MMOrning Shots: Farming Labor


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Today’s MMOrning Shot comes to us from ArcheAge, where as you can see mushrooms are the hottest crop on the market. ArcheAge’s open beta runs from September 4th through 8th, with head start beginning on the 12th for early founders pack buyers.

Check out MMOrning Shots every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

MMOrning Shots: Paxsets


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Today’s MMOrning Shot comes to us from Trove, from assets Trion Worlds released for this year’s Penny Arcade Expo. Trove is set to go into closed beta on September 25th, after which early supporter packs will be going away.

Delve deep into MMOrning Shots every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

Alpha Matter: Project Gorgon


 

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“In this particular dungeon, there is a boss that can turn you into a cow.” All I need to hear, game of the year every year! My first moment of experience with booting up the Project Gorgon early alpha was reading a note warning me that bosses in the game can inflict curses upon death, curses which are incredibly difficult to remove especially for new players. The boss in the tutorial dungeon has the ability to turn players into cows, and not in the sense of casting a spell that temporarily disables your attacks and serves as a boss mechanic. Judging by the comment that, as a cow, you will have your own cow adventures with cow abilities and find cow equipment, you’re going to be in this for a long haul. Tough break, right?

The warning screen for your intuition is hilarious, by the way, and made me chuckle like an idiot in my computer seat. In my romp through the relatively safe tutorial cave, I couldn’t help but notice quite a few features that you just don’t see anymore in MMOs. As I fought off skeletons and collected random mushrooms and items off of the ground, my character would add to his list of skills, and there seems to be skills for everything. Not only does everything from picking mushrooms and eating food to even dying add experience to its appropriate skill, each skill has a tangible effect on your character. The “death” skill, as it is called, raises your maximum health every ten levels, while gourmand (an appreciation of food) increases the benefits of eating further food. Not only is there an expansive list of skills to acquire, you have to actually acquire them before they show up on your skills tab. Exploration, how quaint.

Upon entering the first town I saw outside of the tutorial dungeon, I traveled around talking to merchants to sell the trash I’d found and buy some new equipment. I couldn’t afford anything. Then I came across the tavern and found that there is a place where players can dump their armor and weapons for others to buy for a small chunk of change and use. You know, I’m starting to feel at home in this old-school world. My newly revived adventurer gets into town dirt poor and inexperienced, and now I’m getting my clothing at Ye Olde Goodewill.

Every NPC has a favor level toward the player, raised by performing quests and giving gifts. You have to give items that the person likes, which you can figure out with a little small talk. Oh they’ll still accept an item that they don’t particularly like, as I found out the hard way, you just won’t gain any favor with them. You can also really piss off NPCs by killing their livestock, which may make buying seeds from Farmer John a little tougher when he wants to murder you for killing his chickens.

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Oh, and I have lice, I probably should have sanitized the hat I donated. In fact, I probably got the lice from the helmet I bought second hand. According to the game, this disease is permanent until I get it fixed, and in my years of Dungeons & Dragons I have yet to come across anyone selling that special shampoo and comb. Not as bad as being turned into a cow or spider, I suppose, but now I can’t get the guards to take selfies.

My favorite part of Project Gorgon so far is the fact that the game continues to surprise me, constantly. At first I thought all there was to combat was killing and looting creatures, but finding a skinning knife introduced me to the art of gutting corpses for meat. And that’s not all, later on I found an NPC who sold shovels which I could use to bury the corpses of the dead, not only ensuring that they would spawn faster but also granting compassion experience which raises my other stats. Just looking at the stat requirements for items I’ve come across shows a whole world of features I’ve yet to discover: Animal handling, necromancy, psychology, notoriety, cow, spider, dye making, battle alchemy, and even more that I haven’t come across.

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What I’m trying to say is that I am enjoying Project Gorgon immensely, and you should too. Head on over to the Project Gorgon page and download the very early access client, and maybe donate to the game’s Kickstarter once you’re done being blown away. Seriously, this game needs all of the publicity it can get.

Funcom Revenues Drop In 2nd Quarter


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Funcom has released their second quarter finances and the results are disappointing to say the least. Revenue dropped to $3.19 million USD from $3.83 million last quarter while operating costs rose to $3.67 million in the same quarter. During the second quarter, Funcom initiated several marketing campaigns to increase traffic activity in their games. Traffic for Age of Conan and Anarchy Online were relatively stable, while The Secret World saw increased activity over the summer with the launch of the latest content update.

Lego Minifigures is still on track for release in October this year, with open beta ongoing and reportedly receiving a positive response from testers. In the third quarter, Funcom expects operating costs to remain consistent with revenues continuing their downward trend.

(Source: Funcom)

Necessary Security Features


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Security is a constant back and forth on the internet, a never ending battle between business, thieves, and customers, and while customers have an obligation to do more to secure their accounts, the onus also falls on businesses to keep their back end safe. Securing accounts has become more and more of a legal issue in this day and age, with businesses facing heavy ramifications in the form of civil lawsuits and criminal penalties for not keeping their customer’s data safe. With that in mind, we’ve compiled a list of security features that should be utilized by all services, but for some reason may not be.

