It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
If you're here reading MMORPG.com, chances are you're a fan of the genre. What about MMOs, and what about your first MMO experience get you hooked on the long-standing genre?
Comments
I'm essentially a single-player type of person, but even as a loner, I like the occasional social interaction, and also love showing off my character and what my character has achieved to other people.
I also like how MMOs gave me a place to keep going back to. All of the same stuff, and also continuing to evolve in new ways. They are like a home in a way that single player games can never be.
Godfred's Tomb Trailer: https://youtu.be/-nsXGddj_4w
Original Skyrim: https://www.nexusmods.com/skyrim/mods/109547
Serph toze kindly has started a walk-through. https://youtu.be/UIelCK-lldo
So I loaded up the next, Lineage 1, the Blood pledge, Western edition which ran well.
In six months I experienced a number of wonders, made several friends in game that I still keep in touch with online over 22 years later.
I also learned a valuable lesson to never share personal details about real life when a disgruntled guild member of the clan I was running threatened to come to my town and harm my teenage daughter.
I also experience my first major character/class nerf, a gameplay change that totally invalidated 6 months of hard effort to create my build, wiped away in a single patch.
Was my first perma banning, I was disgruntled about the nerf, decided to go try another new MMO I had heard about, so dropped about 10 in game scrolls in local towns on all 3 of my accounts, inviting people to come join me on DAOC.
Even though a NCsoft moderator was a member of my guild, (or maybe because he was) couldn't prevent my 3 accounts being banned forever.
I had a much better time playing DAOC and Shadowbane in the years that followed,even mellowed my enough to try Lineage 2 in early 2004, well, at least until WOW launched in Nov 2004.
"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
This isn't a signature, you just think it is.
In 1999 I was at home a housewife after years of working 9-10 hours a day and through the weekends because in Malaysia the private offices close on Sunday but the courts are open because it's a Muslim country and they follow Friday as the day the government offices close.
I was really slowly going nuts looking after my son and my husband suggested we go buy another video game. I had been playing on the Playstation only at this point and Fallout. So we went and in this huge computer shop I mean it was massive in Singapore. This women on the cover of a box caught my attention.
I looked inside and was completely hooked by the images
If you look carefully all the races are represented in that artwork.
I have always loved fantasy books since my mother got me interested in Tolkien when I was young. She herself is a huge fantasy genre fan. I took it home and mind you I have never played online. I log in and I am in this world, I had picked a human ranger and started in Surefall Glade and as you know humans are blind in the dark. I had a torch and didn't know how to use it and I had not even opened the inventory. Didn't know how to chat either.
I walk into the tunnel and I'm stuck there for close to an hour until someone comes up to me and talks to me and explains everything from equipping the torch and chatting. I was so grateful and I just could not believe how much it felt like I was actually in that tunnel groping around in the dark or when I walked around and looked at the buildings and opened doors and went inside to find it inhabited. It was completely mind blowing to me how much I felt like I was actually in that tunnel, it was surreal and exciting. I was panicking and my hands in real life was so sweaty because I didn't know how to get out, my heart was thumping. I kept getting turned around and coming back to the glade. After that kind soul helped me get out I come out to Qeynos Hills. To verdant rolling hills as far as I could see.
I think I had the over the shoulder camera and I just stared at the snakes, rats and beetles and the occasional grey wolf. It was so beautiful. Everything about the game was completely breathtaking and I never looked back. That was it I was in love.
I died a lot I mean like really a lot. I ran out of food and drink and was unable to buy anything as the lodge only had iron rations. Every egg in my inventory was quickly consumed and I finally found the forage skill. If I was any other class I would have been still looking at 'you are hungry and thirsty' messages.
Everquest was so well made. It was truly a world that you could be in. It felt like that. It was remarkable and totally addictive.
You're in our world now.
I was completely blown away by the fact that all those people in the hub were real people.
Some guy named Wilson started a chat with me, explained a lot of the game and gave me some nice equipment and money. I just couldn't believe it. Some great memories.
This was it, the moment I got hoocked on MMORPGs and it followed directly with Ragnarök Online, Star Wars Galaxies, EverQuest 2 and World of Warcraft in that particular order.
After that I tried almost every MMORPG ever made but those first 5 will always be special to me
First to hook me: Istaria. This is where I discovered mmo. Good community, player-ran economy...even grind was not that tedious. No advancements purchasable from cash shop (but they, you can have T-shirt!). Dragons and their hoard-ful lairs. Helping other players and being helped by them. All this was really, really nice.
Then it was Lotro, my second big step and last one.
http://www.mmoblogg.wordpress.com
- Earl Nightingale
If you are holding out for the perfect game, the only game you play will be the waiting one.