How SW:TOR is a major step BACKWARDS for MMOs

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LitleWaffle

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Side note: How was Ghostwise put on probation for that?

"Your TLDR section is too long to read lol"

Really? How does that deserve a probation?
 

Orcus The Ultimate

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Nixzilla said:
I think its funny that you have all these complaints yet you will probaly still be buying it. I for one think that this mmo is a great step foward although I also think its a big rpg dressed up as a mmo.
i agree in that vision of The Old Republic.

personally i won't buy it cause I hate MMO's. If it wasn't i would definitly buy it for being a Starwars Kotor related universe !

ps: i can't imagine how many players will call themselves Zayne Carrick...
 

mechanixis

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LitleWaffle said:
Side note: How was Ghostwise put on probation for that?

"Your TLDR section is too long to read lol"

Really? How does that deserve a probation?
That's easy, he said 'lol'.
 

LogicNProportion

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While you do raise some points, I do not believe you have researched everything as fully as you could have. I'm not going to nit-pick the Hell out of this, but I will address one thing.

There ARE going to be non-combat side-professions. But, it is a game focused on combat because while SWG (My fave MMO ever) was more about SURVIVING in the rebellion era, TOR is about acting in the war.

Besides, it's also been said that while your character is creme de la creme, you aren't going to be a 'chosen one'.

As far as naming your companions, I actually thought about this a couple days ago and reasoned that it might turn out a bit lame, but you do collect more than that one throughout your journeys, and you CAN customize them. Think the pets from WoW, only they actually do stuff. :p
 

Snotnarok

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It's not a step backwards it's a step in a different direction is all. It's not like this is the popular trend for MMO's, and if you don't want to play SW then play something else, it's that easy.
 
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DVSAurion said:
I don't enjoy MMOs. I do enjoy singleplayer RPGs, because of story, characters and choice (choice can be limited for characters and story). The fact that I'm actually interested in TOR means that it's either a step forward, getting other people than MMO people interested. Or it's a step back, if MMO people don't like it at all. Depends on the point of view.
this. bioware isn't trying to compete with blizzard for the "best mmo", or making it a wow clone, for me personally, and tons of other people i have seen and talked to, this is going to be their first step into paid mmo's, in which they are sucking up lots of people who hate subscription fees to actually play this game because its NOT like other mmo's

you heard me right, its NOT like other mmo's, thats slightly what attracts me to the game itself.

also

1) its bioware
2)its star wars, and a continuation from kotor 1 and 2
3) its more story and character based, fucking awesome me thinks!
4) not a pointless endless grind with unlimited freedom, there is the point where freedom becomes useless as a game you literally can only kill so many boring uninventive and un conflicting pixel baddies so many times...
5) i really do like text games, especially stuff like ff games, but biowares voice acting...HELL YES!!

so overall, i am very skeptical, but i am very excited for this game, around half the mmo people i know, are getting this game, the other half dont care for star wars but might try it eventually, while a good 9/10 of every non mmo goer i know is gonna give TOR a try as it brings something different to the table.
 

Starke

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Keava said:
You know what? You don't have to play it! Amazing, isn't it?
Which is amazing, because I fuckin' like Star Wars. But clearly I have no right to complain that this franchise I like is being taken out behind the woodshed because I can choose not to play it.

Keava said:
If any of those reasons limits your Roleplaying (i can do bold statements too![sorry, i'll go get my coat]) then frankly you are a crappy roleplayer so go nitpick on something else like actual game mechanics, graphics, or whatever you kids find fancy this days.
Because, as teh holy Bioware has taught us. Lack of Freedom = Roleplaying!
Keava said:
I never liked the SWG, even pre-TheThingThatApparentlyRuinedIt, only fun part was having your own house.
I never played Star Wars Galaxies.
Keava said:
Now for your 'points'.

dastardly said:
1) "The game will be story-driven, and your choices will affect your destiny!" - Great, so that means each situation will boil down to one of three choices (aggressive, defensive, or passive, basically). You can either be a dick, a saint, or a gray blob in the middle. But what's more, it means your character is not YOUR character. It is one of a select handful of pre-made characters that you will rent. And when in these games has it ever really been the BEST idea to "mix and match," rather than go all one way or the other? SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.
In other MMOs you don't usually even have that much freedom. All your dialogue options are limited to "Accept" and "Cancel". Yeah, that shows em your real character! Woo-hoo! Surely that is better, because no evil man in suits tell you what and how to say.... because you can't say anything!.
Because being given a choice between being an utter dick and being a brick is true role playing.

