TERA Weekend Event Postponed


“The sneak peek event planned for this weekend unfortunately has had to be cancelled. As we currently cannot foresee when we will be able to guarantee a smooth running of the event, there is no new date as of yet. We’re working closely with the TERA developers at Bluehole to fix the remaining issues.

The cancellation was not due to load problems caused by the large number of potential players. Player numbers would have given us a look into possible issues within the scope of a stress test. Due to unforeseen reasons, problems arose already during the entry into the game world.

As soon as we have new information regarding a rescheduled event planning and once all technical issues have been resolved we will inform you on our website, in the forum and via the usual social media channels.

We apologize for the cancellation of the event and assure you that we are doing our utmost to provide all players access to TERA as soon as possible. We thank all TERA fans for their patience and understanding and hope to have positive news for you very soon.

From the TERA Europe Facebook page.

Into the MMO Fallout Archives #1


While doing some spring cleaning, I couldn’t help but notice the massive amount of drafts that have accumulated over the past two and a half years. Over one hundred and fifty to be exact. Articles that, for some reason or another, never made it to release. So I started reading through these, and thought I’d give some commentary on why they never hit the table.

  • No, MMOSITE, The Subscription Model Is Not Dying (2010)

Over in the east, releasing a subscription based MMO is about as useful as slathering yourself in the Colonel’s secret herbs and spices, and throwing yourself into a pool of dead, vegan piranha.

As a writer, one of the first lessons you learn is never write while angry. Given the timing, I would say this is just around the day my college stopped deferring my loan and the bill came in the mail. The point of the article was supposed to be that the subscription model is not dying (hence the title), but flat out turned into an attack on MMOSite.com.

  • Arrevan Speaks Out Against Griefer Guilds (2010)

So, as I said, I love PvP’ers of all sorts, because when it comes to almost impossible to find nooks and crannies, they are the best players to find them. If there is a game mechanic to be found, this is the group that will find it, and use it to Helm’s Deep and back before it is changed. They remind me of the kids who, when they figure out that the television has different language settings, they change every television in the house so that the weatherman’s voice is dubbed over in German, subtitled in Portuguese, but the menu language settings have been set to Polish and only he knows the correct combination of buttons to press to set everything back to normal. If you hadn’t figured out, the kid with the television remote was me, and I sat through the entire two year ban on using the remote…and the family television, as a result.

This one was supposed to be about an MMO Arrevan and a comment made by an administrator that they would not tolerate guilds that form just for the sake of griefing new players, but somehow it turned into a profession of love for player killers.

  • It Smells Like Troll In Here (2010)

MMO trolls are enlightening people. Before I started MMO Fallout and truly began interacting with various groups, I had no idea that Bill Roper was part of a crime syndicate funded through lifetime subscriptions. I was also unaware that Sony had purchased Vanguard with the sole purpose of releasing the game in a poor state just so it couldn’t compete with Everquest II. Oh and Derek Smart eats babies…true story.

Again, never write while angry. A fair number of my disposed drafts are furiously punched out rants about how much time some people have to sit on the computer and endlessly trash a game that they don’t even play. Since 2010, I’ve found more productive ways to channel my anger, Team Fortress 2.

  • Participating in Betas Makes Me Feel Guilty (2010)

When a beta lasts months at a time, long enough to take one or two characters to end-game, I can’t help but feel guilty that I’ve essentially played the game for free. In a way, it’s like getting a full sample pizza for free, wolfing that down, and then by the time the actual paid pizza comes to fruition and is ready for sale, I’m too full for another slice. I can always wait for the fervor around the pizza to subside and take advantage when the price comes down, but for now I’ve had my fill.

Now this I still feel guilty about. Believe it or not, but the MMO Fallout name has net me into a number of betas, and even a few alphas I can never legally speak of. I wrote this after about the second week of playing the [redacted] alpha, when I came to the realization that while this was probably one of the best MMOs I had played at the time, by the time the game launched I would likely have exhausted the content.

