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Nothings Original Anymore

maskedweaselmaskedweasel Member LegendaryPosts: 12,178

I was reading this article on IGN and felt it was appropriate here.

http://pc.ign.com/articles/121/1215457p1.html

 

An excerpt:

"Ultimately, though, what people really need to do is ask themselves if any of the games they recently adored are really original. I love Call of Duty, but it really just expands upon what John Carmack and id did with Doom, Quake and other shooters. Or hey, I love Star Wars: The Old Republic, but I'd be crazy if I couldn't admit it learns from, and is heavily inspired by, World of Warcraft. Warcraft also wasn't the first RTS, either, but developer Blizzard helped tweak the genre in ways that have subsequently defined it for years."

 

I completely agree, and have for a long time,  if you look hard enough you can see a clear evolution in each genre,  if you want to look hard enough.  It doesn't mean everything is exactly the same,  but much of what we have now, has been done before in some fashion or another -- and that doesn't make them bad.   

 



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Comments

  • PurutzilPurutzil Member UncommonPosts: 3,048

    Consider it this way, can you really come up with an original concept? Its extremely hard since so much has already been done before. Sure, you can make it more original with effort, but your still going to infringe on something else. Think up an idea  in your head and google it. Chances are, its already done or its so wack no one would even know what to do with it. 

    Oh, and if you thought "Mutant penguins where you got to bash those penguins with a bat and stop them from going to a doomsday scale to start the end of the world", sorry that game exists.

  • fonyfony Member Posts: 755

    kinda right that originality is almost gone, but there's really no silver lining for the topic i know is on your mind. swtor is not an evolution of the genre, because it didn't even do VO first. the first time i played swtor(PAX East), i played another MMO 5 hours later that also was story driven and had heavy use of VO. 

  • 77lolmac7777lolmac77 Member UncommonPosts: 492

    It's hard to be original when "original" games don't sell very well. Look at the game Psychonauts, that was a very well designed and written game that almost nobody bought. Yet people flock to buy the newest Madden or Call of Duty, which bring almost nothing new from one game to the next.

     

    So many games have been made that it's hard to find an idea NO ONE has thought of before. 

     

    And the South Park episode about the Simpson is a perfect quote for you thought, just like TV where the "Simpsons did it" some other game is always going to have used whatever idea you may think of first, short of things that weren't possible but now are due to new technology.

  • WhiteLanternWhiteLantern Member RarePosts: 3,309

    Originally posted by Purutzil

    Consider it this way, can you really come up with an original concept? Its extremely hard since so much has already been done before. Sure, you can make it more original with effort, but your still going to infringe on something else. Think up an idea  in your head and google it. Chances are, its already done or its so wack no one would even know what to do with it. 

    Oh, and if you thought "Mutant penguins where you got to bash those penguins with a bat and stop them from going to a doomsday scale to start the end of the world", sorry that game exists.

    Solomon said "There is nothing new under the sun.". This is still true, I think.

    As for the highlighted portion above: I recently took to trying to design what I would call my perfect board game. I planned two of them out quite far and began bug testing in my head. Then a quick trip to Boardgamegeek revealed that both concepts have already been done. Quite well, in fact. Though neither was identical to what I had come up with, they were close enough that my ideas likely wouldn't fly commercially.

    I want a mmorpg where people have gone through misery, have gone through school stuff and actually have had sex even. -sagil

  • DistopiaDistopia Member EpicPosts: 21,183

    Originally posted by maskedweasel

    I was reading this article on IGN and felt it was appropriate here.

    http://pc.ign.com/articles/121/1215457p1.html

     

    An excerpt:

    "Ultimately, though, what people really need to do is ask themselves if any of the games they recently adored are really original. I love Call of Duty, but it really just expands upon what John Carmack and id did with Doom, Quake and other shooters. Or hey, I love Star Wars: The Old Republic, but I'd be crazy if I couldn't admit it learns from, and is heavily inspired by, World of Warcraft. Warcraft also wasn't the first RTS, either, but developer Blizzard helped tweak the genre in ways that have subsequently defined it for years."

     

    I completely agree, and have for a long time,  if you look hard enough you can see a clear evolution in each genre,  if you want to look hard enough.  It doesn't mean everything is exactly the same,  but much of what we have now, has been done before in some fashion or another -- and that doesn't make them bad.   

     

    Read that yesterday, and my first thought was to quote some of it here, heh. I also agree with what the writer had to say.

