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AnimeWill MMO Reviews and Opinions
Whether you care what I think or not here is my view on the world of MMO.

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Osmosis Jones MMO???

Posted by gom276 Monday April 28 2008 at 8:33AM
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Another idea for the public domain, that I thought was worthy of posting in hopes someone picks it up if they haven't already.

  The idea I was having is why haven't we seen an biology MMO, OK here is the premise.  Think, "Osmosis Jones"  meets MMO.  In other words.  And MMO that takes place in the human body.  Imagine the game based on the systems and functions of the body.  Opposing factions virus and bacteria Vs. the many bodily systems.  Heck what if the viruses could actually cause the body to die.  Or the bodily systems force the viruses out completely.  Think of bodies parts as realms and pvp war happening in them.  With a rolling number of realms.  Each time the viruses win that number dwindles and the viruses gain an advantage the more realms the body system force the viruses out a new realm is created.  Once all the realms are destroyed the body dies.

When it dies the bodily system faction receives a penalty and the viruses gain a bonus.  And they start anew with the next human.  Heck you could even base it on a family that all the systems must work together to protect.  So say you have a husband and wife, with a few kids.  The viruses and bacteria can wipe out the whole family if they are strong enough.

Then you move on to neighbors and so forth until you have a full blown plague on your hands.  Mwahaha!!  Oh wait sorry.  I mean kill those nasty bugs, you white blood cells!

which leads me to classes... You could have body systems be everything from white blood cells, red cells, histamine and other immune type components.  Pardon my lack of biological awareness.  But I do know there are enough things going on in us that if your creative you could create a whole class system.  Such as kidney cells could be your crowd control, while white blood cells would be your tank obviously.  Red blood cells could be your crowd control, of course brain cells your mage type class.  And bowel cells your rogue class.  LOL...  that would be classic.  But you get the idea.

For viruses you could have common cold be your tank class, back up with many of the other deadly viruses.  The combat system could be creative using anti-bodies and enzymes as your ammunition or spell type casting.  For melee combat you could have physical transformation such as creating sword and shields out of hands.  As you grow and develop you gains strength and learn new ways to protect or destroy the body you live in currently.

For the PVE side I would imagine each cells starting in their respective body system and adventuring across the whole body.  If you can imagine the kidneys as massive maps and such.  You could have epic raids for both factions as well as faction specific raids.  Imagine fighting an Ebola infection in the bowels.  Or viruses fighting a flu shot.  I can imagine the whole story line, you could maybe even start this out as the body is a baby.  And as she/he continue to grow and change so does the game world.  And the epic PVP battles shape the way he/she grows up.  Maybe instead of killing the body you could just end up in the hospital with that organs PVE self being now accessible by the opposing faction.  Gaining access to raids and PVE content.  So in essence you could lose the kidneys to infection.  And kidney cells would be left without a home.  And new kidney cells would be forced to start somewhere else.

Anyways that's the general idea.  I sure hope someone picks this up.  I just think as we are all tired of playing the same type games why not something completely original?  What do we think?  Good idea? Or crap?... that's an aspect of the game that should be interesting.

Let me know what you think.

When will we get the "World" we were promised?

Posted by gom276 Saturday April 26 2008 at 12:04PM
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I don't know about you but for me I am still waiting for a true virtual world.  We have lots of "maps" but nothing that I would consider a whole world.  I want something on a planetary scale.  Meaning I want something that can take me months to traverse in game.  I want something that requires player expansion and development.  I want to explore lands unknown to other players and find hidden quests and slay unique beasts before anyone else.  Discover lost ruins and dig to find new treasures.  I want to tame beasts and use them to help me carry my loots.  I want to discover new villages and tribes yet to be found by anyone.  I want my actions and interactions to change how they treat anyone else who finds them.  I want a world where my actions and exploration affect the way the world develops.  I want a massive world, a world that could take years to explore and discover every secret.  And as the world develops I want opportunities to explore new worlds through space exploration.  I want to defend earth's space fleets from alien attacks and make first contact with alien races not yet discovered.  I want all of this.  And I wanted it yesterday.

I think we as gamers have become complacent.  We have been promised these things so many times and have been disappointed just as many along the way.  We no longer dream for a dream knowing we will never get what we truly want.  Because the MMO world has become commercialized.  WoW's success and the flood of Asian titled games has burdened the market to such a point that the idea of catering to a select hardcore group of gamers is simply. "Not as profitable." so we are tossed aside and told just go with the flow. 

I am tired of playing kiddie games that are about expanding consumer base than about creating a lasting product and gamer confidence.  I am tired of playing games that are poor ports of Asian titles.  Trying to flood a new market.  Since their market was already to flooded.

