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Why TESO wasn’t designed as a true sandbox MMORPG

24

Comments

  • Dreamo84Dreamo84 Member UncommonPosts: 3,713

    You know what I never get. Everyone agrees that the Elderscrolls games are Sandboxes. But, they are 90% about quests. Most of what you do in Elderscrolls games is undergo quests.

    I thought quests were the enemy of sandboxes?

    image
  • alterfenixalterfenix Member UncommonPosts: 370
    Originally posted by Fendel84M

    You know what I never get. Everyone agrees that the Elderscrolls games are Sandboxes. But, they are 90% about quests. Most of what you do in Elderscrolls games is undergo quests.

    I thought quests were the enemy of sandboxes?

    You thought wrong. See Daggerfall as best example. You do there mostly quests and pretty much no other activities. Is it sandbox? 100%. Be a warrior, knight, thief, murderer and so on. Work on your reputation (or destroy it and be forgotten). And many other little things. But it has nothing to do with if there are quests or not. Second thing: as in case of Darkfall some pay argue but EvE is also contains quests, just called a different name there. So yeah, quests are not enemy of sandbox. Quests build around one single main story and nothing else are (+ nothing else or nearly nothing else to do).

  • aRtFuLThinGaRtFuLThinG Member UncommonPosts: 1,387
    Originally posted by Zaskar70

    If there is one thing that I’m certain of in the MMORPG genre it’s that true sandbox games don’t work

     It does work, it is just that the vast majority of people are sheeps and they like to be told want to do and what is good for them.

     

    It is the same reason why democracy hasn't always been a good system of government - because people likes to defer responsibities of thinking and follow the mob.

     

    Plato was spot on this point.

  • LesrachLesrach Member UncommonPosts: 112

    I'd like to see a system close to SWGs flagging system.

    - There would be several Factions you could join in. Players guilds also available.

    - Some factions would have agressive relationships with each other = FFA PVP with fulloot (FFA). And this would also to be subject to change when players would rise in to higher positions in to Factions and there be able to alter Faction relation ships.

    - If guilds would Declare(mutually) a War = FFA

    - if you attack certain Faction or Guild (FoG) NPCs or Players = you'd get flagged for FFA  for certains amount of time against that particular FoG. And continuous agression against them would gain you longer "Red" FFA status with particular organisations.

    So if you'd like to go around as non agressive player/Guild it would be possible, but you'd have to avoid  joining most FoG and accept that you cannot attack other FoG players/NPCs. And many good loot/materials would be behind other FoG facilities and areas, but not all.

    A tasty option could also be that some players might be able to get "Red" Murderer Flag. After attacking enough FoG. And gain ability to attack anyone in game, but their ability to enter any "puplic" place should be severely limited by FoG Guards attacking them on sight and by their inability to use any FoG based Markets.

    This way "Blue" players would be in relative safety if they'd choose to live that way. "Red" players life should be made miserable enough so that they would not be too common. Making very develpopped character naked rather easy kill for geared would be a start :)

  • Zaskar70Zaskar70 Member UncommonPosts: 27

    I really wish sandbox MMO's did work as far as the consumers are concerned I should have said.

    I knew while playing Ultima Online that sailing out to mine the great ore spots was a risk, I did it anyways accepting that risk. Some days I came home with a ton of ore to play with, other days I payed the piper.

    Sure I was pissed off every time I got murdered and robbed, but I never got mad at the game or the designer's, it was always my choice to go to the high risk high reward spots I had nobody to blame but myself.

    If more MMO players could accept that kind of risk or better yet deal with that kind of loss perhaps TESO would have been what some of you are wishing it was.

    I began my MMO career in a high risk environment so it doesnt bother me, I cant imagine beginning to play MMO's in one of the many low risk or no risk games that followed it and being ok when suddenly put into a high risk setting.

    This is why its my opinion that western AAA titles like TESO are afraid of the sandbox design, Asain MMO's seem to be more accepting of the high risk design that lends itself to sandbox MMO's.