Okay, it's true, aside from a handful of user focused games the role-playing in most MMOs hasn't really advanced beyond the MUDs of 20 - 30 years ago.

Keava said:
dastardly said:
2) "The game will be fully voice-acted." - So you can't even decide what your character says or how he/she says it. The game will be giving you a script and voice. And, due to the expense of such projects, expect the selection of voices (if there are any) to be extremely limited. It might be that your character gets no voice at all (silent protagonist syndrome) which, to me, is better than being forced into a pre-made voice. SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.
To arms my brethren for our freedom has been on these very day threatened by the voice box! Seriously, it hurts you so much ? Mute it. You won't hear it. I for one enjoy that, i like hearing my character's voice, i loved listening to Shepard's talking in each of my countless ME playthroughs. It didn't took my freedom, it actually added to character.
Congrats. You enjoyed Shepard. I found mShep to have all the charisma of a dead cat, and fShep to sound increasingly bored and annoyed as the games ran on.

That said, you don't role-play as Shepard. No, really you don't. You play one of three specific (mentally challenged) characters devised by the wordsmiths at Bioware. ME isn't an RPG even in the way that Fallout 3 is. You have no personal agency, you are strictly at the mercy of the alleged plot, you point and shoot at what you're told to and forty hours later you're done. Along the way you can decide to be an asshole a failed attempt at a hero or a brick. Mass Effect 2 makes this worse because if you ever deviate from that you'll end up behind the curve on the paragon/renegade points.
Keava said:
dastardly said:
3) "You can choose from one of these iconic professions!" - So all smugglers will be expected to behave in X way with personality Y, because that's how Han did it. All Bounty Hunters will be X, Y, and Z, because that's how Fett did it. This is exactly what the NGE did to RUIN SWG. SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.
That's a players choice. Could also say that every warrior is a dumb meatshield, every mage is pretentious ***** and every rogue is sneaky backstabber. Roleplaying is about person to person interaction in MMOs. You choose what you represent.
Except you don't. As he's already pointed out, Bioware has kindly decided to explain to you exactly who your character is, and will do so every time the twit opens his mouth. Just in case some of their players are a little slow.

Now, what's funny is, you're right, you do choose what you represent in an MMO... except, you pointed out a minute ago that Bioware making the decisions for you (VO) isn't an abbreviation of character freedom, so which is it? Either the voice over work is irrelevant or the class roles are, it can't be both.
Keava said:
dastardly said:
4) "You'll get companion characters to will add spice and variety to your gameplay!" - This one actually sounded GREAT... until we found out that EVERYONE gets the same companion based on his/her class. Yes, ALL smugglers will not just have A wookiee companion (like Han!), they'll have the SAME wookiee companion. You don't even get to pick the name. SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.
Brilliant feature for those that need a quick NPC help if all friends are offline. And no, the companion is not based on your class. Each class get's a selection of companions, depending on what type of supporting character you might find fancy. Wookie however is limited to Smugglers.
What's funny is, there's a shitload of these NPCs kicking around. It would make sense if you collected them as drops and chose between them, but, if we're really limited to a specific one per class, then where is the RPG elements in that? Hell even KOTOR let you pick between nine different characters. Here there will be nine different characters but you'll only be able to pick your NPC companion from a list of one?
Keava said:
dastardly said:
5) "You'll get your own ship, which you can use to travel or complete missions!" - Again, sounded great... until we found out that you get the same ship as everyone else in your class AND that all space missions play out like Starfox as rail- or arena-style episodes. You can't choose your ship, and you can't choose where it goes. SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.
Want various ships and unlimited space? Go play EVE, you have plenty to choose from there. It's not a space sim game. Space ship functions as your character's hub and way of travel between planets. It's a fancy prop the game could do without but they decided to implement it anyway. As for the combat-on-rail, i'm perfectly happy about it. Ever considered that plenty of players, especially MMO players, don't give a damn about your love for flight simulators? I want my MMO be a MMO, means i click around, i run around i bash my 12345 to use skills.
The funny thing with saying go play EVE is how much of a shithole that game is. That's a bit like saying, "oh, you don't like having hair in your soup? Then go jab this needle in your eye, stumble out into the gutter and rot."