I want companies to care what I think, and developers who fight for what they believe.  I want publishing companies to leave development houses to create the game they want.  I want all these things... and yet I know I may never get it.  WoW's success has doomed all games to mediocrity as a standard.  Forever will it be about the number of subscribers instead of about the most dedicated.

I have a dream and it is all those things and so much more.  I hope many of you share my dream then, maybe someday it will come true.

Until then "Anyone wanna raid Sunwell... Again?"

Sociology of MMO Players And Those Who Wish To Stop Us.

Posted by gom276 Friday April 18 2008 at 7:26PM
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As a gamer I must say I am sick and tired of special groups, political figures and media outlets of trying to paint gamers as a sociology experiment.  Why do we play?  What drives us to play?  Why are we drawn to violent and demeaning games?  Does playing them make us demean and be violent with others?  All these ridiculous questions take away from us our sense of joy from playing games that allow us to simply enjoy interacting with our imaginations.   Truly gaming is nothing more than medium that allows us gamers to simply live out our imaginations. 

We dream of running through ancient forests slaying monsters, rescuing the maiden or ruling the world.  If players desire somewhere in their psyche to steal cars and beat up hookers, or join with 24 friends to bring down the evil ruler of the underworld.  Why do we have to answer for something as personal as our imaginations and fantasies.  No one questions what books we read or movies we watch and why we do so.  It's a personal decision based on a personal desires and creative outlets. 

So why do we as gamers get picked on the most.  I think it is because unlike generations before us who could only read or watch their fantasies in a book or in a movie.  Today we can live out those dreams and fantasies like never before.  We are not watching James Dean be a rebel instead we can log into our favorite MMO and be a rebel.  Running around "ganking" people just because we can. 

For those generations who did not have this ability.  They feel it is too self indulgent.  And that we can not understand how it will affect us and our children.  Just as their parents felt about books and movies of their generation.  In this age of increased realism and the endeavour to garner more of the market share of the now billion dollar gaming industry that is larger and pulls in more money than Hollywood.  Publishers must reach deeper into our psyches and pull out some of the most controversial fantasies and imaginative ideas to create controversial products to get their piece of that money pie.

And any opportunity for us to live out a new dream or fantasy through new realism, beautiful art styles and great graphics, brings us back to play again and again.  They wonder why people become addicted to something as simple as a dream or fantasy.  It's common sense provide someone the ability to live inside their fantasy why would they want to come back to real life.

So does this make it wrong.  Of course not.  Games are nothing more than a new form of media, no different than book, movies or TV.  It is a way to live out our fantasies and dreams and interact with our imaginations, the same way books and TV have done for many generations before us.  Games have done for us and will do for many generations after us.

I think that is why MMO's especially have garnered so much attention since everyone wants to control or limit new forms of media.  From governments to religions and crazy over zealous attorneys with too much time on their hands.  These people are no different then the book burners of old.  And should be treated as such.  They seek to limit your choices and restrict your ability to dream and live out your imaginations in unprecedented ways.  That would never be acceptable in today's world of open media and free expression.  So we need to log out occasionally to make sure they don't get their way or one day we may find our servers shut down and our dreams gone.

Get involved in the groups out to protect our rights and support them.  Don't let the Hillary Clinton's and Jack Thompson's of the world limit your ability to express your self.

Terminator MMO???

Posted by gom276 Wednesday April 16 2008 at 11:13AM
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I know,  "didn't this guy just post another blog a little while ago?"  But when the ideas come I just have to type them out.  So Terminator, one of the best sci-fi titles of all time.  It defined post apocalyptic robot controlled future.  And has the potential to become the sci-fi MMO to rule them all.  So why hasn't anyone made it?  I know SOE back in 2002 had expressed interest in getting right to make the game but I have not heard anything since.  And to be honest I pray they didn't get them since most likely SOE would f*** it up.


So where is it?  I searched the web and only found vague references to people hearing about SOE looking to do it.  Am I the only one that has been waiting for A sci-fi MMO done right.  Tabula Rasa was supposed to fill that void but it is kind of its own class of MMO.  But could you not imagine a terminator MMO, based on post apocalyptic robot controlled planet with humans fighting the machines.


The two factions are machines vs humans, with open world pvp and pve action.  People could play as the robots or the humans.  With humans trying to infiltrate sky net and destroy it.  While robots try to infiltrate human underground and kill its leaders.  I just think if your going to do this you have to have robots faction fighting.  The challenge is machine end game what would they fight?   Raids against human outposts to kill leaders maybe.  While it's obvious who humans are going to raid.


game play could be similar to tabula rasa in third person shooter, or go straight for FPS.  I would expect the game is skill based and not class based.  But it could go either way.  Class based system would also work well.  The franchise has elements of a class based system anyways.  Including pet classes using dogs to fight or control remote machines.


I read the comic books growing up and they were ripe with ideas on how to make this work.  I hope someone out there. (not SOE) decides to pick this up and produce it.  I would imagine if done right with PVP action and ripe PVE game this could be the WOW of sci-fi MMO's.