    I never experienced more elation, joy, and sheer terror in any other MMO to date that I did while playing Ultima Online, I just wish more people could experience that type of game play without raging uncontrolably.

  • DavisFlightDavisFlight Member CommonPosts: 2,556
    Originally posted by Distopia
    Originally posted by DavisFlight
    Originally posted by asmkm22
    As much as I want to rally around your flag or whatever, I'm pretty sure they just said something like "we just wanted to create WoW with Elder Scrolls lore."

    This.

    Games like Eve and UO have more subs than most so called "sure shot success" themepark games.

    But sandboxes don't work! Neither do WOW clones, as seen by the complete failure of all the WoW clones of the last 8 years.

    I guess we should be glad it's not a WOW clone then, instead they decided to try something else from the past.

    Nah, it looks pretty much like WoW.

     

    If they had been trying to clone DAoC instead, there wouldn't be quest based leveling, instances, phasing, or megaserver garbage.

    If they had cloned DAoC instead it might actually be good.

  • DraemosDraemos Member UncommonPosts: 1,521

    Eve online says hi!

    But seriously, it just needs to be a well implemented sandbox with proper funding.  All the sandboxes that have been released in the past decade are catastrophes of game design, painfully exploitable, or poorly programmed.  Even Eve suffers from this with its painfully slow pacing.

  • AkerbeltzAkerbeltz Member UncommonPosts: 170

    The OP's experience doesn't mirror mine neither I agree with his gross reductionism and evidently biased analysis.

     

    In terms of sales numbers and long-term profitability, EVE and Ultima Online salute you (the latter still holds subs after 15 years of going live). Yeah, yeah, I might agree that dumb and convenient fit the masses better but, still, the themepark crapfests that've been published in the last 7 years are far from being considered financial success cases.

     

    I'd dare to say that this "one size fits all", "ultra-casual", "superconvenient", "look for the lowest common denominator among gamers" just doesn't work, both from an artistic, technical and financial points of view. My 2 cents is to go back to an specialized market-segments model, that is, specialized games for niche publics.

     

    Lastly, in terms of gaming, many of us prefer the concept of a virtual world with a high degree of interaction, with player run economy and politics and a risk/reward paradigm. In other words, the tabletop rpg mechanics applied to the mmorpg world (as it was originally conceived).

     

    Back in my UO days, I'd join up with other white-knights of fortune to protect travellers and merchants, for a fee, from Britain to Trinsic. I could have been a merchant, or a bandit, but I chose to be a kind bodyguard; you just made your own story, no need for an on-rails personal story. And yes, I had my frustrations, I was robbed, I was ganked, my house was put on fire... but I always struggled to go on, my frustrations were part of my character's biography, made me feel even more attached to him, like he was carrying out an interesting existence in the virtual world - you rise, you fail, you succed again, meet REAL friends and enemies on the way.

     

    And the victory, oh, when the victory came! I've never felt such a thing again.

     

    There was a wise man who said "there's no party without cruelty", which is a way to say that you cannot taste the true ardors of success unless you've previously gone through the halls of pain. This is true for every game or leisure activity, from football to poker.

     

    It's a pity that mmorpgs have forgotten this precious lesson somewhere along the road (probably after WoW-BC, hehehe).

     

    EDIT: typos

    Whoever fights monsters should see to it that in the process he does not become a monster. And if you gaze long enough into an abyss, the abyss will gaze back into you.

  • SavageHorizonSavageHorizon Member EpicPosts: 3,466
    Originally posted by walltar
    Well Archeage will be sandbox, so all sandbox lovers could go play it. I would love TESO as sandbox, but i like both sandbox MMOs ( played EvE, UO, Darkfail) and themepark MMOs (AOC, SWToR, GW2) But most people dont like sandbox games so i dont see Big AAA MMO as viable option. They need to make money they are not charity, they are company, whose purpose is to maky money by making games.

    ArcheAge is an hybrid MMO it's not a sandbox MMO. It has some features that you would find in a sandbox game but it's also a themepark.

    And if we go by Smeds discription of EQNext then their is an big AAA title sandbox coming our way. It will be like comng home for many of us EQ vets, a true successes to the mother of all 3d MMO's. A sandbox that has epic PVE and a PVP system with next gen features and graphics.

