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1/30/12 1:53:36 AM#101
Originally posted by nilden Some of the earlier links didn't work at all and had a bunch of spammy ads since it wasn't real youtube. And yeah, the most apt point you made (Jump to Lightspeed being superior to ToR's space combat) I later realized is an entirely unfair comparison because it was the primary feature of an entire expansion pack. Most of the rest of your points are fluff content that ToR will obviously get as it ages (the exception being housing, which while fairly interesting is only a few steps away from being fluff itself.) |
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1/30/12 3:09:26 AM#102
Originally posted by nerovipus32 I disagree that they are unsustainable they just need enough non-combat activities to keep players interested and involved between content updates, so while Devs should be adding more content as you say that lasts the lifetime of the product I think there is certainly room as well for the fast-food content.
Case in point, the post directly above yours. Adding things like the music system, housing, and tradeskills that allow you to craft things for your house (the latter two also being done in EQ2- and better imo) are ways to keep people playing and having fun even if they have conquered the current top tier in combat-centered content. Add in more things for the ADHD generation such as twitchy mini-games and you've reached players with and without patience.
Rolling alts being the only available option for those that aren't interested in hamster-wheel endgames just isn't good enough anymore for a substantial (and growing!) amount of players.
*edit* fixed repetition |
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1/30/12 3:31:10 AM#103
Originally posted by Shadowlord10 I completely understand where you're coming from, but you have to understand that there has been a huge shift in the design goals (can't think of exactly what I want to call them) seen in the MMORPG genre since back then- in fact there were several good posts in another thread regarding this, so i'll try to recap:
The pre-WoW era themepark MMORPGs were terrible at being games (I'm looking mostly from my experiences in EQ1 and CoH), the content was repetitive, grindy, and oftentimes bland. What made these games memorable was the social interactions the devs set up with player interdependence and hardship. The actual content was just the background for how it was used in a social setting to keep giving players more goals to achieve. Today's MMORPGs are far better at being games than the older ones, but that's all they bring to the table anymore.
The structure for the social metagame just isn't a priority anymore- it's difficult to set up and requires inconveniences that the majority of today's MMORPG players are likely not used to and may not be willing to accept. The risk of that is why we're stuck with shallow, lifeless copypasta clones. |
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1/30/12 3:37:47 AM#104
Originally posted by precious328 I'm inclined to agree. Especially the guys that made/are making important descions. A lot of the problems they are having can be blamed on the state ofthe Hero platform when they licsenced it. The launch has been more AoC than Rift. |
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1/30/12 5:16:47 AM#105
Originally posted by Shadowlord10Originally posted by Axehilt If Grouping made the feeling of Grinding go away, than why do you people complain so much about "RAID GRINDING"? thats both large group as well as a grind. The people here contradict their own complains all the time. Now you see why you people aren't happy about any MMO that comes out
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1/30/12 5:26:30 AM#106
Originally posted by MMOExposed
Did you just say grouping = raid grinding therefore grouping sucks? |
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Tesinato
Apprentice Member
Joined: 7/13/04
A lost gamer looking for the MMO of his dreams. |
1/30/12 6:05:26 AM#107
Originally posted by MMOExposed People complain because it is the same actions, everytime. There is also the fact that most raids are instanced, so you have no real varibles at play of something being different. In the bit of raiding I've personally done, it normally is a matter of learning what to do, and having enough stats to produce the damage to kill it. That's it. Once you learn the fight, it is easy, and when you get better geared, you then can steamroll it, making it even easier. Take a non-instanced version of say a cave, or dungeon you and a group of people are exploring and killing for xp. Your in there, 10-15 minutes, and someone might come in. They may or may not be capable of handling themselves. That adds a few varibles. Generally speaking, stuff respawns after a bit, so you need to keep track of where you rest up at, and where you are, or else you could be in trouble. The "trash mobs" actually give you a run for your money, instead of bending over and dying. There is plenty more of these varibles that occur playing but I will assume you get the point. This is what keeps you from being bored, this is what keeps you from feeling the grind. Not to mention, the social interactions, and making friends in the process. As I stated in another post, people don't act the way they used to either, and I personally feel that is part of the problem as well. Also having the content laid out to you in a nice neat package is part of why folks feel it is grindy, which is also a problem. There really isn't any freedom to do it another way, and once you learn it, it becomes boring. Freedom is honestly the biggest problem in most games nowadays, we just label it different things. |
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1/30/12 7:34:57 AM#108
Originally posted by Brenelael I agree. Endgame for me is literally the end of the game. |
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1/30/12 9:29:16 AM#109
Time will tell.
