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Biggest MMO Failure to date?

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  • ktanner3ktanner3 Member UncommonPosts: 4,063
    Originally posted by eddieg50
       I think SWG has to be right in there when talking about biggest failures, The Hype was HUGE, Time Magazine, News Week, it was everywhere, then when people started playing it they were stunned by how bad it was.  You could actually be killed by a butterfly, AI was totally over powered, Lag was just as bad as Vanguard, it took years to become a full fledged Jedi,  because you could not actually play the game it became a Giant chat room although it was a very good chat room. People left quickly and it was down to a small core of fanatic dedicated Star Wars players, then Sony took over and put the final nail in the Coffin.   Yes Epic Failure!

    I have to disagree with this. Yes, that game when it released had tons of issues, but it still had a lot of people playing it. I started playing it in late 2004, a full year and a half after it had been released and there were people everywhere.  It did lose people to WOW, but it still had more than enough to maintain itself as a subscription based game. And this was back in the days when you were only allowed one character per server. What screwed galaxies was the mismanagemant by SOE and LA.  It didn't meet expectations, but then again any game with the Star Wars brand on it is going to have sky high expectations. 

    Currently Playing: World of Warcraft

  • hh33hh33 Member Posts: 55

    SWTOR is a total failure, perhaps the biggest ever and the numbers do not lie.

    EA/Bioware claimed 1.7 million active subscribers during Q1 2012 and now this game is sub 500k, sub 300K according to some estimates.

    That is a drop-off of 61% or 83% inside of 6 months. Those figures are insane and do not represent a quiet player exit vs an all out stampede for the door.

    The game is an utter failure and is destined for the MMO trash pile.

  • eddieg50eddieg50 Member UncommonPosts: 1,809
    Originally posted by ktanner3
    Originally posted by eddieg50
       I think SWG has to be right in there when talking about biggest failures, The Hype was HUGE, Time Magazine, News Week, it was everywhere, then when people started playing it they were stunned by how bad it was.  You could actually be killed by a butterfly, AI was totally over powered, Lag was just as bad as Vanguard, it took years to become a full fledged Jedi,  because you could not actually play the game it became a Giant chat room although it was a very good chat room. People left quickly and it was down to a small core of fanatic dedicated Star Wars players, then Sony took over and put the final nail in the Coffin.   Yes Epic Failure!

    I have to disagree with this. Yes, that game when it released had tons of issues, but it still had a lot of people playing it. I started playing it in late 2004, a full year and a half after it had been released and there were people everywhere.  It did lose people to WOW, but it still had more than enough to maintain itself as a subscription based game. And this was back in the days when you were only allowed one character per server. What screwed galaxies was the mismanagemant by SOE and LA.  It didn't meet expectations, but then again any game with the Star Wars brand on it is going to have sky high expectations. 

       I guess i am looking at SWG because no matter who took it over, no matter what they tried to do it failed. The game had everything going for it-Open World, unique and different planets, nice harvesting, nice crafting, good space game (although it came in late when people had allready left) friendly people, nice guilds and fun places to chat.   But its fatal flaws killed it.  So I say that with all those things going for it, to die like that was an Epic Failure.

  • superniceguysuperniceguy Member UncommonPosts: 2,278
    Originally posted by eddieg50
    Originally posted by ktanner3
    Originally posted by eddieg50
       I think SWG has to be right in there when talking about biggest failures, The Hype was HUGE, Time Magazine, News Week, it was everywhere, then when people started playing it they were stunned by how bad it was.  You could actually be killed by a butterfly, AI was totally over powered, Lag was just as bad as Vanguard, it took years to become a full fledged Jedi,  because you could not actually play the game it became a Giant chat room although it was a very good chat room. People left quickly and it was down to a small core of fanatic dedicated Star Wars players, then Sony took over and put the final nail in the Coffin.   Yes Epic Failure!

    I have to disagree with this. Yes, that game when it released had tons of issues, but it still had a lot of people playing it. I started playing it in late 2004, a full year and a half after it had been released and there were people everywhere.  It did lose people to WOW, but it still had more than enough to maintain itself as a subscription based game. And this was back in the days when you were only allowed one character per server. What screwed galaxies was the mismanagemant by SOE and LA.  It didn't meet expectations, but then again any game with the Star Wars brand on it is going to have sky high expectations. 