    Personally i thi k EQNext will be a hybrid MMO this is the way MMO should go now.

     




  • RottenbrainsRottenbrains Member Posts: 2
    Guys, what about making two servers, one smaller server where the player population and PvP is quite guild based, like the flagging system Lesrach mentioned, and the other server very player based, with barely any to no NPCs, i'd think for lore sake some greater lore-mentioned characters should be in this server, but all blacksmiths, soldiers, bakers, alchemists, etc, etc. Would be players.

    And/or maybe allow players to create their own servers and configure them in basic and advanced options, also allowing players to add mods...Seeing mods have been very important in the past TES titles, I can't imagine a new TES game without, really.

    That said, aslong as there's fast paced mouse-button action combat, with first person and third person options, and a dynamic, immersive, questline with subquests and a main questline, and alot of options to fool around, i'll be more than happy.
  • JetrpgJetrpg Member UncommonPosts: 2,347
    Originally posted by Rthuth434

    ...OR... because for the millionth time a shot caller who use to be at Mythic did what Mythic does best, rehash their old work.

     

    CAlling BS.
    I just wish a former mythic dood would just remake the darn game, yet they never have. They have made like daoc + wow + other shit thats awful = poopsticks .
    And thats what we get, poopsticks, which aren;t much fun.
    Please can i haz daocburger 2.0.

    "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

  • ZorgoZorgo Member UncommonPosts: 2,254
    so just to summarize the OP:

    TESO won't be a true sandbox because people used to kill him in UO.
  • sapphensapphen Member UncommonPosts: 911
    Originally posted by Jetrpg

    Originally posted by Rthuth434

    ...OR... because for the millionth time a shot caller who use to be at Mythic did what Mythic does best, rehash their old work.

    CAlling BS.
    I just wish a former mythic dood would just remake the darn game, yet they never have. They have made like daoc + wow + other shit thats awful = poopsticks .
    And thats what we get, poopsticks, which aren;t much fun.
    Please can i haz daocburger 2.0.

    Have you not seen Camelot Unchained?
  • IselinIselin Member LegendaryPosts: 18,719

    To the OP:

    Nice post that acurately reflects a lot of my own memories of the early MMO days. Total sandboxes are a bloody mess that only sound good in theory and are beloved by all the hardcore posers who want us to know how tough they are when they're posturing in forums.

    [mod edit]

     

    "Social media gives legions of idiots the right to speak when they once only spoke at a bar after a glass of wine, without harming the community ... but now they have the same right to speak as a Nobel Prize winner. It's the invasion of the idiots”

    ― Umberto Eco

    “Microtransactions? In a single player role-playing game? Are you nuts?” 
    ― CD PROJEKT RED

  • OnomasOnomas Member UncommonPosts: 1,147
    Originally posted by Zaskar70

    If there is one thing that I’m certain of in the MMORPG genre it’s that true sandbox games don’t work

     

    Name one true sandbox that has been released since WOW came out. Minus EVE which works fine.

    Thats why they dont work, because you dont have any. Some companies are changing that slowly but surely. More sandbox stlye games will be coming out of the next few years than all they years of mmorpgs combined. We shall see then.

    Its like going to a chevy dealership with a full lot of chevy cars and trucks and the salesperson tells you fords dont work. Fact is after 90% of themepark, linear, fluff 2 week long stories, eye candy instead of features, and so much more have failed, you cant really say thats the best route either.

    In the past 4 years you have seen more companies sell out, go bankrupt, or close down these games...... all of which have been themepark style games. Its a poor analogy.

    There are good themepark and good sandbox, but the truth is the gameplay and features are lacking like crazy. Doesnt matter which kind of game it is, the game companies need to make them better and get off the WOW coat tails and the single player console rpg mentality.

  • OnomasOnomas Member UncommonPosts: 1,147
    Originally posted by Zaskar70
    Originally posted by Reklaw

    I want a true sandbox, but full loot FFA PVP only if it's optional else it's not a sandbox game but yet a game where the developers force you to play a certain way. Which is not what a true sandbox should be like in my opinion.

