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Who is Responsible for Gear-Based Progression?

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  • BeansnBreadBeansnBread Member EpicPosts: 7,254

    People like gear progression. It seems to be a pretty popular part of being human.

     

    Look at cars, phones, computers, weapons, toasters, TVs, etc. They all get progressively better leaving people feeling satified when they upgrade to the next nice thing. Gear progression is a part of the human experience, not just a game system.

  • HokieHokie Member UncommonPosts: 1,063
    Originally posted by waynejr2
    Originally posted by Hokie
    Originally posted by jtcgs
    Originally posted by waynejr2
    Originally posted by lifesbrink

    Is it EQ?  Or does this go back farther?  It really bothers me that progression went from levels and skills, something I was used to from the days of Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, or other games, to needing gear to be able to fight at all.  So who's bright idea was it to screw us all with this?

    E. Gary Gygax.

     Exactly.

    +1 boots of escaping

    Negatory.

     

    Did you ever read through the original giant series modules?  they had swords of giant slaying for the characters to find to gear them up.  Look at the amount of treasure in most of the modules.   Look at the treasure for monsters as well.  E.G.G had lots of loot in his game even though he was against monty haulism.  Perhaps your DMs didn't give out a lot of it, but if you look at the old products with HONEST review, you will see it.

     Nope, never read thru. But I did play thru them (well all except 1).

    And just because youre getting treasure and magic items to help in your adventure doesnt mean it equates to a gear grind. AD&D was a level grind I'll admit, gear wasnt that critical because you could (sometimes) talk your way out of, or past some, bad encounters.

     

    A person didnt play Against the Giants G1 just to gear up so they could play G2 and then to play G3 modules, that then lead them into the D series, and last to the Q series. Thats EQ (thanks grimfall for the clarification)

    Once again it was about the story the reason to play wasnt to gear up. You could start at any point in the series. And as a matter of fact I did. I went G2,G3, Q1 just because we couldnt find G1 or the D series. My DM just ran his own custom adventures in between G3 and Q1.

    As a matter of fact our Cleric never did have a magic weapon thru all that. Best he had was +2 shield and +1 plate and if I remember a peridot of wisdom. We were woefully underpowered but we damn near beat the module except for some crappy rolls back to back.

     

    Now about the amount of treasue. If your DM was playing by the rules a group couldnt carry 1/2 of what the won out. Unless he was giving out Bag's of Holding like they were large sacks. Encumbrance was a major part of teh game, ignored by most bad DM's. Our group always adventured cause we were always broke, especially my Magic-User. And our DM was there with a fresh story the next weekend.

     

    Im guessing the only games you ever played were based off gear grinds where the story came second or may third after gold (yes Ive had those DMs, its why I stopped playing). But anyone that ever played a classic AD&D game, run by a 1/2 way decent DM, knows this whole "its D&D fault" is just BS.

    AD&D may be the grandfather of almost all adventure, RPG, and MMO games.  But it didnt start the whole you have to kill this guy to get this [insert weapon, armor, etc] to continue, so you can kill this tougher guy so you can get this better [insert weapon, armor, bleh]  to continue further, so you can kill yet again this even tougher guy...and so on ad nauseam.

     

    So once again like I said before , look to The Legend of Zelda and Final Fantasy, theyre the ones that brought the gear grind to the main stream. They are (almost) 100% focused on the gear grind, with (in the case of Zelda) an overly simplistic "rescue the princess" story not even worth mentioning.

     

    "I understand that if I hear any more words come pouring out of your **** mouth, Ill have to eat every fucking chicken in this room."

  • grimfallgrimfall Member UncommonPosts: 1,153
    Originally posted by Hokie
    Originally posted by waynejr2
    Originally posted by Hokie
    Originally posted by jtcgs
    Originally posted by waynejr2
    Originally posted by lifesbrink

    Is it EQ?  Or does this go back farther?  It really bothers me that progression went from levels and skills, something I was used to from the days of Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, or other games, to needing gear to be able to fight at all.  So who's bright idea was it to screw us all with this?

    E. Gary Gygax.

     Exactly.

    +1 boots of escaping

    Negatory.