    For every minute you are angry , you lose 60 seconds of happiness."-Emerson


  • maskedweaselmaskedweasel Member LegendaryPosts: 12,178

    Originally posted by fony

    kinda right that originality is almost gone, but there's really no silver lining for the topic i know is on your mind. swtor is not an evolution of the genre, because it didn't even do VO first. the first time i played swtor(PAX East), i played another MMO 5 hours later that also was story driven and had heavy use of VO. 

     

    But you miss the point,  of course BioWare didn't do anything original,  hell, it was hardly even original in the genre,  but that doesn't mean it isn't an evolution,  or at least a change in direction.

     

    Its not always about being original, or being innovative, or what have you,  sometimes its just about branching genres, or just being different, while utilizing genre similarities.

     

    I could rattle off games that not only have the same basic concepts but utilize the same exact control schemes, in the same genre, yet they are both still popular.  

     

    While I do feel SWTOR is an evolution of sorts,  it doesn't mean it doesn't have a lot of strong similarities to other games spanning different genres,  and that doesn't mean its a bad game.  Likewise to other games releasing soon in this genre, (or have already released in other places)  Such as TERA,  or  TSW,  or GW2.



  • nariusseldonnariusseldon Member EpicPosts: 27,775

    This is also not new.

    Entertertainment does NOT have to be original to be entertaining.

    Avatar is just Dances with Wolves with Aliens & better action/sfx.

    Games are really not about being original or new ... but implemented well with a lot of polish. I wont play something for the sake that it is new.

  • Creslin321Creslin321 Member Posts: 5,359

    It's basically true that no game is going to be 100% original, and honestly, I don't think anyone would want that.

    What I don't like about this sentiment is that it can be used as an excuse for mediocrity.  Just because nothing is truly original, it doesn't mean that it's "OK" to just copy problematic systems into your game en masse.

    There are still many "problems" in modern MMORPGs that are desperately in need of innovations to solve them.  For example, in an effort to reduce grind and make the games more interesting, MMORPGs have been drifting closer and closer to normal multiplayer games ever since WoW.  We've gotten to the point where we can honestly compare modern MMORPGs to lobby games like Diablo and not be far off.  In fact, the line has gotten so blurry, that Diablo 3 is being designed as almost a quasi-MMORPG with auction house and everything.

    The problem here is that this really threatens the identity of MMORPGs.  I personally, would not like the concept of a virtual world to completely die off and be replaced by a bunch of CORPGs masquerading as MMORPGs.

    But you can't just say "go back to how it was before" because there were problems there too.  So, if nothing is original, it would seem that you're stuck to returning to the old ways of endless, directionless grinding.  Or staying with the new way of SPRPG quests with a lobby game attached to it that takes place in a virtual world that is so insanely sharded that it feels like an SPRPG.

    This is where we need innovation.  Someone has to come up with an idea to make MMORPGs interesting without turning them into normal multiplayer games.  The virtual world HAS to be preserved, because that's all that really differentiates an MMORPG from a multiplayer game.

    In conclusion, I can see where folks can get confused and think that there is nothing really original.  Most innovations are incremental in that they make minor changes to an already existing concept.  So when you look at games that came out in immediate succession...it looks like there is hardly any innovation.  But try looking at games that came out a long time apart.  Look at Neverwinter Nights compared to the old SSI gold box games...there is plenty of innovation to be seen there.

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  • ClassicstarClassicstar Member UncommonPosts: 2,697

    Majority i think 99% of gamings community wants WoW-SWtor or korean F2P themepark mmo's so dont think it will improve soon, forget it won't happen. Where stuck with mediocre disgusting themeparks that makes me sick and sad at same time.

    So ill eather play solo or dont play at all. Will not spent one dime anymore on all the crap released in last few years.

    As someone already pointed out where on verge of comming into era where DIABLO 3 will be new generation thats been called a mmorpg lol the genre is becomming joke realy.

    Hope to build full AMD system RYZEN/VEGA/AM4!!!

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  • JohnnyBravolJohnnyBravol Member Posts: 83

    This is where virtual reality games will come in to disrupt the pattern. Soon, soon they will come...

  • CuathonCuathon Member Posts: 2,211

    There are people trying to innovate, make huge sweeping changes, and so forth. But they don't necessarily have any money to actually make and publish and sell the game.

