Daily Blogroll 4/29 — Free as in Beer Edition

After hours of agonizing labor pains, SOE popped Free Realms out last night, just before midnight in California. They were just half an hour from having to have their launch party in Fairbanks, but they technically shipped it Tuesday, despite it being Wednesday in four-fifths of the world. Despite the late hour, the server was bustling with new chefs and brawlers. It doesn’t look like Station Access members are considered members in Free Realms yet, or maybe it’s just me. Look for me in the game, my character is Tipa Tanglewood. Speedy custom name approval FTW!
Syncaine of Hardcore Casual feels there’s no way Free Realms can be a success because at a subscription rate a third of a normal MMO, they would need three times as many subscriptions as another MMO to be a success. I’m not sure FR is working with that business model. Wizard 101 is about to announce its two millionth account, and they have three pages of servers which are filled with people at all hours…
Keen of Keen and Graev’s Gaming Blog took a tiny off-the-cuff post about EQ3 (hinted at a year ago), and came up with some really good thoughts on how a next-gen EverQuest could attract new players while not alienating the old. Toldain picked up on it as well, trolling through forum posts to find out what players really wanted from an EQ3.
I shouldn’t have put Syncaine and Keen that close together, because now Syncaine is playing the “Not Cool Enough for Darkfall” card on Keen. Keen (wisely) hasn’t responded, but the comments are full of people coming to his aid. First, it’s not fair to make Keen the spokesman for anyone who doesn’t stick to Darkfall. People should ALWAYS play the game they enjoy playing, and if you’re not having fun in a game for whatever reason, why stick with it?
Isn’t it cool how a massive success story like Wizard 101 receives only a small, small fraction of the press that Age of Conan, Warhammer, or EVE Online receives, despite being arguably more popular than all of those put together? Ever wonder why there are so many shooters, war games, and other opportunities to crown yourself the king of the coop and destroy your friends and enemies with equal joy? If you’re a guy, you’re probably loving this because you are being targeted by marketers who want every bit of your spare change. Spinks of Welcome to Spinksville points out that not only are males being singled out by marketers tempting them to always have the newest toys, but that females, because they don’t often fit the marketing definition of “hardcore gamers”, don’t get as rich a selection of games.
Copra notes that World of Warcraft has so trivialized MMO gaming that devoted players easily become bored with it, yet find all other MMOs different, difficult and strange and are forced to return to WoW as the only MMO that is familiar enough to be fun, at least a little. Me, I enjoy seeing WoW players try other MMOs. They might see something there they like, and even though you know they will return to WoW, it’s nice to see a bit of another MMO through their eyes.
Lars of MMOment of Zen has some ideas on how tanks could be changed to work better together in groups and raids to make them a little more desirable. Right now, the perfect number of tanks in a group is one, and for a raid, maybe two. Crusaders (shadow knights and paladins) have buffs which grant the main tank in a group additional bonuses, but Lars says these minor buffs don’t go far enough.
Well, I’m shambling like a zombie with one leg and both arms missing today after waiting on Free Realms to launch last night, so I have to rush off to work. Have fun wherever gaming takes you and see you all tomorrow for another edition of the Daily Blogroll!

2 thoughts on “Daily Blogroll 4/29 — Free as in Beer Edition”

  1. Hey Tipa, sorry for posting this here, but I didn’t know if people still checked the official Nostalgia forums:
    In LOTRO I re-created my hunter on Landroval over the weekend and somehow managed to level him up to and past what he was on the old server. I would very much be interested in hooking up with the other Nostalgia transfers. Who should I look for online to seek out an invite? I hear that you guys hooked up with the Casualties of War folks, which is cool, but do they have any sort of guild entry requirements that I need to meet first?
    Speaking of WoW players trying other MMOs, I just came off a 2 month stint in wow where I finally reached level cap for the first time. I then went on to run heroics and dailies in preparation for running the higher level raid content. So I wasn’t raiding, per se, but I was experiencing the end game for the first time. While I can’t say that I wasn’t having fun, I will say that my desire to log in and “do stuff” was rapidly diminishing. The instant the free LOTRO offer came around I was instantly sucked back out of WoW.

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