     

    Did you ever read through the original giant series modules?  they had swords of giant slaying for the characters to find to gear them up.  Look at the amount of treasure in most of the modules.   Look at the treasure for monsters as well.  E.G.G had lots of loot in his game even though he was against monty haulism.  Perhaps your DMs didn't give out a lot of it, but if you look at the old products with HONEST review, you will see it.

     Nope, never read thru. But I did play thru them (well all except 1).

    And just because youre getting treasure and magic items to help in your adventure doesnt mean it equates to a gear grind. AD&D was a level grind since most encounters you couldnt talk you way out of.

     

    A person didnt play Against the Giants G1 just to gear up so they could play G2 and then to play G3 modules, that then lead them into the D series, and last to the Q series. Thats WOW.

    Just a point of correction here, that's not WoW, that's Everquest, specifically the Kunark Expansion, and it was codified during Velious and written in stone for Luclin.

    The idea of reaching max level, then raiding for gear to help you do more max level only content is solely EQ's baby, but it's a natural extension of what would have happened if you played an AD&D campaign which had two things, a level cap and no character retirement.

    I am about 85% sure that there was no more than 1 sword of giant slaying in the G series, if any at all.

    Your characterization of AD&D gaming sessions... not so on target from my experience... though I am curious why your DM didn't let you haul all the treasure out of a dungeon... did you guys not think to leave someone there to guard it and send someone back for pack horses?

  • HokieHokie Member UncommonPosts: 1,063
    Originally posted by grimfall
    Originally posted by Hokie
    Originally posted by waynejr2
    Originally posted by Hokie
    Originally posted by jtcgs
    Originally posted by waynejr2
    Originally posted by lifesbrink

    Is it EQ?  Or does this go back farther?  It really bothers me that progression went from levels and skills, something I was used to from the days of Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, or other games, to needing gear to be able to fight at all.  So who's bright idea was it to screw us all with this?

    E. Gary Gygax.

     Exactly.

    +1 boots of escaping

    Negatory.

     

    Did you ever read through the original giant series modules?  they had swords of giant slaying for the characters to find to gear them up.  Look at the amount of treasure in most of the modules.   Look at the treasure for monsters as well.  E.G.G had lots of loot in his game even though he was against monty haulism.  Perhaps your DMs didn't give out a lot of it, but if you look at the old products with HONEST review, you will see it.

     Nope, never read thru. But I did play thru them (well all except 1).

    And just because youre getting treasure and magic items to help in your adventure doesnt mean it equates to a gear grind. AD&D was a level grind since most encounters you couldnt talk you way out of.

     

    A person didnt play Against the Giants G1 just to gear up so they could play G2 and then to play G3 modules, that then lead them into the D series, and last to the Q series. Thats WOW.

    Just a point of correction here, that's not WoW, that's Everquest, specifically the Kunark Expansion, and it was codified during Velious and written in stone for Luclin.

    The idea of reaching max level, then raiding for gear to help you do more max level only content is solely EQ's baby, but it's a natural extension of what would have happened if you played an AD&D campaign which had two things, a level cap and no character retirement.

    I am about 85% sure that there was no more than 1 sword of giant slaying in the G series, if any at all.

    Got ya. Never did play EQ, my 1st true was EVE (tried E&B and AO, last only 1-2 months). But I'll fix it.

    "I understand that if I hear any more words come pouring out of your **** mouth, Ill have to eat every fucking chicken in this room."

  • TwoThreeFourTwoThreeFour Member UncommonPosts: 2,155
    Originally posted by lifesbrink

    Is it EQ?  Or does this go back farther?  It really bothers me that progression went from levels and skills, something I was used to from the days of Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, or other games, to needing gear to be able to fight at all.  So who's bright idea was it to screw us all with this?

    When you say "gear-based progression" you are implying that it is the most important progression form. Even in Final Fantasy I , I felt that the progression was not mostly based on gear. I never felt like "omg I need to grind and grind  to finally get this gear", I felt more like "I so want to beat the darn Ogre and I will do everything in my power to beat it".  

     

    It feels very weird when the only reason I am doing a dungeon over and over again is to get a gear and nothing else. 

  • TinybinaTinybina Member Posts: 2,130

    All this gear progression goes back to Movie's and then before that books.... How many movies have you seen where the "hero" has to go out questing to get this uber sword or some other item that will allow him to become more powerfull?  How many books have you read that are the same thing?