Now, funny thing, the Star Trek Online forums used to be loaded to the gills with annoying little trolls who'd blither about how STO was doomed when TOR came out and beat it's space and ground combat soundly. Funny thing about those trolls. I haven't seen one since the on rails shooter mechanics were announced.

In other words there IS room for an arcade style space shooter that's off rails in the current market and still isn't a sim.
Keava said:
I'm really sorry AAA titles aren't created to fulfil wet dreams of single fan, but that's how market works.
And we all understand you know "how the market works because..." you have nice teeth?
Keava said:
You are minority, face it and live with it or start making games yourself.
Because as we all know the strongest trait of a democracy is the ability to squelch the minority... no, wait... what?

To be (almost) fair to you, Keava, dastardly is in the minority. Though, I seriously suspect this has more to do with shitty implementation in MMOs than that the market isn't there.
Keava said:
There's been plenty of 'indie' titles over last years catering to 'hardcore' players.
EVE and Fallen Earth are the only two that immediatly jump to mind. Maybe Dawntide, if that IS in fact the game I think it is.
Keava said:
Guess what? They barely managed to get enough subscriptions to operate and plenty of them dies within first months.
Funny thing about that. The current record holder for shortest lifespan of an MMO is only a few months. But that's almost unique. Even Hellgate London kept going for nearly a year before having its teeth taken out. (Over a year, if you count from release to when the servers went off line, instead of from release until the subscription services were shut down.) In the future it would profit your argument style to avoid making grandiose claims with no basis in reality.
 

TheLefty

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As much as I hate it when people do this to me, I'm going to pick out some things that don't really add up.

dastardly said:
(For TL;DR, skip to the bolded section)

Single-player RPGs evolved (or de-volved) long ago into more of a character "rental" than creation. Your job is to take an extant character through a strictly laid-out story. It's much more playing with action figures than being an action hero. You don't really own anything in the story.

So, single-player RPGs were a combination of early roleplaying ideas (improving your character over time, specialization of characters, etc) and standard single-player action games. I'd argue, in fact, that that's what they are--action games, no more "roleplaying" than Mario.
Maybe it's just me, but some story sure kicks no story in the ass. And if you're playing a GOOD RPG (character customization, winding story, that kind of stuff) then it may be an "action figure" but it's a custom action figure that you made, and without someone waltzing by with a bigger better action figure to make you feel bad about yourself. I'm the biggest badass in my game, not that level 75 Paladin riding the polar bear.


1) "The game will be story-driven, and your choices will affect your destiny!" - Great, so that means each situation will boil down to one of three choices (aggressive, defensive, or passive, basically). You can either be a dick, a saint, or a gray blob in the middle. But what's more, it means your character is not YOUR character. It is one of a select handful of pre-made characters that you will rent. And when in these games has it ever really been the BEST idea to "mix and match," rather than go all one way or the other? SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.

2) "The game will be fully voice-acted." - So you can't even decide what your character says or how he/she says it. The game will be giving you a script and voice. And, due to the expense of such projects, expect the selection of voices (if there are any) to be extremely limited. It might be that your character gets no voice at all (silent protagonist syndrome) which, to me, is better than being forced into a pre-made voice. SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.

Again, some form of dialogue is better than reading the mission description and going to do it, coming back, and repeated for 70 some-odd levels.

3) "You can choose from one of these iconic professions!" - So all smugglers will be expected to behave in X way with personality Y, because that's how Han did it. All Bounty Hunters will be X, Y, and Z, because that's how Fett did it. This is exactly what the NGE did to RUIN SWG. SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.
That's how every MMO i've ever played works. Maybe we've been playing different games (I'm not exactly an MMO connoisseur) but there's no point in specifying this one game (which hasn't even come out yet) is doing something wrong, when it's the entire genre.

4) "You'll get companion characters to will add spice and variety to your gameplay!" - This one actually sounded GREAT... until we found out that EVERYONE gets the same companion based on his/her class. Yes, ALL smugglers will not just have A wookiee companion (like Han!), they'll have the SAME wookiee companion. You don't even get to pick the name. SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.
See the above, most games that have a companion system work in this way. You can't specifically blame this one game.