  • maskedweaselmaskedweasel Member LegendaryPosts: 12,178

    Originally posted by Creslin321

    It's basically true that no game is going to be 100% original, and honestly, I don't think anyone would want that.

    What I don't like about this sentiment is that it can be used as an excuse for mediocrity.  Just because nothing is truly original, it doesn't mean that it's "OK" to just copy problematic systems into your game en masse.

    There are still many "problems" in modern MMORPGs that are desperately in need of innovations to solve them.  For example, in an effort to reduce grind and make the games more interesting, MMORPGs have been drifting closer and closer to normal multiplayer games ever since WoW.  We've gotten to the point where we can honestly compare modern MMORPGs to lobby games like Diablo and not be far off.  In fact, the line has gotten so blurry, that Diablo 3 is being designed as almost a quasi-MMORPG with auction house and everything.

    The problem here is that this really threatens the identity of MMORPGs.  I personally, would not like the concept of a virtual world to completely die off and be replaced by a bunch of CORPGs masquerading as MMORPGs.

    But you can't just say "go back to how it was before" because there were problems there too.  So, if nothing is original, it would seem that you're stuck to returning to the old ways of endless, directionless grinding.  Or staying with the new way of SPRPG quests with a lobby game attached to it that takes place in a virtual world that is so insanely sharded that it feels like an SPRPG.

    This is where we need innovation.  Someone has to come up with an idea to make MMORPGs interesting without turning them into normal multiplayer games.  The virtual world HAS to be preserved, because that's all that really differentiates an MMORPG from a multiplayer game.

    In conclusion, I can see where folks can get confused and think that there is nothing really original.  Most innovations are incremental in that they make minor changes to an already existing concept.  So when you look at games that came out in immediate succession...it looks like there is hardly any innovation.  But try looking at games that came out a long time apart.  Look at Neverwinter Nights compared to the old SSI gold box games...there is plenty of innovation to be seen there.

    I don't think its necessarily innovation we need,  I think its diversity.  And not just in the systems we have and the games we play,  but in what players actually play.  

     

    We have a lot of MMO junkies out there that are tired of seeing the "same" games,  yet, if they're playing the same game and same genre for 8 years, how is it not understandable that they'd get tired of - not just similar systems - but the genre as a whole.

     

    Perhaps thats one reason I enjoy SWTOR for what it is,  because in the last year I didn't sit around pining for MMOs or playing the same genre,  I played racing, sports, action adventure, FPS games,  and so on.  

     

    While I agree to a point, that we shouldn't settle for less, or allow the same concepts breed mediocrity,  I also think many people lose sight of how good some of the more up to date traditional (or "defined") systems really are - even if they aren't strikingly new.  Maybe its time for a change in genre for players just as much as it is important for us to find a genre changer.



  • QuizzicalQuizzical Member LegendaryPosts: 25,348

    Well sure, if you ignore all the games that do anything original, then you're likely to conclude that the rest of the games don't.

    Can you name any other game ever that did something along the lines of the adventuring discoveries in Uncharted Waters Online?  Single player, online, PC, console, anything?  I can't.  Of course, that's probably a big reason why it confuses people.  People come in thinking it's going to be similar to Pirates of the Burning Sea or Voyage Century Online or some such (or worse yet, WoW), and can't figure out what to do when it isn't.

    But it doesn't even take a completely original game mechanic to make an original game.  Plenty of games have combat vaguely similar to that of Spiral Knights.  Twenty years ago, plenty of games had combat vaguely similar to Spiral Knights.  But how many other such games put the game online with a good PUG system in semi-randomly generated levels?

  • TheLizardbonesTheLizardbones Member CommonPosts: 10,910


    Originally posted by JohnnyBravol
    This is where virtual reality games will come in to disrupt the pattern. Soon, soon they will come...


    'Virtual Reality' has been around since the late 90's. It was boring then and it'll be boring now. For virtual reality to be fun, reality would need to be fun.

    People often confusing 'innovative' with 'things I like'. If a game is enjoyable, even if it has elements of games that have been done before, it's innovative because it recombined existing elements into something new. If a game isn't enjoyable, it's the same old thing that's been done before. The same game can be in both camps depending on who you talk to.

    I can not remember winning or losing a single debate on the internet.

  • solarinesolarine Member Posts: 1,203

    Well, you know what Einstein said:

    The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.

    You can draw on some relatively obscure sources and come across as original. Nothing wrong with that. It's not like design is a race of coming up with an idea that's not been thought of, it's about not boring your audience. 