    Hate to say it folks but its part of the tradition and its here to stay, and as well it should!

    Deal with it or find a game that doesn't do it. Those are your two options.

    ------------------------------
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  • IcewhiteIcewhite Member Posts: 6,403
    Originally posted by TwoThreeFour

    It feels very weird when the only reason I am doing a dungeon over and over again is to get a gear and nothing else. 

    So the original question is sort of an inexact one; what we're really seeking is the first game with repeatable content and predictable boss drops?

    Diablo one is a pretty strong bet, at least in terms of  popularity.

    Self-pity imprisons us in the walls of our own self-absorption. The whole world shrinks down to the size of our problem, and the more we dwell on it, the smaller we are and the larger the problem seems to grow.

  • HokieHokie Member UncommonPosts: 1,063
    Originally posted by grimfall

    The idea of reaching max level, then raiding for gear to help you do more max level only content is solely EQ's baby, but it's a natural extension of what would have happened if you played an AD&D campaign which had two things, a level cap and no character retirement.

    I am about 85% sure that there was no more than 1 sword of giant slaying in the G series, if any at all.

    Your characterization of AD&D gaming sessions... not so on target from my experience... though I am curious why your DM didn't let you haul all the treasure out of a dungeon... did you guys not think to leave someone there to guard it and send someone back for pack horses?

    We got paraniod with leaving someone outside with the pack mules. We had one game where we had it loaded up with tapestries, candelabras, rugs, iron bar stock (remember what G said about GPs, only about 10% of it is in coins, and almost always copper and silver, pfft). Well the experience mountain guide we hired to, well guide us and watch the mules, absconded with not only our loot, but our horses and spare food. So we had to drop 1/2 of what we had just brought out  to make it back the 20 or so miles to town.

    If looks could kill.

    His answer was "What do you expect with 2k-3k worth of goods (and about 500 silver and copper coins) thats more of less untracable, and us with no way to track or chase him down. It was an easy decision for the NPC.

    After a few hours we got a good laugh out of it. He just couldnt let our characters score enough to semi-retire. Like I said its why we went out to dungeon-crawl, we were broke.

    "Its not and adventure, its a job!" Okay we never said that, but its sure what it felt like for our characters. :)

     

    Six to eight hours of a well ran AD&D game beats any MMO on the interwebs today (and probably forever). *sigh*

    "I understand that if I hear any more words come pouring out of your **** mouth, Ill have to eat every fucking chicken in this room."

  • IcewhiteIcewhite Member Posts: 6,403
    Originally posted by Hokie
    We had one game where we had it loaded up with tapestries, candelabras, rugs, iron bar stock (remember what G said about GPs, only about 10% of it is in coins, and almost always copper and silver, pfft).

    We actually began building a tower from throwaway copper.  Cubic volume by weight (.1 pound each!), melt it down and make bricks of it.

    As a resource copper was more plentiful than cut stone, just required a steady suppy of critturs with "treasure type" loot.

    Self-pity imprisons us in the walls of our own self-absorption. The whole world shrinks down to the size of our problem, and the more we dwell on it, the smaller we are and the larger the problem seems to grow.

  • HokieHokie Member UncommonPosts: 1,063
    Originally posted by Icewhite
    Originally posted by Hokie
    We had one game where we had it loaded up with tapestries, candelabras, rugs, iron bar stock (remember what G said about GPs, only about 10% of it is in coins, and almost always copper and silver, pfft).

    We actually began building a tower from throwaway copper.  Cubic volume by weight (.1 pound each!), melt it down and make bricks of it.

    As a resource copper was more plentiful than cut stone, just required a steady suppy of critturs with "treasure type" loot.

    LOL, never thought of that.

    Hmm, throw some tin in it during smelting and you could call it Castle Brass when its done and then call yourself Count Brass....

    "I understand that if I hear any more words come pouring out of your **** mouth, Ill have to eat every fucking chicken in this room."

  • IcewhiteIcewhite Member Posts: 6,403
    Originally posted by Hokie

    Hmm, throw some tin in it during smelting and you could call it Castle Brass when its done and then call yourself Count Brass....

    Too uncomfortable in the winter time.