  1. Lockout timers: Brute force attacks should be the easiest method of account theft to deter, but for some reason is still an issue. Many games that carry lockout timers on their website do not offer the same protection inside the game client, and if you can figure out someone’s password by brute forcing a client then the entire feature is pointless.
  2. Notification: This goes hand in hand with the lockout timer. If someone tries to get into my account and fails, I want to know. If someone logs in with the correct password but can’t get past the two factor authentication, I want to know because it means someone has my password and there might be a virus on my computer. Businesses have the ability to detect suspicious activity, and they have an obligation to inform the user if something strange is going on.
  3. Case sensitive passwords: I shouldn’t even have to add this to the list, but here it is. In 2014, RuneScape still does not use case-sensitive passwords. Blizzard apparently does not use case-sensitive passwords on their website. Couple this with #1 and you make brute forcing an account a very time-consuming endeavor.
  4. Two-factor authentication: There are so many ways that two-factor authentication can be utilized that it isn’t funny. By text, by phone call, smartphone apps, tablet apps, point-and-click PIN tools, physical dongles, desktop-based authenticators like Google Auth, and more. There are no more excuses as to why developers would not have some form of two-factor authentication.
  5. One-click purchases: RuneScape will not allow me to buy/sell anything in-game if I don’t enter my pin first, nor will they allow me to use the Grand Exchange on the companion app if I don’t have two-factor authentication enabled on my account. I won’t deny businesses the power of impulse-buying that one-click purchases allows for, but you should not afford your customers this pleasure unless they have two-factor authentication enabled. Cleaning out an account is one thing, those items can be restored by customer support, but allowing someone to go hog-wild and start racking up credit card charges? You’re asking for a lawsuit, and you deserve one.

And of course, our list for consumers:

  1. Passwords: Never use the same password twice, and especially don’t use passwords on fan sites that could be compromised and not even know it. Avoid passwords.
  2. Make it up: One way people can get into your accounts is by figuring out your personal details and simply getting it through customer support. Use fake birth dates, addresses, and the like and keep them written down so you don’t forget. Remember back in the day when you’d use a fake birth date to get into websites? Same concept, different reason.
  3. Updates: Keep your computer up to date, and that means all of your software. Plugins like Java regularly update to patch security holes, do not allow yourself to fall behind.
  4. Anti-virus: Have an anti-virus, a good one. Norton and Mcafee are not good anti-virus programs, utilize tools like Avast and Windows Defender. Recognize that this isn’t 100% foolproof.
  5. Operating System: Don’t use a pirated copy of Windows, for crying out loud. I know you don’t want to pay the cost of the OS, but these are very often filled with backdoors at an OS level that even anti-virus programs won’t detect.
  6. Take Security Seriously: Keep up to date on security news.

It will likely never be possible to 100% secure an account, it is impossible, but we can do a hell of a lot more to protect customer data.

MMOrning Shots: Shooting Things…And People


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Today’s MMOrning Shot comes to us from 3000AD, with Line of Defense getting ready for early access soon™. Those interested in a new open world shooter will be able to get early in for as little as $40, or you can wait a while and get in for free on launch.

Shoot up MMOrning Shots every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

MMOrning Shots: 99 Percent


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Today’s MMOrning Shot comes to us from Diablo III, which I finally decided to reinstall and complete the story mode on. ARPGs like Diablo are all about loot: getting better loot to kill more creatures to get better loot to kill more creatures. If you haven’t played Diablo III since before loot 2.0 and the other changes, check it out. The game is a lot better and it is much easier to equip your character properly.

Level up with MMOrning Shots every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

MMOrning Shots: Reaper Of Souls


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Today’s MMOrning Shot comes to us from RuneScape, for today’s Grim Reaper update. Soul Reaper tasks players with culling the world’s population of boss monsters for the Grim Reaper, in return for points that can be spent on rewards. Rewards include various items and buffs to assist players and make death less punishing.

Survive to the next MMOrning Shots every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

This Week In Review: Pledge This


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I hate clip shows, so much that I’ve never given much bother to a weekly wrapup here at MMO Fallout. So instead of devoting the week in review to reestablishing topics we’ve already talked about, I want to give some time to pieces that I did not cover. So let’s check out the news, shall we?

Sony is being sued over Killzone on PS4 not delivering native 1080p in multiplayer. What the game does is it scales up what is technically not really 1080p to deliver a final output that is technically 1080p. If you’re going to sue a game developer, there are many other instances that would have been a better case to make. Game developers have been lying about graphics and performance since the days when they’d stick arcade screenshots on the case of NES ports. This is in no way a defense of Sony, but I have a feeling that they will win this lawsuit because the question of “native” comes down to multiple definitions that exist in the industry.

Meawhile, Activision has hired a level 80 necromancer to revive the years-dead Sierra. Sierra is the developer responsible for the Spyro, Crash Bandicoot, Space/King/Police Quests, Homeworld, and Timeshift. They shut down in 2008 when Activision merged with Vivendi, but it appears that Activision is now interested in bringing them back. Boy are the guys at Sierra going to be disappointed when they see what Spyro has become.

Wing Commander 3 is available for free via Origin “On The House.” If you’ve never played this game, and our younger viewers won’t have, Wing Commander 3 is a dogfighting game released in 1994 and stars not Han Solo and not Chewbacca. Grab the game for free and keep it in your account forever, or until EA goes under in 2025.

And speaking of misleading advertising, Codemasters is offering refunds on Colin McRae Racing after gamers purchased what they thought was an HD remake on Steam only to find that what Codemasters was offering was in fact a port of a mobile game. Refunds will be available until August 19th, after which you’re on your own.

And finally Dead or Alive released a DLC pack which introduces “bed and bath” outfits to the players. The outfits are just as creepy and voyeuristic as you’d expect from Dead or Alive.

Tune in next week as we discuss why your favorite childhood icons weren’t as great as you remember.