It works out alright as long as i watch the screen. Economy on Darkfall I haven't been able to attempt the buy low, sell high, because a) I didn't have enough money to buy enough of something to make it so someone would spend an hour to get to me, and b) I was spending all my time looking for ways to make money (Which I finally did figure out) I heard from my buddies that they made the grind on stats a lot easier, I remember on the NA server that monster loots where better. Ahh enough blabber, I'll go on forever about that game. Mortal Online? I've looked it up, looks alright, maybe I ought start there. Graphics aren't too bad, looks a lot like Darkfall, but I like their graphics a little more from what I've seen. I looked it up just as I was in the middle of darkfall, so I don't remember much about it. It looks like it is still in beta. Wurm? Never heard of it. Something to keep in mind, I am a fantasy genre player, but it could take a little convincing to play a different type than I'm used to. Thanks! Kithablast |
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10/19/09 10:28:20 PM#17
Wow, You really have great interest in playing MMO's. |
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What makes ya say that? :P |
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10/19/09 11:06:05 PM#19
I started playing Fallen Earth this weekend. I think I'm hooked. I generally only like the really polished/high budget titles (like WoW), but this is a huge exception. It sounds like it might be right up your alley. At least try to get a trial key for the 10 day trial event starting Friday. |
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10/19/09 11:08:06 PM#20
Because you tend to know a lot of things about the game you are playing. Giving out the Pro's and Con's of the game in your own perspective. a lot of people just play games just to have some fun but only a few tend to analyze every inch of the game they are playing. Just like what you did, you gave out insights about the games you've played. |
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