    Self-pity imprisons us in the walls of our own self-absorption. The whole world shrinks down to the size of our problem, and the more we dwell on it, the smaller we are and the larger the problem seems to grow.

  • For CRPGs,

     

    EQ got it from DIKU MUDs.  DIKU MUDs probably got it or at least the base mechanics of it from certain rogue-like games such as the old Moria.

    If you look at the way gear is made in all those games they are very similar. 

    The LP MUD I played had none of the +5 then get a +7 type stuff nor could you even tell what a piece of equipment did except in a very vague way or by experimentation and observation.  Even the one guild(class) that had a power to appraise stuff only got words like "good" or "excellent".  Its unlikely you could even tell if some item was a slight upgrade over some other.  Of course that game also had no max level and no perpetual gear progression.  In fact the best items were called artifacts.  They could not be owned by players only temporarily possesed (you dropped them as soon as you logged out).  Where they were reset into an NPC hands each reboot and if the room they were in reset they went back too.  And no normal "keepable" weapon was supposed to have artifact level stats.

     

    But the thing that is really stupid in eq-style MMOs is they raise both Mob stats and equipment stat simultaneously.  You never progress, the only thing you can do is not fall behind.  Then they lie to you and call it progression.

     

    Even most DIKU MUDs did not take it that far.  There was often a tier of equipment people would work on after they reached max but once they goot all that almost all DIKU MUDs opted for a remort system where you reincarnated back to lvl 1 and usually got an extra power or stats in exchagne for an XP penalty.

    While DIKU MUDs had a few tiers of gear above max level almost none did the whole perpetual neverending gear grind as that just didn't seem sustainable to them.  Also they probably didn't have the personell to do it since the games were mostly free.

     

    Note: a number of LP MUDs had/have max levels and gear progressions with obvious numbers etc.

  • dontadowdontadow Member UncommonPosts: 1,005
    Originally posted by Hokie
    Originally posted by grimfall

    The idea of reaching max level, then raiding for gear to help you do more max level only content is solely EQ's baby, but it's a natural extension of what would have happened if you played an AD&D campaign which had two things, a level cap and no character retirement.

    I am about 85% sure that there was no more than 1 sword of giant slaying in the G series, if any at all.

    Your characterization of AD&D gaming sessions... not so on target from my experience... though I am curious why your DM didn't let you haul all the treasure out of a dungeon... did you guys not think to leave someone there to guard it and send someone back for pack horses?

    We got paraniod with leaving someone outside with the pack mules. We had one game where we had it loaded up with tapestries, candelabras, rugs, iron bar stock (remember what G said about GPs, only about 10% of it is in coins, and almost always copper and silver, pfft). Well the experience mountain guide we hired to, well guide us and watch the mules, absconded with not only our loot, but our horses and spare food. So we had to drop 1/2 of what we had just brought out  to make it back the 20 or so miles to town.

    If looks could kill.

    His answer was "What do you expect with 2k-3k worth of goods (and about 500 silver and copper coins) thats more of less untracable, and us with no way to track or chase him down. It was an easy decision for the NPC.

    After a few hours we got a good laugh out of it. He just couldnt let our characters score enough to semi-retire. Like I said its why we went out to dungeon-crawl, we were broke.

    "Its not and adventure, its a job!" Okay we never said that, but its sure what it felt like for our characters. :)

     

    Six to eight hours of a well ran AD&D game beats any MMO on the interwebs today (and probably forever). *sigh*

    I'd agree with this, no way I"d miss my sunday game.   MMOs are bastardized versions of DnD usually, and until an AI is smart enough to react, we'll be happy with mmos getting as close as they can, but nothing can replace a human computer that will build an adventure for you. 

  • HarafnirHarafnir Member UncommonPosts: 1,350

    In EQ and before hunting gear was one playstyle among many. When WoW hired one guild from EQ to create the whole endgame for them a guild with that playstyle, they created this new completly messed up norm. In the early beta of WoW it was about the Warcraft and about the two sides in a constant struggle. Suddenly, just weeks after they said who would create the endgame for WoW and "iron out the kinks", the whole focus of the game changed to endgame dungeons, really hard bosses for big groups in hard to reach places and loot loot loot. It was a big uproar....