    When it comes to MMOs, for many players, a game copying the design philosophy of not WOW but UO will feel like a breath of fresh air now. 

    And of course there are degrees to originality. Portal was a hybrid of puzzle games and FPS mechanics, but I don't think many people would disagree that it was original.

    But yeah, generally speaking, in the last years originality is more about new takes on familiar stuff rather than outright new systems. Going by this, there are quite some original indie games out there. Also stuff like LA Noire is semi-original. :)

     

  • SovrathSovrath Member LegendaryPosts: 32,001

    Originally posted by solarine

    Well, you know what Einstein said:

    The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources.

    Bingo!

    It really is about taking your influences and makning them your own.

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  • nariusseldonnariusseldon Member EpicPosts: 27,775

    Originally posted by Creslin321

    It's basically true that no game is going to be 100% original, and honestly, I don't think anyone would want that.

    What I don't like about this sentiment is that it can be used as an excuse for mediocrity.  Just because nothing is truly original, it doesn't mean that it's "OK" to just copy problematic systems into your game en masse.

    There are still many "problems" in modern MMORPGs that are desperately in need of innovations to solve them.  For example, in an effort to reduce grind and make the games more interesting, MMORPGs have been drifting closer and closer to normal multiplayer games ever since WoW.  We've gotten to the point where we can honestly compare modern MMORPGs to lobby games like Diablo and not be far off.  In fact, the line has gotten so blurry, that Diablo 3 is being designed as almost a quasi-MMORPG with auction house and everything.

    The problem here is that this really threatens the identity of MMORPGs.  I personally, would not like the concept of a virtual world to completely die off and be replaced by a bunch of CORPGs masquerading as MMORPGs.

    It is a good thing. WOW & Diablo has shown that it is more fun to focus on what people like to do .. i.e. killing stuff and getting rewarded for doing so ... then giving them a virtual world.

    Some are reluctant to embrace the new world because they are nostalgic about the old, boring past. They will be left behind. I am more excited about Diablo3 than any MMO. I think it will be a much better game.

    I don't understand this obsession with virtual worlds. Second Life is a virtual world.You cannot pay me enough to "play" it. I would MUCH rather play Diablo.

  • Creslin321Creslin321 Member Posts: 5,359

    Originally posted by nariusseldon

    Originally posted by Creslin321

    ....

    It is a good thing. WOW & Diablo has shown that it is more fun to focus on what people like to do .. i.e. killing stuff and getting rewarded for doing so ... then giving them a virtual world.

    Some are reluctant to embrace the new world because they are nostalgic about the old, boring past. They will be left behind. I am more excited about Diablo3 than any MMO. I think it will be a much better game.

    I don't understand this obsession with virtual worlds. Second Life is a virtual world.You cannot pay me enough to "play" it. I would MUCH rather play Diablo.

     It is a good thing...to you.  Personally, I would like to see a game that emphasizes the virtual world more, and we actually have a few of them on the way like GW2 and Archeage.  There are others that feel like I do as well.

    Maybe it's time for a genre split.  IMO, some games are getting too CORPG-like to be considered MMORPGs anymore.  And that's fine, just call them CORPGs though.  I would be cool with that.

    Are you team Azeroth, team Tyria, or team Jacob?

  • JetrpgJetrpg Member UncommonPosts: 2,347

    Originally posted by maskedweasel

    I completely agree, and have for a long time,  if you look hard enough you can see a clear evolution in each genre,  if you want to look hard enough.  It doesn't mean everything is exactly the same,  but much of what we have now, has been done before in some fashion or another -- and that doesn't make them bad.   

     

    There is a differnce between similar and the same or less than another game is offering.

    The call of duty games can fall under this to a degree, but graphics and other optiosn do keep expanding. BF3 was not really that much beeter gameplay than bf2 if nota downgrade, But tis graphics are vastly superior, and other things as well.

    Lets look at MMOs We have seen mmos come out with much better graphics then wow, and others with some different ideas... But has any of them came out with better graphic style and quality? Maybe one or two of which failed to even met the gameplay of wow.. So. Many peopel say ehh more of the same ... no benifit in playing a new mmo, when the old one is superior.

    Lets look at swtor, it did quest text better, its voiced and there a cut scene. But the graphics may be a bit higher quality with less style. So thast not really attractive. End game? Token/chest raid system. PVP BGs for "points" to buy gear. I mean classes, equipment, etc. pretty much very similar.