  • Why MMOs Can Never Be Immersive (2011)

Imagine this, gentlemen: You’re walking through the streets, and at the corner you come across a beautiful woman, clad in nothing but a frilly bra and underwear. As she looks at you seductively, using the hottest /dance emote available, she says “4g 4 l4p d4nc3.” All of a sudden, you notice something about her is wrong. The chin, the hairy arms, the Adam’s Apple. IT’S A MAN, BABY!

That isn’t the real title of the article, somehow I never wrote one in. I’ve written a few articles over the years on my lack of faith that an MMO will ever truly immerse me, and my number one piece of evidence has generally been the community. I love the community, I wouldn’t be writing MMO Fallout if I didn’t, but I have to admit Amnesia: The Dark Descent would not have made me afraid to leave my bathroom door cracked open at night if there was a chat window, a quest hub, and some guy bunny hopping around screaming about much sex he has.

So I don’t expect immersion in my MMOs, and frankly I enjoy them more without that complaint holding me back. I would say that the only time an MMO has made me care about the characters is RuneScape, but I don’t count the quest series in my MMO evaluation because they are a single player story.

 

The archives will probably be a weekly editorial for Sundays, so I look forward to diving deeper into my draft folder and finding all of the thoughts that sounded great at the time but never made it past the cutting board.

PSN Becomes SEN On Feb. 8th


The Playstation Network has been a brand name for Sony’s online service since 2006 and has been the subject of controversy, license agreement changes, and free online gaming. Starting February 8th, Sony will be dropping the PSN title and adopting a new name: Sony Entertainment Network. The new name essentially is to allow Sony to consolidate all of their services on one account.

(Source: Email sent out to PSN users)

Dear (username),

On February 8, 2012, your “PlayStation®Network account” will be renamed a “Sony Entertainment Network account” or a “SEN account” in conjunction with Sony Computer Entertainment’s PlayStation®3 system software and PlayStation®Vita system software updates. (Note, this change will not be applied to the PSP® (PlayStation®Portable) system at this time.)

For general purposes, this account change is a change in name only. Your username or password will not change, nor are we asking you to change them. In accordance with this transition, some necessary naming changes will be made to the TOS and Privacy Policy.

This transition is based on Sony’s goal to enhance its unique digital entertainment offering. As a series of these activities Sony started last September, PlayStation®Network will be aligned with “Sony Entertainment Network.” This helps us get closer to our goal of establishing a global comprehensive network platform of services across games, movies, music and more, all accessible from one convenient account.

Thank you for your continued loyalty and support during this transition.

Sincerely,
The Sony Entertainment Network Team

RuneScape: Members Trial Much More Likely


If you had asked me one year ago if RuneScape should have a members trial, I might have said no. Not that such a program wouldn’t be beneficial, but that the rampant amount of cheaters that plagued the game at the time would use the opportunity for free membership, no matter how short, to bot more valuable members items and upend the economy even more. Now that the bots are no longer an issue, there isn’t much of a reason not to allow free players to experience membership.

Not to say that RuneScape’s free version is low quality, but the skills accessible to free players are (for the most part) a far cry from the variety offered in membership. Of the twenty five skills, free players can access sixteen. Seven of those skills are combat related (Attack, strength, defense, constitution, magic, ranged, and prayer). Of the remaining nine, three (woodcutting, fishing, mining) are basic harvesting skills, five (runecrafting, crafting, firemaking, smithing, cooking) are processing skills that revolve around taking raw materials to a place and using them on a thing to create finished stuff, with Dungeoneering bringing up the rear as a combination of all of the above in a secluded area.

Members, on the other hand, is quite a different game to its free to play brother. Weapons and equipment sets with special effects add a whole new level of strategy to combat, as do potions, poisons, curses, new magic books. Skills like summoning can dramatically alter a person’s experience from combat to simple resource gathering. Farming requires time management and mobility while slayer introduces the player to combat that requires more strategy than fight, fight, eat food, kill.