5) "You'll get your own ship, which you can use to travel or complete missions!" - Again, sounded great... until we found out that you get the same ship as everyone else in your class AND that all space missions play out like Starfox as rail- or arena-style episodes. You can't choose your ship, and you can't choose where it goes. SACRIFICES CHARACTER FREEDOM.
The exact opposite of the last few, no other MMO, that I can think of, even tries this system. Flyff has their hoverboards and (from watching a friend) World of Warcraft seems to have some kind of flying system, but neither were particularly fun, or at the scale of an entire Galaxy.

At the center though, your argument is destroyed by the fact that you seem to be trying to review a game that's not out yet. I don't even know if the beta test is out. Basically, wait for the game then play it, then come here, then give it another try. We'll all probably have feel a lot better about your opinions then.
 

ZehGeek

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Blind Sight said:
My God, I get it that you might be a little annoyed with what you've seen of the Old Republic, and it's fine for you be prepared to be disappointed (lord knows I already complained about the Videodrome remake enough on this forum) but you know, you should actually PLAY the game before you pass complete judgement on it. Doing so before you've played it, based off of released information just makes you look somewhat uninformed and whiny. Once again, the Big Lebowski's "Well, that's just your opinion, man" applies.
The thing though, you couldn't even count the number of people that consider there opinion fact. My opinion, this is just typical hype. New game comes along, "ohaeynewgamenewgamenewgameforgetwowiquit", they play it, it's successful for a bit, but then ultamitly next thing you know it's being played on Private Servers, and everyone's back to the one that's been there the longest. There's a reason why WoW's been around for 5 or 6 years I think, and the Warcraft franchise itself for for atleast 10+.
 

Warachia

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Starke said:
snip, because there is no way I am reposting that iron wall of text
there is no reason to start a flame war like this, organize your arguments so that you can summarize them cleanly and to the point, rather than murder another thread.
 

luckshot

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the op has pretty much outlined what i liked about the pre-nge/cu SWG and what puts TOR on thin ice for me.


you can role play your characters in other mmo's, and for the most part they can be YOUR characters. In TOR you are constantly roleplaying BIOWARE'S character. now whether you roleplay your characters in game or primarily in your head (like me) this makes a difference.

as others have said this limits both roleplaying and player interaction, how exactly are you going to have 2 players that make completely different choices during key events play in the same galaxy when those choices shape the galaxy...and hopefully future choices (if the choice has no effect then it is meaningless)
 

Free Thinker

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even though it isn't a true RPG, don't demonize it. I know we sacrifice creating our own truly unique characters, but to allow us with programming would be a developer's nightmare. It just isn't possible right now unless it was a D&D table-top clone.
 

luckshot

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Free Thinker said:
even though it isn't a true RPG, don't demonize it. I know we sacrifice creating our own truly unique characters, but to allow us with programming would be a developer's nightmare. It just isn't possible right now unless it was a D&D table-top clone.
just like programing what it is would be a nightmare, and aren't all mmo's basically computerized dice running everything?

did you mean in addition to TOR as is adding the freedom that is behind the 'R' in RPG would be a nightmare? if so then i agree, which leads to the question of why they have made the choices in development that they have. the only answer to that is "because they're bioware."
 

Keava

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Starke said:
<snip because it get's unreadable after a while>
Valid complaints are perfectly fine, as far as you complain about actual issues with the game itself. Complaining about a dream you had is pretty silly. We all have our own 'perfect games' in our imagination, but we also know none of those games will be released any time soon if ever.

As far as roleplaying in videogames goes, i guess it depends what you consider roleplaying? I'll start since neither you nor OP actually bothered to explain this little detail. So for me, roleplaying is impossible within current videogames core and will remain so until we discover how to implement VR properly.
I played MMOs since about UO times and RP was always based not on what your character could do within the game bounds but on those fancy lines of text you type yourself, either by using /me, :, or just by typing it in between the stars *like this*.
Even the BioWares NWN, which offered amazing possibilities for setting up near pen and paper campaigns depended mainly on typing the actions rather than performing them within the game mechanics.