       I guess i am looking at SWG because no matter who took it over, no matter what they tried to do it failed. The game had everything going for it-Open World, unique and different planets, nice harvesting, nice crafting, good space game (although it came in late when people had allready left) friendly people, nice guilds and fun places to chat.   But its fatal flaws killed it.  So I say that with all those things going for it, to die like that was an Epic Failure.

    The trouble with all MMOs they change over time, although SWG had 2 changes within the same year and no one trusted SOE/LA after the NGE, despite the fact then the game had no major changes to it after the NGE.

    By the time the game closed it was doing quite well, and the game was far from a failure in 2011 (SOE did a great job in turning the game around during the course of the 6 years), and last year with the free 45 days it brought a load of people back to the game, showing that there was a tonne of interest for the game still and not dead at all. The thing that made people return was the free time plus the free transfers. I suspect a loot of people would resubbed after the 45 days, but did not as the shutdown announcement beat them to it. I do not see many people playing the game for a solid 45 days and then just cancel, a lot would have subbed.

    SWTOR has had many free periods, and especially with it being new and having a top rate developer with Bioware, none of the free periods boosted SWTORs servers as much as SWG last year.

    Maybe Bioware can turn SWTOR around now but from what they have shown, is that the game is what it is and they can not expand upon it, like add Beast Master or multiplayer space battles etc, but just add more of what the game has already - more flashpoints, more warzones, more operation, more story etc

  • RizelStarRizelStar Member UncommonPosts: 2,773
    Originally posted by eddieg50
    Originally posted by eddieg50
    Originally posted by gervaise1
    Originally posted by eddieg50
    A failure at half a million players LOL,  Vanguard would die to have a quarter that many players

    The idea of what defines failure is a valid question.

    Number of players? Well if you ignore WoW, Guild Wars, Linegage, FF, League of Legions and a host of others then SWTOR didn't do very well.

    Ah number of players for a western subscription game you may cry. OK - but on that definition it isn't much better than WAR or AoC. WAR still had 300k+ subs in month 7 and AoC held onto a lot of subs pretty much until WAR launched; AoC still had about 100-150k 11 months after it launched. (Source: EA and Funcom's financial reports -  at the end Funcom gave a revenue range for AoC hence the range for the subs). Even EQ1 managed 650k subs at its peak and 450k for quite a while. UO as well. And we know that SWTOR wil have 0 subscribers in November so at that point it is a failure by this measure.

    Sales? Dwarfed by WoW, GW, EQ1, FF, Lineage.

    Longevity - no. SWTOR will probably see out 2 or 3 years because of the IP agreement but it doesn't look good.

    Profit made. Not a good measure at all. SWTOR cost a lot. And factor in part of the purchase price for Bioware - EA expected 1.2M subscribers at the time they bought  Bioware (source JR after the May results) .... dwarfs the reported $120 for VSoH, AoC was less still and even factoring in $84M or so for buying Mythic WAR will have looked cheap. Ditto TR when allowing for the stock options / damages that RG won in the court case against NCSoft. Against this measure - profit/return on investment  - SWTOR is a solid candidate for greatest failure.

    Content: not great for an mmo. People will debate the point but most agree this is a problem.

    Single player experience: probably scores highly here.

    MMO experience: and not very highly here.

    I am sure that there are other measures though.

       I just dont think you can call an mmo a failure with a half million players, that is a problem with our society today, if you are not perfect you are a failure-I dont agree

     

    I must say eddie your defense is interesting, if I'm corrrect didn't you say the same exact thing when they had 1 million subs? It was either you or someone else but if you don't see the pattern here then I almost(I said almost) fear for you. 

    The direction SWTOR is moving in, is not good, 500k IMO is good but to go from approx 2 mill and to go below 1 mill in less than a year? That shit isn't good period.

    Direction is not going towards success unfortunately.

     

    I might get banned for this. - Rizel Star.

    I'm not afraid to tell trolls what they [need] to hear, even if that means for me to have an forced absence afterwards.