    Then the game was released and people started playing and forgot all about it, except a few questions here and there " was there supposed ot be any "War" in World of Warcraft?" Today. All games are released withthat same simple mindset because everybody and their sister thinks playing MMOS is all about the endgame loot. Since their first and only experience with MMOs is WoW (and yes, a lot of the developers know little else but WoW as well, they are in the thier late 20s)

    "This is not a game to be tossed aside lightly.
    It should be thrown with great force"

  • Don-QuixoteDon-Quixote Member Posts: 87
    Originally posted by lifesbrink

    Is it EQ?  Or does this go back farther?  It really bothers me that progression went from levels and skills, something I was used to from the days of Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, or other games, to needing gear to be able to fight at all.  So who's bright idea was it to screw us all with this?

    Back to the Roman Empire.

  • sonoggisonoggi Member Posts: 1,119

    i dont know who's responsible, but i know Blizzard perverted it. i think about this as i grind my way through D3's Inferno, and keep smacking my monk against "gear checkpoints." i also thought about this while grinding arena gear so i could pvp in WoW. finally, im thinking about how big of a moron i am for constantly falling for Blizzard's bullshit and buying their stupid games.

  • lifesbrinklifesbrink Member UncommonPosts: 553
    Originally posted by Quizzical

    Video games that push you to get better gear to advance go way back.  The earliest examples that I can think of off hand are Metroid and The Legend of Zelda (both 1986), neither of which have experience levels.  There are probably earlier examples that didn't come to mind, too.

    These games were still skill-based.  Other than needing certain items to advance, period, you did not need stat-based gear, which is my original rant.  I hate stat-based.

    My blog is a continuing story of what MMO's should be like.

  • lifesbrinklifesbrink Member UncommonPosts: 553
    Originally posted by Konfess

    There are four types of MMO players, they are Killers, Achievers, Socializers, & Explorers. Gear Progression is for Achievers & some may say Socializers. Heck an argument can be devised that GP adds flavor to all four play styles.

    Achievers want the next and best. Explorers like to find stuff. Socializers like to show off, brag, and relive great adventures. Killers like anything that makes them better killers.

    Heh, notice that 3 of those personality types happen to be about the equipment?  Sadly, I am all 4 of these types, so the gear thing really screws me.

    My blog is a continuing story of what MMO's should be like.

  • Zen_BladeZen_Blade Member UncommonPosts: 106
    Originally posted by sirphobos

    D&D, MUDs.

    This... EQ of the modern day 3D MMORPGs, but it had huge inspiration from the above...

  • lifesbrinklifesbrink Member UncommonPosts: 553
    Originally posted by Nadia
    Originally posted by Edeus

    Look at the early FF series, or the early dragonquest series, or the Chrono series...  it's all there!  Even skilling up with different weapons

    largely true but it wasnt until MUDs and MMOs where your skills and levels do not change (if you are level capped)

    only your gear changes

    This is untrue, besides.  At max level, I can beat Chrono Trigger with nothing more than a wooden sword.

    My blog is a continuing story of what MMO's should be like.

  • waynejr2waynejr2 Member EpicPosts: 7,769
    Originally posted by grimfall
    Originally posted by Hokie
    Originally posted by waynejr2
    Originally posted by Hokie
    Originally posted by jtcgs
    Originally posted by waynejr2
    Originally posted by lifesbrink

    Is it EQ?  Or does this go back farther?  It really bothers me that progression went from levels and skills, something I was used to from the days of Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest, or other games, to needing gear to be able to fight at all.  So who's bright idea was it to screw us all with this?

    E. Gary Gygax.

     Exactly.

    +1 boots of escaping

    Negatory.

     

    Did you ever read through the original giant series modules?  they had swords of giant slaying for the characters to find to gear them up.  Look at the amount of treasure in most of the modules.   Look at the treasure for monsters as well.  E.G.G had lots of loot in his game even though he was against monty haulism.  Perhaps your DMs didn't give out a lot of it, but if you look at the old products with HONEST review, you will see it.

     Nope, never read thru. But I did play thru them (well all except 1).

    And just because youre getting treasure and magic items to help in your adventure doesnt mean it equates to a gear grind. AD&D was a level grind since most encounters you couldnt talk you way out of.

     

    A person didnt play Against the Giants G1 just to gear up so they could play G2 and then to play G3 modules, that then lead them into the D series, and last to the Q series. Thats WOW.