I fail to see how lines of text being spoken in presumably realistic manner are immersion breaking, finally it will not be just nodding like a muppet at an NPC that spews out a book at you describing how his family got abused by big fat monsters. There will be semi-interactive dialogue between your character and the quest giver. If anything it actually adds to experience. You choose how the character reacts.
Sure it would be more awesome if you had unlimited voice over resource and ability to type in response by your own and then that being processed by the game engine into something that the NPC on the other side could understand, but we are far from that in terms of technology and i'll happily take a small improvement over none.

When it comes to NPc companions, as far as i understand it works on the basic that there is a companion NPC for each of the classes, which means that there is Soldier NPC, Smuggler NPC, Consular NPC, etc. You can pick whatever you consider useful at given moment. Let's say you lack a healer for a group quest then you pick a consular NPC that will follow you and heal you, or whatever the crap they do. You need a tank you pick up the bulky Soldier NPC. If you ever played DDO you should have vague idea of how such system works.

The indie MMOs i had in mind were Fallen Earth, Mortal Online, Darkfall. They all cater to more 'engaged' players, and all barely manage to keep floating on the surface without much hope for expanding their userbase. EVE is the only one that managed to find a niche for itself but it has to do a lot with how CCP directed the game. In it's core it's very simplistic contrary to the popular belief. Also when talking about death of a MMO i mean it stops being relevant to the scene. You can keep things going on life support, but apart from the most devout fans no one cares.

The market is free, you as customer make choices. You don't like what MMO A offers you go play MMO B or MMO C or just don't play any and go out have fun. Since i stopped playing WoW 2 years ago i haven't bothered with MMOs much because none interests me, it's that simple.
The market is very simple thing, it operates on basics of supply and demand. There apparently is very low demand for what many of so called 'hardcore' players want. When you are a big company you want to make big money. Big money means having as broad target as possible so you pick the features that will appeal to majority of people, especially if they worked fine for you till now.

I'll give you a simple example from the 'most popular' MMO on the market - WoW. At some point they realized that only about 5-10% of player base is 'hardcore' enough to get to the last tiers, and majority doesn't even finish the entry tier raid instances.
So they changed things, removed attunements, allowed buying epics for tokens that you can obtain through 5man content, added 10man mode to raid instances, eventually added LFG tool for raids that automatically teamed you with people and teleported to the instance. All this so more than just 5%-10% would see what the whole deal is about. They gladly risked the moaning of those 5% so that the remaining 90% would be grateful. See how it works?
 

Nazulu

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Keava said:
You know what? You don't have to play it! Amazing, isn't it?

If any of those reasons limits your Roleplaying (i can do bold statements too![sorry, i'll go get my coat]) then frankly you are a crappy roleplayer so go nitpick on something else like actual game mechanics, graphics, or whatever you kids find fancy this days.
Jeez Keava, I know your a lot better than that. You don't have to attack him like he's attacking everyone else. He's just sharing some info while criticising it, which is perfectly acceptable on any forum. And saying "you don't have to play it" is just silly.

Please read this - http://plover.net/~bonds/stupidresponses.html#better
 

Quazimofo

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dastardly said:
4) "You'll get companion characters to will add spice and variety to your gameplay!" - This one actually sounded GREAT... until we found out that EVERYONE gets the same companion based on his/her class. Yes, ALL smugglers will not just have A wookiee companion (like Han!), they'll have the SAME wookiee companion.

5) "You'll get your own ship, which you can use to travel or complete missions!" - Again, sounded great... until we found out that you get the same ship as everyone else in your class AND that all space missions play out like Starfox as rail- or arena-style episodes. You can't choose your ship, and you can't choose where it goes.
Ok, i will agree to these two. when i heard i got my own ship i was hoping for the ability to pick from a Smorgasbord of companions and starships. i could accept only having X companion for y class in single player Rpg's where as he said the premade character had no reason for any others. however, in an rpg say im a jedi/sith who doesent want to broadcast my class just by my starship. maybe i picked up some smuggler traits along my travels and wanted that ship instead because it fit me better. or maybe instead of having a wookie buddy i prefered the robot as a smuggler because it is less conspicuous and can open doors/steal info/ or siphon credits from some assholes account i was trying to rob.

however space combat as a starfox style minigame is over rated yes. but fun all the same. fucking loved that game as a kid
 

cheese_wizington

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Anyone else notice that the TLDR is actually around half as long as the original thing? I never knew a TLDR could be too long to read.