    P2P LOGIC = If it's P2P it means longevity, overall better game, and THE BEST SUPPORT EVER!!!!!(Which has been rinsed and repeated about a thousand times)

    Common Sense Logic = P2P logic is no better than F2P Logic.

  • Grimlock426Grimlock426 Member Posts: 159

    Success and failure need to be viewed in context of expectations.  Having said that, it puts SWTOR ad the biggest failure in MMO history.

    Some have argued that having (allegedly) 500K subscribers represents a good number and therefore SWTOR cannot be considered a failure, and I strongly disagree. 

    For the hype, the expectations, the IP and the large sums of money spent on it, for SWTOR to be down to 500K after 8 months, with more exodus on the way, represents a colosal failure! 

  • ktanner3ktanner3 Member UncommonPosts: 4,063
    Originally posted by eddieg50
    Originally posted by ktanner3
    Originally posted by eddieg50
       I think SWG has to be right in there when talking about biggest failures, The Hype was HUGE, Time Magazine, News Week, it was everywhere, then when people started playing it they were stunned by how bad it was.  You could actually be killed by a butterfly, AI was totally over powered, Lag was just as bad as Vanguard, it took years to become a full fledged Jedi,  because you could not actually play the game it became a Giant chat room although it was a very good chat room. People left quickly and it was down to a small core of fanatic dedicated Star Wars players, then Sony took over and put the final nail in the Coffin.   Yes Epic Failure!

    I have to disagree with this. Yes, that game when it released had tons of issues, but it still had a lot of people playing it. I started playing it in late 2004, a full year and a half after it had been released and there were people everywhere.  It did lose people to WOW, but it still had more than enough to maintain itself as a subscription based game. And this was back in the days when you were only allowed one character per server. What screwed galaxies was the mismanagemant by SOE and LA.  It didn't meet expectations, but then again any game with the Star Wars brand on it is going to have sky high expectations. 

       I guess i am looking at SWG because no matter who took it over, no matter what they tried to do it failed. The game had everything going for it-Open World, unique and different planets, nice harvesting, nice crafting, good space game (although it came in late when people had allready left)

    Jump To Lightspeed was released in October 2004. I started playing around that time. There was still lots of players. The exodus didn't happen until November 2005 with the NGE. 

    friendly people, nice guilds and fun places to chat.   But its fatal flaws killed it.  So I say that with all those things going for it, to die like that was an Epic Failure.

    The game lasted 8 years so I wouldn't call it a failure. It never again attained that 300 k sub number after the NGE debacle but it was certainly not a failure. This is all opinion, but in my view neither SWG nor TOR is a failure. 

    Currently Playing: World of Warcraft

  • WolfmeisterWolfmeister Member UncommonPosts: 50

    SWTOR only mmo worth playing right now.

    LOTRO close but I want pvp. Unfortunately, LOTRO pvp is an afterthought.

    Casual noobs want to roll huttball once a week and then moan about getting jacked; I got 3000+ hours pvp experience, both sides of the SAME class. Even if I werent in full WH gear I would roll them. But since I am, its time for Dr. Funtimes:)

    Name the magical mmo that's even close to SWTOR; thought so have fun with the crickets.

    Nothing else comes close to the depth of the story, nothing else comes close to the difficulty of operations. Nothing comes close to the pvp or the rewards. Nothing. The end.

     

    We are the Founding Fathers in this virtual world in which we create. As such it seems we must do what our Founding Fathers had to do.. in order to let our fellow gamers have a fair shake.

  • RydesonRydeson Member UncommonPosts: 3,852

         To say something is "failure" is very subjective..  Granted people like to resort to the common grading system as the only definition of "failure" versus success..  To me alot what makes up rather something is falied or not is your own personal expectations and work put into it..  Look at USA's olympic basketball.. If we don't win gold and end up with silver or worse, in my opinion that is failure on the teams part.. Using a pro all-star team and not winning the gold is unaccectable..  If on paper you have a loaded team, with huge resources and don't produce the result.. I do not call that success..

        So..... if you have 200+ employees, with a 200 million budget (which is the biggest in MMO history) can people call that failure?  or success?   I guess only the accountants and management have the answer to that.. 