     

    A sandbox game is about freedom to do what you want, how you want it and when you want it. Not how developers want you too play, but just developers given players the tools to shape or make a name in that world.

     

        

     

    These two statements are contradictory, what if some player's want to kill and loot other player's?

    Sandboxes have nothing to do with full loot open world pvp. Its a misconception. Matter of fact more sandbox games have little or no pvp whatsoever than with it.

    Sandbox is about choice and freedom, crafting, exploring, social aspects, and more. Not about going out and being able to player kill everyone you see.

    And the full loot pvp stuff came from themeparks btw ;)

     

  • IselinIselin Member LegendaryPosts: 18,719
    Originally posted by Zorgo
    so just to summarize the OP: TESO won't be a true sandbox because people used to kill him in UO.

    So just to summarize the summary: I'm not a carebear. The harsher the environment the better! (or at least, that's what I say with absolutely zero risk in discussion forums)

    "Social media gives legions of idiots the right to speak when they once only spoke at a bar after a glass of wine, without harming the community ... but now they have the same right to speak as a Nobel Prize winner. It's the invasion of the idiots”

    ― Umberto Eco

    “Microtransactions? In a single player role-playing game? Are you nuts?” 
    ― CD PROJEKT RED

  • CelusiosCelusios Member UncommonPosts: 337
    Good post dude! I myself never got to play Ultima Online, as in 1998 I was only 6... but from everything I have ever heard it was the sandbox game. The only game of the modern generation to try to replicate that game has been a complete flop (yes you Mortal Online). It's sad.
  • IselinIselin Member LegendaryPosts: 18,719
    Originally posted by Onomas
    Originally posted by Zaskar70
    Originally posted by Reklaw

    I want a true sandbox, but full loot FFA PVP only if it's optional else it's not a sandbox game but yet a game where the developers force you to play a certain way. Which is not what a true sandbox should be like in my opinion.

     

    A sandbox game is about freedom to do what you want, how you want it and when you want it. Not how developers want you too play, but just developers given players the tools to shape or make a name in that world.

     

        

     

    These two statements are contradictory, what if some player's want to kill and loot other player's?

    Sandboxes have nothing to do with full loot open world pvp. Its a misconception. Matter of fact more sandbox games have little or no pvp whatsoever than with it.

    Sandbox is about choice and freedom, crafting, exploring, social aspects, and more. Not about going out and being able to player kill everyone you see.

    And the full loot pvp stuff came from themeparks btw ;)

     

    Actually he's right and you're wrong. The type of sandbox you're talking about is a later day revisionist idealized fantasy. He is talking about the original real sandbox as it actually was. Full loot PVP was the way it was. For obvious reasons, new sandbox aficionados want to distance themselves form that core feature. 

    "Social media gives legions of idiots the right to speak when they once only spoke at a bar after a glass of wine, without harming the community ... but now they have the same right to speak as a Nobel Prize winner. It's the invasion of the idiots”

    ― Umberto Eco

    “Microtransactions? In a single player role-playing game? Are you nuts?” 
    ― CD PROJEKT RED

  • keitholikeitholi Member UncommonPosts: 140
    Originally posted by Zaskar70

    If there is one thing that I’m certain of in the MMORPG genre it’s that true sandbox games don’t work

    For the vast majority of the players that are out there.

    I began my MMORPG journey in 1998 in what I still consider the ultimate sandbox game, Ultima Online.

    Back in 1998 only 2 mainstream MMO’s existed, Ultima Online and Lineage and as far as anyone in the West was concerned Lineage didn’t exist because we didn’t hear about it, so for most western gamers it was Ultima Online or nothing.

    Ultima Online was the great experiment, a free roaming, do anything, skill based world to explore. There were no quests to do, no guides, no tutorials, nothing to nudge you in any one direction. You chose your starting city and you were thrown into the world.