    Crafting; a bit different, i love it, by lvl 40 on all my toons i have maxed crafting (because its new and different, i haven't done it over and over for years).

    Yeah i like compaions / part of crafting... other than that the game it self doesn't play as well as wow, has far less options for specs (but not by much pretty similar). UI is far worse as they have it locked, i mean there really isn't any differnce that would entertian you for more than a few months.

    Now this isn't true of all mmos , GW2 is trying new and old stuff most mmos forgot. There is terra, wildstar, even PS2 (while similar to itself rare in the market).

    The issue isn't that coping = bad, its no new experinces , no improvement, no REASON to play the next mmo IS BAD.

     

    "Society in every state is a blessing, but government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one ..." - Thomas Paine

  • Creslin321Creslin321 Member Posts: 5,359

    Originally posted by Jetrpg

    Originally posted by maskedweasel

    I completely agree, and have for a long time,  if you look hard enough you can see a clear evolution in each genre,  if you want to look hard enough.  It doesn't mean everything is exactly the same,  but much of what we have now, has been done before in some fashion or another -- and that doesn't make them bad.   

     

    There is a differnce between similar and the same or less than another game is offering.

    The call of duty games can fall under this to a degree, but graphics and other optiosn do keep expanding. BF3 was not really that much beeter gameplay than bf2 if nota downgrade, But tis graphics are vastly superior, and other things as well.

    Lets look at MMOs We have seen mmos come out with much better graphics then wow, and others with some different ideas... But has any of them came out with better graphic style and quality? Maybe one or two of which failed to even met the gameplay of wow.. So. Many peopel say ehh more of the same ... no benifit in playing a new mmo, when the old one is superior.

    Lets look at swtor, it did quest text better, its voiced and there a cut scene. But the graphics may be a bit higher quality with less style. So thast not really attractive. End game? Token/chest raid system. PVP BGs for "points" to buy gear. I mean classes, equipment, etc. pretty much very similar.

    Crafting; a bit different, i love it, by lvl 40 on all my toons i have maxed crafting (because its new and different, i haven't done it over and over for years).

    Yeah i like compaions / part of crafting... other than that the game it self doesn't play as well as wow, has far less options for specs (but not by much pretty similar). UI is far worse as they have it locked, i mean there really isn't any differnce that would entertian you for more than a few months.

    Now this isn't true of all mmos , GW2 is trying new and old stuff most mmos forgot. There is terra, wildstar, even PS2 (while similar to itself rare in the market).

    The issue isn't that coping = bad, its no new experinces , no improvement, no REASON to play the next mmo IS BAD.

     

     Very well said!

    You know, I think that a lot of single player games get away with lack of innovation due to their relatively short lifespans.  BF3 as you said is probably worse than BF2 (no commander mode), but I sitll had a great time with it.  Reason being that I hadn't played BF:BC2 in a year or so, and hadn't played BF2 is many years.  So while it wasn't that novel, its target audience wasn't completely burned out on the concept.

    But MMORPGs are different.  Many MMORPG fans are currently playing an MMORPG when the next one comes out.  And if that MMORPG is very similar to the one they are playing, then it's not going to be exciting.  And this is my problem.  I think that MMORPGs have a lot more responsibility to be "innovative" and "groundbreaking" than SP games are. 

    For the simple reason that MMORPGs are ACTIVELY competing with the juggernaut game that may have come our over half a decade ago.  SP games aren't like this.  If an awesome, genre-defining, groundbreaking game comes out in 2009, then a game in 2011 that is similar won't be competing very heavily with the 2009 game (typically).  People have already finished with the 2009 game.

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  • nariusseldonnariusseldon Member EpicPosts: 27,775

    Originally posted by Creslin321

    Originally posted by nariusseldon


    Originally posted by Creslin321

    ....

    It is a good thing. WOW & Diablo has shown that it is more fun to focus on what people like to do .. i.e. killing stuff and getting rewarded for doing so ... then giving them a virtual world.

    Some are reluctant to embrace the new world because they are nostalgic about the old, boring past. They will be left behind. I am more excited about Diablo3 than any MMO. I think it will be a much better game.

    I don't understand this obsession with virtual worlds. Second Life is a virtual world.You cannot pay me enough to "play" it. I would MUCH rather play Diablo.