    Just a point of correction here, that's not WoW, that's Everquest, specifically the Kunark Expansion, and it was codified during Velious and written in stone for Luclin.

    The idea of reaching max level, then raiding for gear to help you do more max level only content is solely EQ's baby, but it's a natural extension of what would have happened if you played an AD&D campaign which had two things, a level cap and no character retirement.

    I am about 85% sure that there was no more than 1 sword of giant slaying in the G series, if any at all.

    Your characterization of AD&D gaming sessions... not so on target from my experience... though I am curious why your DM didn't let you haul all the treasure out of a dungeon... did you guys not think to leave someone there to guard it and send someone back for pack horses?

    If you are sure about the giant slaying sword, then you are wrong.

    You have to look at what the OP is asking.  Who started it.

    It's like asking who is responsible for airplanes.  You are talking about the modern era of jets and fly by wire and discounting the early work. That's how I see what you are doing.  I have a specific background in regards to dnd and the old days.

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  • lifesbrinklifesbrink Member UncommonPosts: 553
    Originally posted by Axehilt

    Logic is responsible.

    You have a game with bosses and they need to reward something which meaningfully makes players stronger.  Directly awarding new abilities or stat upgrades is really arbitrary and weird.  Rewarding an actual item you put on your actual character is much less weird (the only weirdness lies in the fact that a sword is making you stronger.)

    I can understand the logic of reward, but that does not explain the aspect of making player skill negligible in favor of gear.

    My blog is a continuing story of what MMO's should be like.

  • lifesbrinklifesbrink Member UncommonPosts: 553
    Originally posted by skydiver12

    I've got the feeling somethign gone amiss here.
    Are we talking gear progression like "any gear upgrade" or gear progression like item Gates and 90% of my characters combat stats come from gear?


    Cause i see no point in discussion the first one, as for the second one, i think i can nail it down to my personal first contact with elemental stats attached to weapons which made me able to damage monsters at all (Rangarok online?) and as for overall stat contribution versus a naked character in WOW?

    Can't say if a better quality armor set made all the difference in EQ, it certainly didn't in Lineage1.

    My personal take is 2002~is where character growth beyond the item grind stopped.

    To clarify, the second progression with 90% stats from gear.

    My blog is a continuing story of what MMO's should be like.

  • GadarethGadareth Member UncommonPosts: 310

    Traditionally there are 4 great pillars by which a character was rated :-

    Stats = These are his statistics strenfth, intelligence charisma, Hps, mana etc.

    Level = self explanatory

    Abiliites/Skills = What could he do how well could he do it

    Equipment

    These 4 factors togather made up basically how good your character was on paper. How good he was in reality was down to the player.

    Equipment has and always was a strong factor in a reoleplaying game he right equipment could make the difference a standard broadsword was seriously out classed by a Vorpal Blade for example.

     

  • lifesbrinklifesbrink Member UncommonPosts: 553
    Originally posted by Uhwop

     I never played D&D, I played pretty much everything Paladium though.  While not D&D, those books are pretty similliar in their rules, and were designed to be a more streamline and easier to use ruleset.

    I remember those games as being all about character development.  You had magic items and item quality, but that wasn't what defined your character.  Even Rift, which had robots and mecha like armor, was still about character progression and not what gear I had.  I never had a player get a new Glitter Boy that had better stats, they had the same Glitter boy suit until it either got destroyed or was beyond repair and they were able to actually buy a new one. 

    The first time I remember playing an RPG that was focussed on getting better gear to improve my character was actually in games like Zelda, and some really early D&D PC games that did really bad jobs of translating the rules and always had you finding new weapons and armor as you played through the game.

    I couldn't imagine playing a table top game that had me roleplaying a sword and armor, instead of a character that I that I controlled and developed over the course of many years.  That's what mmo's that are all about gear progession feel like to me.  Like I'm playing an RPG, but instead of a character, I'm looking after gear. 

    Maybe that's why so many people call them "toons" instead of calling them characters today?  You level a character, you just slap gear on a toon.

    This sums my feelings up very well.  You read books and watch movies, and characters are defined by the weapons they wield, and rarely do they get a new one.  Gr.

    My blog is a continuing story of what MMO's should be like.

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