    Ultima Online was a dangerous place to be, far more dangerous than any other MMORPG I have ever played since. Seeing another player while out exploring the world was a very tense moment, you could almost feel the tension between the two of you, it was this way because Ultima Online was a true sandbox in that anything could happen, you could lose everything you had on you, you could make a new friend, or you could choose to avoid one another.

    There were no true safe areas in Ultima Online. The city’s were a lot safer than the wilds though you could still be robbed by a thief without ever knowing it or even killed outright before the guards could respond. A common macro in that game when going to a bank in town was “Bank, Guards!, Thief!” since the thieves would hang out at the banks to relieve you of your adventuring loot before you could deposit it.

    Playing the game could be incredibly frustrating, for example on several occasions after jumping in my boat and sailing to a resource rich mining area on one of the coasts I would mine for hours only to have a couple guys sail into view, block me in with their boat before I could react and subsequently murder me. I would have to stand there on my boat which was now their boat as a ghost and watch as they looted my lifeless body, transferred all the ore it took me hours to mine to their boat, use my boat key which was now their boat key to deconstruct my boat to sell later. If they were nice they would rez me and gate me to some town, or more often than not just ignore my poor ghost until they sailed to a port and I could get off their boat and go to a healer to get rez’d.

    People couldn’t really handle a true sandbox game back then, the crying and loss of subscriptions became so great that Ultima Online had to change to survive so they split the game in two and created Trammel, an exact mirror of the old world Felucca but with one twist, it was no longer a true sandbox for there was no player vs. player allowed, you could live in absolute security and thus the great experiment ended and the first true sandbox game had failed.

    In my opinion if any AAA dev studio put out a true open world sandbox game today the tears would be endless and the screams of rage deafening.

    Anyone who posts that they want a true sandbox game but wasn’t around to play Ultima Online before Trammel doesn’t really understand what they are asking for in my opinion.

    I love when people trot out the ole' "if it's not FFA PvP full loot, then its not a sandbox" meme. Just like in real life, as civilization started to take hold, people got tired of the lawlessness and did something about it. Nobody wants to live in a lawless society where everyone is out to slit your throat. Well, nobody who lives outside Somalia anyways. The MAJORITY of people do NOT want to lose everything they work hard at everytime they get killed in an MMO. That viewpoint is very niche and only a small percentage of the player population wants those types of games as PROVEN time and time again by less-than-stellar performances for those types of games. Griefing, full loot and no safe spots anywhere are NOT required to make a sandbox.

  • IselinIselin Member LegendaryPosts: 18,719
    Originally posted by keitholi
    Originally posted by Zaskar70

    If there is one thing that I’m certain of in the MMORPG genre it’s that true sandbox games don’t work

    For the vast majority of the players that are out there.

    I began my MMORPG journey in 1998 in what I still consider the ultimate sandbox game, Ultima Online.

    Back in 1998 only 2 mainstream MMO’s existed, Ultima Online and Lineage and as far as anyone in the West was concerned Lineage didn’t exist because we didn’t hear about it, so for most western gamers it was Ultima Online or nothing.

    Ultima Online was the great experiment, a free roaming, do anything, skill based world to explore. There were no quests to do, no guides, no tutorials, nothing to nudge you in any one direction. You chose your starting city and you were thrown into the world.

    Ultima Online was a dangerous place to be, far more dangerous than any other MMORPG I have ever played since. Seeing another player while out exploring the world was a very tense moment, you could almost feel the tension between the two of you, it was this way because Ultima Online was a true sandbox in that anything could happen, you could lose everything you had on you, you could make a new friend, or you could choose to avoid one another.

    There were no true safe areas in Ultima Online. The city’s were a lot safer than the wilds though you could still be robbed by a thief without ever knowing it or even killed outright before the guards could respond. A common macro in that game when going to a bank in town was “Bank, Guards!, Thief!” since the thieves would hang out at the banks to relieve you of your adventuring loot before you could deposit it.