     It is a good thing...to you.  Personally, I would like to see a game that emphasizes the virtual world more, and we actually have a few of them on the way like GW2 and Archeage.  There are others that feel like I do as well.

    Maybe it's time for a genre split.  IMO, some games are getting too CORPG-like to be considered MMORPGs anymore.  And that's fine, just call them CORPGs though.  I would be cool with that.

    It is a good thing for ME, and the market. Obviously people looking for virtual world is a very minority.

    Look at WOW. It still has 10M players and pretty representative of the market. What features are popular? NOT the virtual world ones. LFD & LFR are very popular and they make WOW into a much more lobby like game.

    When D3 is out, other developers will see how popular it is to combine some MMO features into a CORPG and MMOs will move further into that direction. Those who dont like it, probably will be left in the dust.

     

     

  • AlBQuirkyAlBQuirky Member EpicPosts: 7,432


    Originally posted by maskedweasel
    I don't think its necessarily innovation we need,  I think its diversity.  And not just in the systems we have and the games we play,  but in what players actually play.

    I could not agree here more. There are as many playstyles as there are players, it seems, and games just don't make the distinctions.

    Unfortunately, that means that the games won't be big sellers like companies want them to be.

    - Al

    Personally the only modern MMORPG trend that annoys me is the idea that MMOs need to be designed in a way to attract people who don't actually like MMOs. Which to me makes about as much sense as someone trying to figure out a way to get vegetarians to eat at their steakhouse.
    - FARGIN_WAR


  • CalerxesCalerxes Member UncommonPosts: 1,641

    Originally posted by maskedweasel

    I was reading this article on IGN and felt it was appropriate here.

    http://pc.ign.com/articles/121/1215457p1.html

     

    An excerpt:

    "Ultimately, though, what people really need to do is ask themselves if any of the games they recently adored are really original. I love Call of Duty, but it really just expands upon what John Carmack and id did with Doom, Quake and other shooters. Or hey, I love Star Wars: The Old Republic, but I'd be crazy if I couldn't admit it learns from, and is heavily inspired by, World of Warcraft. Warcraft also wasn't the first RTS, either, but developer Blizzard helped tweak the genre in ways that have subsequently defined it for years."

     

    I completely agree, and have for a long time,  if you look hard enough you can see a clear evolution in each genre,  if you want to look hard enough.  It doesn't mean everything is exactly the same,  but much of what we have now, has been done before in some fashion or another -- and that doesn't make them bad.   

     

     

     

    This is an entertaining read and I think fits the tone of this thread.

    http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/issues/issue_221/6582-Why-Your-Game-Idea-Sucks

     

    And this sums it up.

     

     

     

     

    This doom and gloom thread was brought to you by Chin Up™ the new ultra high caffeine soft drink for gamers who just need that boost of happiness after a long forum session.

  • MindTriggerMindTrigger Member Posts: 2,596

    Originally posted by nariusseldon

    Originally posted by Creslin321


    Originally posted by nariusseldon


    Originally posted by Creslin321

    ....

    It is a good thing. WOW & Diablo has shown that it is more fun to focus on what people like to do .. i.e. killing stuff and getting rewarded for doing so ... then giving them a virtual world.

    Some are reluctant to embrace the new world because they are nostalgic about the old, boring past. They will be left behind. I am more excited about Diablo3 than any MMO. I think it will be a much better game.

    I don't understand this obsession with virtual worlds. Second Life is a virtual world.You cannot pay me enough to "play" it. I would MUCH rather play Diablo.

     It is a good thing...to you.  Personally, I would like to see a game that emphasizes the virtual world more, and we actually have a few of them on the way like GW2 and Archeage.  There are others that feel like I do as well.

    Maybe it's time for a genre split.  IMO, some games are getting too CORPG-like to be considered MMORPGs anymore.  And that's fine, just call them CORPGs though.  I would be cool with that.

    It is a good thing for ME, and the market. Obviously people looking for virtual world is a very minority.

    Look at WOW. It still has 10M players and pretty representative of the market. What features are popular? NOT the virtual world ones. LFD & LFR are very popular and they make WOW into a much more lobby like game.

    When D3 is out, other developers will see how popular it is to combine some MMO features into a CORPG and MMOs will move further into that direction. Those who dont like it, probably will be left in the dust.