  • DreamionDreamion Member UncommonPosts: 287
    SWTOR, waste of dev time and a waste of our money. They should've done Kotor III, simple as that. I don't wanna hear about SWTOR again really, because its so damn bad. Just shut it down.
  • GoldknyghtGoldknyght Member UncommonPosts: 1,519
    Originally posted by Dreamion
    SWTOR, waste of dev time and a waste of our money. They should've done Kotor III, simple as that. I don't wanna hear about SWTOR again really, because its so damn bad. Just shut it down.

    Swtor wasnt bad to me i liked it was a fun game just was a single player game is all IMO and not an MMO

  • FusionFusion Member UncommonPosts: 1,398

    Tabula Rasa or APB (with original dev/pub)

    ps. SWTOR haven't failed yet, it's still going, sure it has some declined subs, but it haven't failed yet.

    http://neocron-game.com/ - now totally F2P no cash-shops or micro transactions at all.
  • BloodyVikingBloodyViking Member UncommonPosts: 132
    In objective terms moneywise I would say SW:TOR is by far the biggest failiure to date. There is a high likelyhood this game will never earn back the money that went into making it and marketing it.
  • Byne25Byne25 Member Posts: 41

    Sorry dissagree with everything you say. Bioware and EA never said it was a WoW killer it was the community who said that. Only a game can kill itself. TOR was not the level of success that everyone predicted but a complete failure is false and a lie. The game is still running, still being funded and still being developed.  [mod edit]

  • superniceguysuperniceguy Member UncommonPosts: 2,278
    Originally posted by Byne25

    Sorry dissagree with everything you say. Bioware and EA never said it was a WoW killer it was the community who said that. Only a game can kill itself. TOR was not the level of success that everyone predicted but a complete failure is false and a lie. The game is still running, still being funded and still being developed.  [mod edit]

    The fact that it needs 500K subs to break even proves that they wanted a WOW killer. WOW does not need 500K subs to survive, and if their subs did drop to 500K they would not be taking it F2P.  The sub figures for MMOs around WOWs release was about 300K/450K, so they would not have put in the funding to create a MMO that needed 500K subs to stay afloat

    Here is Bioware praising WOW and stating that any MMO that does not follow WOW is dumb

    The game would hardly be shut down yet, it has only been around half a year, and with the money it was put into it, they are not going to blow it off just yet, they have tried many different typs of free trials, when other MMos just do free trials once or twice a year, SWTOR had it virtually every weekend, and now has a level 15 constant free trial.  Now it is going F2P soon, which is the final attempt to get it from the bottom of the cesspool!

  • PranksterPrankster Member UncommonPosts: 163

    Horizons was the biggest MMO failure to date. Quit whining about SWTOR.

     

    Refugee from UO,EQ,AC,AC2,AO,DAOC,L2,SB,HZ,CoH,PT,EQ2,WoW,VG,SWG,EVE,WAR,DF,MO,AI,GA,LOTRO, SWTOR... Gw2 on Deck

  • VorchVorch Member UncommonPosts: 793

    If by failing, you mean the disparity between the expected results and the actual product, then yes, SWTOR, imo, is the largest, followed by TERA (really hurt me, personally).

     

    However, if you mean profitability, then no, SWTOR still remains profitable and will most likely be even more profitable as time goes on given its change to Freemium.

    "As you read these words, a release is seven days or less away or has just happened within the last seven days— those are now the only two states you’ll find the world of Tyria."...Guild Wars 2

  • superniceguysuperniceguy Member UncommonPosts: 2,278
    Originally posted by Prankster

    Horizons was the biggest MMO failure to date. Quit whining about SWTOR.

     

    What is that? I have not even heard of it

    To be the biggest MMO failure everyone needs to know about it!

    Did it have like 5 million subs then drop down to about 100k in a few months? If it did, then you are definately right!

  • superniceguysuperniceguy Member UncommonPosts: 2,278
    Originally posted by Vorch

     

     

    However, if you mean profitability, then no, SWTOR still remains profitable and will most likely be even more profitable as time goes on given its change to Freemium.

    It certainly is not getting profitable at the moment. They say they need 500k subs to break even, and by now (within the next month at the latest) the subs will be below that, so now they are losing money on SWTOR now. They are doing F2P in hope to stop the loss

  • tiefighter25tiefighter25 Member Posts: 937
    Originally posted by Byne25

    [mod edit]

    Well good morning Sunshine.