    Playing the game could be incredibly frustrating, for example on several occasions after jumping in my boat and sailing to a resource rich mining area on one of the coasts I would mine for hours only to have a couple guys sail into view, block me in with their boat before I could react and subsequently murder me. I would have to stand there on my boat which was now their boat as a ghost and watch as they looted my lifeless body, transferred all the ore it took me hours to mine to their boat, use my boat key which was now their boat key to deconstruct my boat to sell later. If they were nice they would rez me and gate me to some town, or more often than not just ignore my poor ghost until they sailed to a port and I could get off their boat and go to a healer to get rez’d.

    People couldn’t really handle a true sandbox game back then, the crying and loss of subscriptions became so great that Ultima Online had to change to survive so they split the game in two and created Trammel, an exact mirror of the old world Felucca but with one twist, it was no longer a true sandbox for there was no player vs. player allowed, you could live in absolute security and thus the great experiment ended and the first true sandbox game had failed.

    In my opinion if any AAA dev studio put out a true open world sandbox game today the tears would be endless and the screams of rage deafening.

    Anyone who posts that they want a true sandbox game but wasn’t around to play Ultima Online before Trammel doesn’t really understand what they are asking for in my opinion.

    I love when people trot out the ole' "if it's not FFA PvP full loot, then its not a sandbox" meme. Just like in real life, as civilization started to take hold, people got tired of the lawlessness and did something about it. Nobody wants to live in a lawless society where everyone is out to slit your throat. Well, nobody who lives outside Somalia anyways. The MAJORITY of people do NOT want to lose everything they work hard at everytime they get killed in an MMO. That viewpoint is very niche and only a small percentage of the player population wants those types of games as PROVEN time and time again by less-than-stellar performances for those types of games. Griefing, full loot and no safe spots anywhere are NOT required to make a sandbox.

    You're almost correct. Except I would change your last statement to: "Griefing, full loot and no safe spots anywhere are NOT required, or desirable to make a MMORPG."

    The problem is that sandbox proponents are always trotting out the parts of UO they don't feel embarassed about when praising the greatness of sandboxes in the "golden age of MMOs" while conveniently forgetting the most noticeable and obnoxious aspects of it.

    A lot of people here love to pigeonhole all MMOS into sandbox or themepark. I rather think of MMORPGS in their entirety as either a POS or not a POS. I haven't seen anything about TESO that makes me think POS... but I seem to be in the minority in this cesspool of a forum.

     

    "Social media gives legions of idiots the right to speak when they once only spoke at a bar after a glass of wine, without harming the community ... but now they have the same right to speak as a Nobel Prize winner. It's the invasion of the idiots”

    ― Umberto Eco

    “Microtransactions? In a single player role-playing game? Are you nuts?” 
    ― CD PROJEKT RED

  • Caliburn101Caliburn101 Member Posts: 636

    OP - could you please encode your post into a DNA sequence, put it in a airbourne retrovirus and then release it into the community.

    People who bang on and on about OWPvP with full loot need to be reprogrammed and brought back to reality.

    Such games don't work.

    You either have an outstanding and unabusable consequences system, or you utterly fail...

    ... and to date - not one company has created said system.

    Fact.

  • Caliburn101Caliburn101 Member Posts: 636
    Originally posted by Iselin
    Originally posted by keitholi
    Originally posted by Zaskar70

    If there is one thing that I’m certain of in the MMORPG genre it’s that true sandbox games don’t work

    For the vast majority of the players that are out there.

    I began my MMORPG journey in 1998 in what I still consider the ultimate sandbox game, Ultima Online.

    Back in 1998 only 2 mainstream MMO’s existed, Ultima Online and Lineage and as far as anyone in the West was concerned Lineage didn’t exist because we didn’t hear about it, so for most western gamers it was Ultima Online or nothing.

    Ultima Online was the great experiment, a free roaming, do anything, skill based world to explore. There were no quests to do, no guides, no tutorials, nothing to nudge you in any one direction. You chose your starting city and you were thrown into the world.

    Ultima Online was a dangerous place to be, far more dangerous than any other MMORPG I have ever played since. Seeing another player while out exploring the world was a very tense moment, you could almost feel the tension between the two of you, it was this way because Ultima Online was a true sandbox in that anything could happen, you could lose everything you had on you, you could make a new friend, or you could choose to avoid one another.