     

     

    People keep saying this, but the truth is that most of the millions of people who came to the genre with WoW have never even *seen* a AAA virtual world game, because no one has made one.  They have been too busy trying to emulate WoW's success, and completely failing, to give people anything unique to try.  The truth is, no one, not you or any game developer, has the slightest clue about how many people may like a more open world game if it was done bringing some modern game design elements into account.  You have a hint by looking at stable games like EVE, but you still don't have enough information to make the call.

    Who is the typical virtual world player?  I came to sandbox games from years of hardcore FPS shooter clan match gaming.  You might think that I would be inclined to play themepark combat games and raids, but I wasn't.  I found that I liked forging my own adventure, hero and non-hero, in an open world.   I suspect there is at least a very large niche community of people like me that could make some game developer a lot of cash.  If you really made it a great and polished game, it may even surprise you.

    Right now, there is zero evidence to backup your claim.  You cannot use the current themepark-only player pool to make that assertion. What we do know as a fact is that a lot of those players that came from WoW, are sick and tired of WoW clones already and they are looking for something fresh with more depth.  A hybrid perhaps, but not another themepark clone.  One of the most common complaints I have seen here about SWTOR, for example, is that it *feels old*.  Guess why that is.

    A sure sign that you are in an old, dying paradigm/mindset, is when you are scared of new ideas and new technology. Don't feel bad. The world is moving on without you, and you are welcome to yell "Get Off My Lawn!" all you want while it happens. You cannot, however, stop an idea whose time has come.

  • CalerxesCalerxes Member UncommonPosts: 1,641

    Originally posted by maskedweasel

    Originally posted by Creslin321

    It's basically true that no game is going to be 100% original, and honestly, I don't think anyone would want that.

    What I don't like about this sentiment is that it can be used as an excuse for mediocrity.  Just because nothing is truly original, it doesn't mean that it's "OK" to just copy problematic systems into your game en masse.

    There are still many "problems" in modern MMORPGs that are desperately in need of innovations to solve them.  For example, in an effort to reduce grind and make the games more interesting, MMORPGs have been drifting closer and closer to normal multiplayer games ever since WoW.  We've gotten to the point where we can honestly compare modern MMORPGs to lobby games like Diablo and not be far off.  In fact, the line has gotten so blurry, that Diablo 3 is being designed as almost a quasi-MMORPG with auction house and everything.

    The problem here is that this really threatens the identity of MMORPGs.  I personally, would not like the concept of a virtual world to completely die off and be replaced by a bunch of CORPGs masquerading as MMORPGs.

    But you can't just say "go back to how it was before" because there were problems there too.  So, if nothing is original, it would seem that you're stuck to returning to the old ways of endless, directionless grinding.  Or staying with the new way of SPRPG quests with a lobby game attached to it that takes place in a virtual world that is so insanely sharded that it feels like an SPRPG.

    This is where we need innovation.  Someone has to come up with an idea to make MMORPGs interesting without turning them into normal multiplayer games.  The virtual world HAS to be preserved, because that's all that really differentiates an MMORPG from a multiplayer game.

    In conclusion, I can see where folks can get confused and think that there is nothing really original.  Most innovations are incremental in that they make minor changes to an already existing concept.  So when you look at games that came out in immediate succession...it looks like there is hardly any innovation.  But try looking at games that came out a long time apart.  Look at Neverwinter Nights compared to the old SSI gold box games...there is plenty of innovation to be seen there.

    I don't think its necessarily innovation we need,  I think its diversity.  And not just in the systems we have and the games we play,  but in what players actually play.  

     

    We have a lot of MMO junkies out there that are tired of seeing the "same" games,  yet, if they're playing the same game and same genre for 8 years, how is it not understandable that they'd get tired of - not just similar systems - but the genre as a whole.

     

    Perhaps thats one reason I enjoy SWTOR for what it is,  because in the last year I didn't sit around pining for MMOs or playing the same genre,  I played racing, sports, action adventure, FPS games,  and so on.  

     

    While I agree to a point, that we shouldn't settle for less, or allow the same concepts breed mediocrity,  I also think many people lose sight of how good some of the more up to date traditional (or "defined") systems really are - even if they aren't strikingly new.  Maybe its time for a change in genre for players just as much as it is important for us to find a genre changer.

     

    The phrase "familiarity breeds contempt" is very apt here.

    This doom and gloom thread was brought to you by Chin Up™ the new ultra high caffeine soft drink for gamers who just need that boost of happiness after a long forum session.

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