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Let me start by saying, I am generally not a stupid person. However for some reason, likely desperation for a good MMO, I once again bought into all the hype and preordered Black Desert Online. Started playing and with in a half hour I was lvl 10. You literally stand in one spot and hold down the left mouse button until you ding, instantly heal and continue on or move to the next spawn point and repeat. When will I learn? .... /sigh <bangs head into wall over and over again>
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Edit: Think about it. The last time you had fun in an MMO over a long period of time, was it really the game? Or the people you were interacting with?
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I was certainly "addicted" to MMORPGs for a long time. Averaged probably 4hrs a day between 2007 (lotro release) and 2013, very unhealthy. I certainly ended up playing games way past the point where they were enjoyable because I still hoped to find that feeling of fun I got in the early days.
Eventually, you just got to put your foot down and be disciplined. SW:TOR was the game that broke the camels back for me. I bought into the hype. I pre-ordered. I moved my guild there. 3 weeks after launch, I was capped (only started skipping dialogue around lvl 35 when it became clear the writing wasn't going to get better). 6 weeks after launch we'd cleared all the content. 8 weeks after launch we'd cleared hardmode raids.
Still, I kept playing for a year! I was convinced that the game would somehow get better, that they'd make combat more interesting, the classes more diverse, the worlds more open, the raids harder, reduce the power gaps etc. When the announced the first xpac, it became clear the game was going to remain a pile of turd. They could do story content but weren't capable of anything else.
So, I made myself a promise never to buy an MMO again without more research and unless it met my minimum requirements. So far, no MMO has met my minimum requirements. However, my life in general has been more productive. I'm more social, I'm fitter, I've gotten a couple of promotions at work and when I want to game, there are plenty of single player games to pick up and play for cheap on steam.
I still hope to find my next MMO which is why I'm still here, but I refuse to fall for the same hype train bollocks that got me with swtor.
Same old, same old, all the time, even with new games. These days the games themselves aren't much but I still enjoy MMOs if I have people online I can chat with.
For every minute you are angry , you lose 60 seconds of happiness."-Emerson
i have so far passed on BDO. There are simply more things I dislike about it than there are things I like with no gold / item trading and forced PvP chief among them. Still though, I get hyped about games. I'm a gamer. Specifically, I love adventure games, MMOs, and RPGs. As an older gamer, I have a certain amount of disposable income that I budget for games each month. Sometimes I get turds, and sometimes I find amazing games (like Pillars of Eternity or ARK). It's not really about the money anymore though. It's more about not supporting crap games. Steam is now a SEA of AWFUL 16-bit retro style roguelike indie garbage, while amazingly well done games like the new King's Quest reboot never see the front page. I hope more gamers in general stop buying into the "new hotness hype" sooner rather than later.
I am here to say that this new generation didn't know anything when they got here. They were taught how to interact and survive in this world by their elders. The kids today didn't design smart phones. They were designed by old farts and sold to kids who now can't live without them. So I have a hard time blaming kids. Think of how future generations will think of us and the fkd up world we are leaving them.
Well, I don't have kids, will likely never have them, but if I had, they sure as hell wouldn't have smart phones until they moved out of my house. I grew up with out much for games, I had Nintendo sure but only a few hours a week tops, I learned to go out side and do/build stuff, play sports and catch critters. My kids would do the same. but then again I have no kids so take it with a grain of salt.
Never forget 3 mile Island and never trust a government official or company spokesman.
I loved the new free King's Quest reboot, completed KQ I and KQ II. There is a number of great games that stay hidden because many people never bother to investigate beyond what game press reporters write about.
I have to confess that I never bothered to look into BDO. It was hate at first sight, I guess. I'm automatically repulsed or extremely prejudiced towards Asian fantasy MMORPGs because I don't expect anything from their game concepts that I could ever enjoy. Maybe I was a lot more optimistic about them 10-15 years ago, but that optimism is long completely gone. I used to love one Korean game and still have some fond memories from it, but it wasn't a fantasy MMORPG. It was an MMRTS game, Navyfield.
This year I'll be probably slowly savouring Pillars of Eternity and keeping an eye on a few other games on my Steam wishlist, waiting for -50% or -75% sales. For example, I love Homeworld games for their epic cutscenes and was happy to learn that a new Homeworld game was released a month ago. Something to look forward to in 2016 or 2017.
For multiplayer experience I'll continue waiting for new developments with Revival, CoE and Star Citizen. I don't mind if those games are released only 4-5 years from now. I am not in a hurry to see them. It will be a pity if those projects become completely cancelled, though. I still play a few released MMOs, but I usually do that very casually because more than half of the experience feels like beating a dead dog.
For me the best MMO experience was during the golden age of Neverwinter Nights games. It says a lot about the industry when talented enthusiast persistent world developers and dungeon masters working for free for the love of the game could arrange a lot more fun and immersive gameplay experience than commercial MMO companies.
* more info, screenshots and videos here
Actually you will have to come up with something else to say, not because its 10 years old, but because you really cant have his stuff or anyone's stuff in BDO. Its all player locked untradeable.
"We all do the best we can based on life experience, point of view, and our ability to believe in ourselves." - Naropa "We don't see things as they are, we see them as we are." SR Covey