    There were no true safe areas in Ultima Online. The city’s were a lot safer than the wilds though you could still be robbed by a thief without ever knowing it or even killed outright before the guards could respond. A common macro in that game when going to a bank in town was “Bank, Guards!, Thief!” since the thieves would hang out at the banks to relieve you of your adventuring loot before you could deposit it.

    Playing the game could be incredibly frustrating, for example on several occasions after jumping in my boat and sailing to a resource rich mining area on one of the coasts I would mine for hours only to have a couple guys sail into view, block me in with their boat before I could react and subsequently murder me. I would have to stand there on my boat which was now their boat as a ghost and watch as they looted my lifeless body, transferred all the ore it took me hours to mine to their boat, use my boat key which was now their boat key to deconstruct my boat to sell later. If they were nice they would rez me and gate me to some town, or more often than not just ignore my poor ghost until they sailed to a port and I could get off their boat and go to a healer to get rez’d.

    People couldn’t really handle a true sandbox game back then, the crying and loss of subscriptions became so great that Ultima Online had to change to survive so they split the game in two and created Trammel, an exact mirror of the old world Felucca but with one twist, it was no longer a true sandbox for there was no player vs. player allowed, you could live in absolute security and thus the great experiment ended and the first true sandbox game had failed.

    In my opinion if any AAA dev studio put out a true open world sandbox game today the tears would be endless and the screams of rage deafening.

    Anyone who posts that they want a true sandbox game but wasn’t around to play Ultima Online before Trammel doesn’t really understand what they are asking for in my opinion.

    I love when people trot out the ole' "if it's not FFA PvP full loot, then its not a sandbox" meme. Just like in real life, as civilization started to take hold, people got tired of the lawlessness and did something about it. Nobody wants to live in a lawless society where everyone is out to slit your throat. Well, nobody who lives outside Somalia anyways. The MAJORITY of people do NOT want to lose everything they work hard at everytime they get killed in an MMO. That viewpoint is very niche and only a small percentage of the player population wants those types of games as PROVEN time and time again by less-than-stellar performances for those types of games. Griefing, full loot and no safe spots anywhere are NOT required to make a sandbox.

    You're almost correct. Except I would change your last statement to: "Griefing, full loot and no safe spots anywhere are NOT required, or desirable to make a MMORPG."

    The problem is that sandbox proponents are always trotting out the parts of UO they don't feel embarassed about when praising the greatness of sandboxes in the "golden age of MMOs" while conveniently forgetting the most noticeable and obnoxious aspects of it.

    A lot of people here love to pigeonhole all MMOS into sandbox or themepark. I rather think of MMORPGS in their entirety as either a POS or not a POS. I haven't seen anything about TESO that makes me think POS... but I seem to be in the minority in this cesspool of a forum.

     

    As an elite member with over 950 posts - it would seem that you cry crocodile tears in complaining that you are in a minority in this 'cesspool'.

  • HatefullHatefull Member EpicPosts: 2,502

    Obviously OP is entitled to his (or her, I didn't check) opinion on the matter, but I do not agree with his (or her) 'rules' on what makes a sand box.

    There are many true sand box games out there and more coming, and just because you can't lose everything in the blink of an eye, does not mean they are not 'true' sand box games.  Anyway, the write up was not all that impressive, if UO was so amazing they would have a lot more numbers and still be a powerhouse in the gaming world.  It is not the only true sand dox MMO.

     

    If you want a new idea, go read an old book.

    In order to be insulted, I must first value your opinion.

  • potapithikospotapithikos Member Posts: 178
    Originally posted by Caliburn101

    OP - could you please encode your post into a DNA sequence, put it in a airbourne retrovirus and then release it into the community.

    People who bang on and on about OWPvP with full loot need to be reprogrammed and brought back to reality.

    Such games don't work.

    You either have an outstanding and unabusable consequences system, or you utterly fail...

    ... and to date - not one company has created said system.

    Fact.

    EVE.

    Open World Full Loot PvP.

    Works.

    Fact.

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