first off id like to say i am an mmo veteran, i have played mmorpgs since Everquest and have actively been playing an mmorpg in some form or another. that being said, i have been trying to get back into the games i have so deeply loved and have been addicted to for years. nothing is working, im bored, i feel like i wont ever have that spark i once had, grinding lvls, running dungeons in hopes of that one piece of gear ive been needed to drop. guilds and friends. idk what to do. my main mmorpgs recently have been FFXIV and WoW. those have the combat systems i like. the guild systems i like, the pve content i like. i need something new yet there is nothing that comes close to those games in my opinion other than Pantheon: Rise of the Fallen...and who knows when that will be out... has anyone else been in this same mmorpg rut?
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I think for me it wasn't the game that kept me coming back, it was the community.
And there is no fixing that....too many hollows permeate the MMORPG community these days.
The only two MMOs I play now are GW2 and ESO. GW2 because of the open world events, ESO for the story. I used to be able to find all that and more in one MMO. Maybe someday someone will get a clue.
After that year was over, I came back and never stuck with any mmp for more than a few months at a time. So here I am sitting waiting for that next magical moment in an MMO that might not ever come. Hopefully it will, but I'm not holding my breath.
-Unconstitutional laws aren't laws.-
Graphically we're at a peak but the constant pandering to casuals and soloers has changed the MMO landscape so much you may as well be playing single player games. I keep trying new MMO's hoping to find something worthy of being classed as an MMO but it's mostly the same old BS with each new release.
I still play now and then, mainly older MMO's like P99 EQ or a bit of EVE. I'm hoping that either Pantheon or Camelot Unchained will deliver something close to the old days of EQ and DAoC but I'm not holding my breath.
-Unconstitutional laws aren't laws.-
"True friends stab you in the front." | Oscar Wilde
"I need to finish" - Christian Wolff: The Accountant
Just trying to live long enough to play a new, released MMORPG, playing New Worlds atm
Fools find no pleasure in understanding but delight in airing their own opinions. Pvbs 18:2, NIV
Don't just play games, inhabit virtual worlds™
"This is the most intelligent, well qualified and articulate response to a post I have ever seen on these forums. It's a shame most people here won't have the attention span to read past the second line." - Anon
Now I think I'm done with MMOs. I come here because of Ship of Heroes, my last MMO hope and I'm waiting for Wildstar to get the axe. I think I've moved on and got tired of paying hundreds of dollars for a temporary game when I could have just as much/more fun with a $30 game I get at a Steam Sale. I'm at the point where I'm re-examining my life and it seems MMOs may no longer be part of it.
I think many of us have been there, i myself literally didn't play anything for a minimum of a year, (it was probably more like 2 to 3 years? more even?) and at the time had no plan to return, i was done.
It wasn't an all out i hate all games or anything it was more i took some other interests, gaming didn't fit and i didn't make it fit, i was bored of it, so did other chit.
When i got into it again, (i think i got a new rig is what sparked things up again) yikes i was playing everything i had missed for those years, and was having an amazing fun time again, but bouncing around too much, has it's own set of draw backs.
Lately I'm cruising ESO, excited for Morrowind, i play most nights, and if i don't for a night or two i enjoy it that much more the next night i do get on. Can't make it all you do.
-Unconstitutional laws aren't laws.-
Don't worry though, some day you'll have your ultra-realistic VR fantasy simulator where you can finally exist as the person you wish you were.
Not as hardcore as before but more casual, I rotate between games depend on what mood I am.
When I get my Star Wars urge I play TOR, when I get my Star Trek urge I play STO, when I want to just play a classic themepark I play ESO, and when I want to grind craft and explore I play BDO and when I just want to play PVP in a MMO I fire up GW2.
So I don't really stick with just one MMO.
When all games are equally average, it makes sense to average your playing time among them equally.
"True friends stab you in the front." | Oscar Wilde
"I need to finish" - Christian Wolff: The Accountant
Just trying to live long enough to play a new, released MMORPG, playing New Worlds atm
Fools find no pleasure in understanding but delight in airing their own opinions. Pvbs 18:2, NIV
Don't just play games, inhabit virtual worlds™
"This is the most intelligent, well qualified and articulate response to a post I have ever seen on these forums. It's a shame most people here won't have the attention span to read past the second line." - Anon
Jan - Apr: No mmo's. That is not set in stone. If my younger daughter wants me to play Lotro or Wizard 101 with her, I do. Currently playing the Wizard 101. This is also when I play all the SP games I picked up during the year.
May - August: FFXIV
Sept - Dec: WoW
I have given up on anything new with mmo's. I very much doubt anything will come out that captures those old feelings. It was never really about the games, but about the communities in those games of old. The communities in games aren't the same any more as they once were. Different generation of gamers now and what's important to them is not the same as what used to be important.
I'm not an IT Specialist, Game Developer, or Clairvoyant in real life, but like others on here, I play one on the internet.
This comparison will likely not quite hit the mark for most, but I'm going to try and explain it anyway.
When I was fairly young, music was something that I was aggressively interested in. I used to love it and I used to feel like it was one of the most important things in my life. I allowed it to wash over me and let it take over my mood and my perspective if even for a short amount of time.
That is not to say that I don't love it today. But I will say that, once I began to practice various instruments and get heavily involved in the world of music, it began to lose its mystique. I started viewing music in a more analytical way. I had a million questions. Why does this make a person feel this way? Why does that make a person feel that way? Over time I feel like I lost something. I had lost my virginity in a way. I had lost my innocence towards music.
I feel like a very similar thing happened to me with MMORPGs. My lack of knowledge about the inner working and details of an MMORPG actually allowed me to more easily enjoy them. Once I got extremely accustomed to them and began to understand their... patterns, they started to feel stale and regular. Analyzing them became natural and there was no longer a feeling of mystique.
Recapturing this feeling, for me at least, seems very unlikely. Not impossible, but very difficult. I will say that I personally am trying to let go of over-analyzing music and just let it wash over me. I think that for the most part it has worked. With games, for whatever reason, its been a lot more difficult. There is something about games that makes it far more difficult for me to let them just "wash over me."
I am just playing without worrying about what I want or expect just playing. Ky is right too if you want community try the 1.65 rules of Dark Age of Camelot server. Community is wonderful there.