    Not everything is sold for a profit. Bargain Bins sell items to reduce a loss. All criticism of the game aside.

    If you want to be an optimist and say the game cost $200 million to develope and market and the game had a "hard" average subscriber base of a million; it would still take over a year just to break even.

    If you assume the game cost $500 million to develope and market and has hard a "hard" average subscrier base of 500,000; it would take over 5.5 years just to break even.

    The truth lies somewhere between the two scenarios above.  I think (but ofc I could be wrong) most would agree it's closer to the second scenario, thus the Freemium conversion.

    When you factor in a 6 year oppurtunity cost, I'm really not seeing (even if you love playing the game) that the game is a financial success.

    EA's Warhammer On Line is still on line. (I guess it's aptly named.) I'd hardly call it a success. It's been in maintenance mode for years, sucking up a small die-hard fanbase's subscription revenue (and mandatory cash shop items ie. Renown cap increase) attempting to offset its developmental cost. To me, the SWTOR freemium conversion looks like more of the same with new spin.

    [mod edit]

  • GdemamiGdemami Member EpicPosts: 12,342


    Originally posted by tiefighter25

    If you want to be an optimist and say the game cost $200 million to develope and market and the game had a "hard" average subscriber base of a million; it would still take over a year just to break even.

    Odd math you got there...


    2.4M sales through in January = 2.4M x 60 USD per box = 144M USD.
    1M subscribers for 7 months = 7M x 15 USD per subscriber = 105M USD.

    So all in all that is 249M USD.

  • tiefighter25tiefighter25 Member Posts: 937
    Originally posted by Gdemami

     


    Originally posted by tiefighter25

    If you want to be an optimist and say the game cost $200 million to develope and market and the game had a "hard" average subscriber base of a million; it would still take over a year just to break even.


     

    Odd math you got there...


    2.4M sales through in January = 2.4M x 60 USD per box = 144M USD.
    1M subscribers for 7 months = 7M x 15 USD per subscriber = 105M USD.

    So all in all that is 249M USD.

    You think they got anything close to $60 a box?

    You also forgot the initial free month and the give away free month.

    You forgot all server maintence and staff benefits and salaries.

    Assuming there was a profit you forgot taxes.

    I was thumb nailing to illustrate a point. You are at best nit picking, at worst grasping at straws.

  • GdemamiGdemami Member EpicPosts: 12,342


    Originally posted by tiefighter25

    You think they got anything close to $60 a box?You also forgot the initial free month and the give away free month.You forgot all server maintence and staff benefits and salaries.Assuming there was a profit you forgot taxes.I was thumb nailing to illustrate a point. You are at best nit picking, at worst grasping at straws.

    Did not forget anything, thanks. You failed at illustrating anything tho...

  • tiefighter25tiefighter25 Member Posts: 937
    Originally posted by Gdemami

     


    Originally posted by tiefighter25

    You think they got anything close to $60 a box?

     

    You also forgot the initial free month and the give away free month.

    You forgot all server maintence and staff benefits and salaries.

    Assuming there was a profit you forgot taxes.

    I was thumb nailing to illustrate a point. You are at best nit picking, at worst grasping at straws.


     

    Did not forget anything, thanks. You failed at illustrating anything tho...

    I beg to differ, but if you want to believe that the server consolidations, several rounds of lay-offs, key executives leaving/terminated, lack of EA announcing exact active subscriber numbers, and the conversion of the game to Free To Play is because the game is a resounding financial success; that is of course your perogotive.

  • GdemamiGdemami Member EpicPosts: 12,342


    Originally posted by tiefighter25

    I beg to differ, but if you want to believe that the server consolidations, several rounds of lay-offs, key executives leaving/terminated, lack of EA announcing exact active subscriber numbers, and the conversion of the game to Free To Play is because the game is a resounding financial success; that is of course your perogotive.

    I guess it comes down what you consider "failure".

    If you attribute server consolidation, layoffs, executives leaves, no exact subscriber numbers and F2P conversion as "failure", it will be a "failure". Circular reasoning as any other invalid logic proves just about anything...

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