Week In Review: Let’s Talk Disappointment Edition


I received an interesting email the other day from a reader, or at least I think he was a reader. This email was by a guy who presumably plays Mortal Online. I won’t post the email here, but he essentially tears into me for having a constantly negative bias against the game by posting pieces like Star Vault’s financial documents that show the game is not making a profit (one of the examples he actually used). You can see how I misinterpreted such a statement from this:

With our current cost structure, the Board expects that an additional approximately 1000 players to achieve break-even, a goal that we hope to achieve during the second quarter of 2011.

My apologies for having a far worse grasp of the English language than I originally anticipated, because for the love of me I can’t see where the mistake is. Anyway, the guy followed up with the usual hate mail I get with this comment: “If Star Vault wanted your opinion, they’d ask for it.” Naturally the implication is that I should stop writing about the company until they hire me as the new PR guy when Black Opal goes the way of his predecessor. I write MMO Fallout indeed for both players and companies alike, although I’ve never done much explanation for the latter. My work for companies is to provide stories, experiences that can be understood and integrated into the company’s own plan. I don’t teach what feature would go best with your open world sandbox game, but rather ideas like how to respond to false positives, or why developers should focus on retention rate over just funding with initial sales. I always try to stray as far as possible from becoming that guy that always criticizes but never has any ideas of his own.

1. Jake Song Says ArchAge Will Surpass Aion

I think it’s time to break out the old NCsoft chart, and not because I spent a lot of time making it and want to milk this cow dry:

Jake Song is the designer of ArcheAge, the upcoming MMO based on the CryEngine. You may also know him from his work at NCsoft with Lineage, a company that he is now targeting in interviews. Jake Song is making the claim that ArcheAge, when it enters formal operation expected sometime in 2012, will surpass Aion (NCsoft’s best card in the game). The question is, can he? The answer? Probably not.

This isn’t a question of Jake Song’s talent, the guy is partially responsible for NCsoft’s most popular franchise combined. There is, however, precedent in the field of gaming where an industry veteran forms his own studio to release a game in competition with his old company, and is thoroughly tarred and feathered when the game launches to poor reception. Don’t believe me? Ask Richard Garriot.

2. The Other Journalists Finally Got Wind of the Turbine MMO.

Many months ago, I posted about the upcoming Turbine console MMO thanks to a tip I received pointing me to the games section of the Twisted Pixel website, posting about a console game being made for Turbine. Since then, the announcement has been removed but the lights have finally turned on last month for a few other websites.

There is still very little known about this MMO, and by very little I mean practically nothing.

3. Stephen Calender Bears His Soul

NetDevil is dead, and its death was not a peaceful one. In his blog, Stephen Calender (ex-NetDevil staffer) talks about the acquisition of Lego Universe by Lego Team, about the poor relationship between NetDevil and their parent company Gazillion, and the poor relationship between Gazillion and Lego. He also takes a small jab at the media (myself included) for taking Gazillion’s PR speak and turning a bad situation into something good.

How likely would you be to purchase or continue funding a subscription when you find out production of new features and content has been reduced? Whether or not you can trust people’s online comments, I saw message boards with statements just like that.

Stephen also talks about interviewers:

I spent two years of my life working on it, at least do me the courtesy of watching some YouTube videos of the game. It makes you wonder if they just are not gamers, or if there is so much deceit and deception anymore that people stop trusting resumes.

Read the whole article, it goes in depth about getting hired in the games industry.

4. APB: Reloaded Hates Your 32-Bit Operating System

An important factor to remember with APB: Reloaded is that, at its heart, it is a re-release of All Points Bulletin, the game that loved memory and loved 64-bit operating systems. Although GamersFirst has been doing some extensive work in rewriting the game to work decently on 32-bit operating systems, you still won’t have the same success as 64-bit. This is mostly because 32-bit operating systems (without some coding) can only map 2 gigabytes of ram.

So if you have a 32-bit operating system and want to play APB: Reloaded, consider downloading the game before you sink a hundred bucks into your G1 account only to find out the game doesn’t run well on your system.

5. Alganon: Free For All PvP Weekend

Alganon’s free for all PvP weekends are rather inventive. Given the game is already free to play, Quest Online managed to pull that even further by introducing these FFA-PvP weekends, allowing players to experience the siege system with no cost for buildings and without the offline study requirements to use the contraptions. In addition, battle durability (pvp armor) tribute costs are removed for the weekend.

If you haven’t tried Alganon or left, the community has become bigger. Not huge, but bigger.

One thought on “Week In Review: Let’s Talk Disappointment Edition”

Comments are closed.