So I finally started this game....
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We need to find some people who are really interested in old school game design and work on NTG's hosted MUD and get ML people to play there.
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My 46 year old wife and child having friend is addicted to a newish game called Hawkin a mech based game.
I haven't played computer games since C&C Generals - I guess I grew out of them.
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I've actually never played a MUD... I'd be interested in seeing how it works.
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@Dashrender said:
I've actually never played a MUD... I'd be interested in seeing how it works.
They are generally pretty boring when you play alone but if you've got a few score of your friends on it it can be pretty amazing and if you've got a few hundred players and some really keen gods it really gets amazing. It's a steep learning curve as they are pure text but it allows for some awesome role playing that other platforms really cannot do.
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@JaredBusch said:
The problem with all the MMORPG games on the market today is that they dropped the second M. They are no longer multiplayer games. They are a bunch of single players running around in the same world.
That's one of the reasons that I dropped ESO. However, for many games in endgame content, it's nearly exclusively multiplayer. The leveling process may or may not be, depending on the game.
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@alexntg said:
@JaredBusch said:
The problem with all the MMORPG games on the market today is that they dropped the second M. They are no longer multiplayer games. They are a bunch of single players running around in the same world.
That's one of the reasons that I dropped ESO. However, for many games in endgame content, it's nearly exclusively multiplayer. The leveling process may or may not be, depending on the game.
Correct, that the endgame is multiplayer, but the entire game should be.
This is one of the things I liked about the original design of EverQuest 2. Like other games it is changed horribly from what it was. There was solo content and you could level yourself, just slowly. But most content was designed around a group. Additionally the entire crafting system was designed for a solo player, but still required interaction with others (or creation of a lot of alts).
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@Reid-Cooper said:
@IRJ said:
called WOW.
Believe it or not, I have never played it before this week. I have alot to learn quickly.
Something tells me that your weekend is going to be quickly consumed.
Nah, I only spent about 2 hours playing this weekend. I had a bunch of stuff to do around the house and a sick pregnant gf
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@JaredBusch said:
@alexntg said:
@JaredBusch said:
The problem with all the MMORPG games on the market today is that they dropped the second M. They are no longer multiplayer games. They are a bunch of single players running around in the same world.
That's one of the reasons that I dropped ESO. However, for many games in endgame content, it's nearly exclusively multiplayer. The leveling process may or may not be, depending on the game.
Correct, that the endgame is multiplayer, but the entire game should be.
This is one of the things I liked about the original design of EverQuest 2. Like other games it is changed horribly from what it was. There was solo content and you could level yourself, just slowly. But most content was designed around a group. Additionally the entire crafting system was designed for a solo player, but still required interaction with others (or creation of a lot of alts).
You might like that aspect of FFXIV, then. throughout the game, there's plenty of places where you need to interact with others. In the crafting system, everyone crafts items other crafters need.
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@alexntg said:
@JaredBusch said:
@alexntg said:
@JaredBusch said:
The problem with all the MMORPG games on the market today is that they dropped the second M. They are no longer multiplayer games. They are a bunch of single players running around in the same world.
That's one of the reasons that I dropped ESO. However, for many games in endgame content, it's nearly exclusively multiplayer. The leveling process may or may not be, depending on the game.
Correct, that the endgame is multiplayer, but the entire game should be.
This is one of the things I liked about the original design of EverQuest 2. Like other games it is changed horribly from what it was. There was solo content and you could level yourself, just slowly. But most content was designed around a group. Additionally the entire crafting system was designed for a solo player, but still required interaction with others (or creation of a lot of alts).
You might like that aspect of FFXIV, then. throughout the game, there's plenty of places where you need to interact with others. In the crafting system, everyone crafts items other crafters need.
That could be fun. Makes time commitments bigger, though.
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@scottalanmiller said:
@alexntg said:
@JaredBusch said:
@alexntg said:
@JaredBusch said:
The problem with all the MMORPG games on the market today is that they dropped the second M. They are no longer multiplayer games. They are a bunch of single players running around in the same world.
That's one of the reasons that I dropped ESO. However, for many games in endgame content, it's nearly exclusively multiplayer. The leveling process may or may not be, depending on the game.
Correct, that the endgame is multiplayer, but the entire game should be.
This is one of the things I liked about the original design of EverQuest 2. Like other games it is changed horribly from what it was. There was solo content and you could level yourself, just slowly. But most content was designed around a group. Additionally the entire crafting system was designed for a solo player, but still required interaction with others (or creation of a lot of alts).
You might like that aspect of FFXIV, then. throughout the game, there's plenty of places where you need to interact with others. In the crafting system, everyone crafts items other crafters need.
That could be fun. Makes time commitments bigger, though.
Not at all. There isn't the addiction factor there. You can put it down whenever.
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@alexntg said:
You might like that aspect of FFXIV, then. throughout the game, there's plenty of places where you need to interact with others. In the crafting system, everyone crafts items other crafters need.
That is exactly how EQ2 was at launch. It was a really good system IMO. Then again I had 3 max level crafters in my two years playing and only one max level adventure class.