We will see after mid march when the 3 month subs run out if it failed or not. |
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1/30/12 9:30:43 AM#110
The biggest problem I had with SWTOR was they did a lot of things, but few of them were better than the competition. It's like they didn't know their audience. I think this is why WoW and Rift get a lot of slack... because they do a few things very well and cater specifically to their audience. Bioware didn't know their audience. You could tell they were going for box sales since they were making promises to every person with a computer and 60 bucks. They said the game was for Star Wars fans, Bioware fans, MMORPG gamers, casual players and hardcore players, PvP'ers, end-game raiders and single player gamers... the list just doesn't end. As a gamer, I don't care if I'm not in the target audience for a game. But at least HAVE a target audience so those players who do subscribe can enjoy it for a long time. "Everyone" is not a sustainable audience. It's a box sales grab. Enter a whole new realm of challenge and adventure. |
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1/30/12 10:46:30 AM#111
Originally posted by Shadowlord10 Wow, you're really trying to claim that endless mob-grinding had more variety than raid fights where you have to learn each boss' unique mechanic? You realize that's rather ridiculous, right? (As a complete aside, kudos to the mods for not automatically knee-jerking this thread into the TOR forums. That's always been the worst and most unnecessary type of moderation that happens around here.) |
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1/30/12 10:55:31 AM#112
Originally posted by Axehilt Is endless mob grinding anything less than endless daily grinding, endless token grinding, endless instance grinding.. Its a treadmill either way. As far as unique mechanics? When there really isn't much to lose from failing that mechanic it encourages people to play poorly. That or they grind lower level instances to improve their gear to mask their poor playskill. At least in EQ you learned many of the same mechanics you would use in raiding while you leveled (as in grouping) so you at least had some skill if you managed to make it to a higher level. |
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1/30/12 11:24:58 AM#113
Let's actually have some information before everyone is shouting "the journey is too short". This website boasted a leveling guide that can level a wow char from 1-85 in 4 day played. http://www.zygorguides.com/ 4 days played is roughly 100 hours. If you play 2 hours a day, that is 50 days ... a month and 2/3. Now, this guide assumes you don't read anything, don't level up professions, don't explore, and just follow the MOST efficient path which they worked out. It can easily take 2x as much if you don't play the game instead of rushing it though. In that case, we are talking about 200 hours .. and 3 month time if you average play 2-3 hours a day. 3 months is quite a reasonable time when most single player games last only 1-2 weeks. Plus, this is for a SINGLE character while MOST players have multiple toons. If you factor in the different starting areas, and faction areas, the actual leveling content last way more than 3 months. And also remember most of the leveling content (i.e. quests) are single play-through (for ONE toon) and not repeatable. Thus, this is quite unlike dailies that you need to repeat and repeat. I won't complain about a few month worth of single play through content.
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Tesinato
Apprentice Member
Joined: 7/13/04
A lost gamer looking for the MMO of his dreams. |
1/30/12 12:43:57 PM#114
Originally posted by OberanMiM This is exactly my point. It is all the same grinding at the end of the day, and there is really no difference. At least mob-grinding, and generally exploring the massive worlds we had available gave us something to do. Right now in SWTOR, Ilum is very small, maybe 10-12 types of mobs at most, and half the map is friendly to either side with the mobs. The PVP area is a joke, doesn't work right half the time, and no one is in there the other 1/2. I'd much rather the open-ness and freedom of grind mobs for hours with a group of people, who respect you as a person, then doing raids all day with idiots and assholes. I feel raids are very limited, and you are piegonholed into doing it one way or else, and never felt that restriction with mob grinding. |
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1/30/12 5:56:50 PM#115
I think about it this way, Trion has so far made Rift and that is there first game. Blizzard and Bioware are veterans. Trion is kicking there ass with Customer Service and fast patches and content. Rift has a bunch of post-game content that you can do by yourself. Why does the journey ONLY have to be while your lvling? Trion has done post 50 lvling with Planar Attunement. Solo content like Chronicles and the Epic Questline and the Cult Saga. There is a bunch of stuff to do at 50 that drives the story more for you. Raiding and grinding isnt the only thing. |
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1/30/12 9:05:53 PM#116
Originally posted by OberanMiM Well we're talking about variety here, and you've clearly cited three "endless" activities in modern raiding vs. one in classic mob-grinding. So even at a high level there's more variety. But at a mid level there's also more variety. Certainly the variety to gameplay that I experienced in early mob-grind games was nowhere near what I experienced in modern dungeon/raid gameplay. After all someone already mentioned it in this thread: you have to learn those fights. You didn't have to learn anything when it came to endless mob-grinding because they were basically all the same (at least until CoX, which admittedly was an endless mob-grinder with some variety to it.) |
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1/30/12 9:27:06 PM#117
Originally posted by precious328 This was so well put that I have to quote it. Thank you. http://i.imgur.com/jlNIk.jpg |
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Cuathon
Advanced Member
Joined: 10/24/04
Draw Something is now an MMO. God has forsaken us. |
1/30/12 9:32:45 PM#118
I like to have a whole selection of boys to whip, if you catch my drift. |
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1/30/12 9:57:30 PM#119
Originally posted by Axehilt
You know the irony, I can remember more details about EQ dungeons than i can in any of the instances in the current MMO's. It wasn't just blast your way through the dugeons spells blazing, you had to be careful not to pull strays, watch out for roamers and adds, all while managing your resources such as mana (you could quickly burn down a mob but then you had downtime and couldn't get out of combat to drink a drink and be back to full in 10 seconds). You talk about variety in gameplay, almost every dungeon that has come out lately in current MMO's is a straight path from start to end. No winding coredors that can get you lost, no secrets, no incentive to explore in essence they really arent dungeons they would be more aptly named "Guantlets" (not to be confused with the old school game) where you run from one end to another and hope to survive to the end to get a prize. In the newer MMO's you are just shuttled from one area to another with quests most people don't even look around them they just run towards where there arrow is pointing them. Also whats the point in quests if all you do (or rather what most people do) is just look at the objective without even caring about the lore. No incentive to break the mold just one quest area to another. I dunno i call that less variety in gameplay than I used to get from games like EQ. |
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1/31/12 6:17:58 AM#120
Originally posted by nilden That's why I like how Lotro and FFXI do story. It's an important part of the game but not the major focus. You can literally play those 2 games and never do the story aspects. Now you may gimp yourself in certain ways, items, money, xp etc. but it is possible. I suppose it's possible in SWTOR but you would literally have to choose to not quest from the get go. Interesting. |
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