In 2010, Jagex did attempt a membership trial for a week in July, but the program was bogged down by a few unfriendly details. Players were required to submit credit card details, which was charged for $5.95 and set the player up with an automatically recurring subscription. Only if the player unsubscribed during those seven days would the deposit be refunded.

To Jagex’s defense, and as I’ve already said, an unrestricted membership trial at the time would have upended the RuneScape economy table, riddling the members worlds with even more bots than were already present. With the bots absent, there isn’t much reason for Jagex to not offer a taste of membership to free players.

Other than that I have no opinion.

Who Should Publish Dark Millennium Online?


Although Dark Millennium Online was not cancelled, as per the false report circulated late last year, at the time we were given some rather uncertain news that the game was on uneven ground and that there was nothing set in stone. When THQ published its earnings report for the third quarter of 2011, they mentioned that Dark Millennium Online would be taking a more cautious approach.

Gamasutra reports that in an investor conference call, Brian Farrell (CEO) has revealed that THQ is seeking a partner for distribution, and that THQ cannot afford to publish the game by itself.  Of course, a developer hiring a third party publish an MMO is hardly surprising, even more so for a company like THQ that has seen better financial times.

(Source: Gamasutra)

TERA Previews Coming Soon


Moving with MMO Fallout’s commitment for expanding our medium, I’ve committed to producing more video features. While I will not have access to the TERA sneak peek this weekend, reportedly neither the sneak peek or beta tests will be covered by a non disclosure agreement, meaning MMO Fallout will be publishing several TERA previews, both in video and text over the course of the closed beta period.

Stay tuned for more information.

MMO FALLOUT Has A New Home!


Dearest MMO Fallout fans,

It is with great pleasure that I bring you the last post that will ever appear on mmofallout.wordpress.com. As of today, MMO Fallout has moved to the exact same address. Yes, all you have to do is continue heading to mmofallout.com to get your daily fix. The difference? We are no longer hosted on wordpress.com, and have a far more open future than we had before. This news post is primarily for our email subscribers, you will have to desubscribe from mmofallout.wordpress.com and resubscribe on the new website. Sorry!

I’m looking forward to a great year on the new host, and hopefully you will all come along with me.

Falling Out #11: Global Servers


This happens at least once on every global game I play, at least one person demanding that everyone speak English.

Hellgate Global: Status Update and Ticket Prices


Back in July, I talked about how players can get access to Hellgate Global’s Act 3 ticket and Tokyo expansion without paying a dime by paying for the tickets on the in-game auction house. At the time, the tickets only cost a few hundred thousand palladium. In September, I updated the post with another update: The prices for act 3 tickets amounted to around 450,000 palladium, with the Tokyo ticket around half of that.

I checked in on the ticket prices, and not only have prices skyrocketed, the amount of available tickets has gone down to just a few choices. I checked the auction house at 7:30pm on February 1st and found only one Act 3 ticket on sale and a handful of Tokyo expansion tickets on sale. At these prices, it might be easier to just throw down the seven dollars in real cash to buy the tickets from the cash shop.

The Old Republic: 1.7 Million Subscribers


Many years ago, I could provide you with hard subscriber facts because companies were actually able to reveal them. Today, thanks to investors and “trade secrets,” we generally have to settle for vague statements of growth, decline, or breaking even. Actually, these days World of Warcraft is one of the few developers left that come straight out and give base number of subscribers, while NCSoft goes into a detailed breakdown on sales figures per title rather than subscriber numbers.

Since plenty of people have called for the imminent death of The Old Republic, Electronic Arts has eased our pain and suffering of needing to know everything by revealing that The Old Republic has sold over two million copies with 1.7 million subscribers (1 million concurrent), or a retention rate of between 80 and 85 percent. Despite the level of vitriol on certain websites, Origin accounted for 40% of those sales.

You can find an interview below at Darth Hater.

(Via: Darth Hater)