You could also possibly have terminator units that have been "reprogrammed" by the Resistance as units you could choose.  would be lots of fun I imagine.  however I would hate to be the dev's trying to balance this and still keep it real.  I mean the robots in the movies and comic books were super over powered.  But hey that's half the fun playing as a human.


Now I would say that the franchise lends itself to a more human PVE game but I know that unless there is some kind of PVP half the MMO populations Will condemn it much like they did Tabula Rasa, when it was announced.  Since we should learn from their lessons it would make sense to offer machine play.  Or risk losing appeal to the much wider audience. Plus I just want to play as some bad ass robot.  Bent on wiping out all humanity.

So what do you think?  Doesn't this franchise just scream MMO?

Dragon Riders of Pern - CO-OP MMO

Posted by gom276 Tuesday April 15 2008 at 11:07AM
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OK, so I had this idea last night.  There is a great novel series called Dragon Rider of Pern By Anne McCaffery. If you are not familiar with the series and love fantasy you should be ashamed.  It's a great series about dragons and humans who work together to stop the silver threads.  There is a lot of lore to work with and you could base the MMO in the time of the first landing on the planet when they were creating dragons through genetic research.  Before they lost the technology.

Anyways my idea for a co-op MMO is kind of odd and I am sure most people are going to think I am insane and it would never work.  But since I am an idea guy I figure put it out here and see what everyone thinks.  Now there are quite a lot of co-op games coming out for consoles and I am a big fan of it.  I don't have enough friends to do it all the time though.  So the idea is to make an MMO that uses co-op.

The idea is that you have two classes, dragons and riders.  The system would be skill based not really class based since it is a co-op game though you will need to choose to be a dragon or a rider.  During creation you fill out you character sheet.  With some options of game play style, preferences for PVP and PVE or role playing.  Your character then enters the world and embarks on a mission to find your partner.  Now this may be a stretch on the lore since dragons bond with their riders at birth.  But my idea is that the riders quest is to seek out their dragon.  Once they find their dragon.  Which will be a player who's character creation profile matched up with the riders they "bond"  Through this bonding they become as if one unit.  The dragon and rider can embark on co-op missions together, or they can work on improving their skills solo.  But 70% of their skills are only available when they are together as rider and dragon.

Where I see the problem and everyone saying no way this wont work is what if you dragon decides to quit the game or never shows up to play.  Then you have a system that would allow dragon or riders to abandon their partner but lose any shared traits or abilities with the old one and start new with a new one.  But their individual skills and traits stay the same.  I would imagine that when you find a new partner you have to complete a series of quests together in order to establish a new bond.

 The other complaint I can see with this game is "What if you have 200 riders and 100 dragons?"  You could possibly put some kind of system that monitors the number of each and limits creation based on balance.  So you choose your character first then you choose your server.  The system sees you want to make a rider and then shows you only servers that need more riders or vice versa for dragons.

The solo game play could allow for temporary pairings so you could group with a non bound dragon but you would not get certain bonuses.  But allow people to group to complete missions when their partner is not online.

The game play would consists of PVP and PVE elements for PVP there are many different faction in the pern universe that could be used to fight each other.  Or you could re-imagine some. That would allow for dragon battles in the air.  This is when I explain how the co-op thing works.  During co-op missions with your bound partner the rider gains certain abilities he can use against other dragons and riders.  The dragons also gains abilities.  The dragons control the flight and the riders perform most of the combat.  Dragon abilities include flight maneuvers, blinking, and various other flight, speed, positional and of course dragon breath and melee attacks.  The rider casts magic skills and use weapons to attack the opposing riders and dragons.  Including melee with lances and swords and ranged attacks as well as magic depending on the skills you have advanced you can be mostly magic or mostly melee/ranged. 

When together, either riding or just in range of each other.  Each gains bonuses for magic, health and bond skill which the more things you do together increases.  As the bond skill advances so do all the bonuses.  If you abandon your bound partner in search of a new one you lose part of that skills value.  You will then need to complete missions and tasks together to advance the bond skill again.

For PVE there are quite a few missions or events that could be triggered such as thread dropping and having dragons and riders fly out to protect their castles or towns, what would be really neat is depending on how well they do, the town could advance and improve and offer new gear and missions. However if the town is destroyed you lose the gear and special items until you rebuild the town doing solo and co-op quests.

This would in a sense create a dynamic world that would never run out of quests and work to be done.  Guilds could establish their own settlements and as they build up their cities and protect them from raiding guilds and thread their cities prosper and they get access to quests only available to guild cities and special guild goods.  And battle bonuses when defending.  This would lend in some RTS elements such as paying for archers or other resources gathers to defend and build their city.

Now I know this idea is no way a mainstream MMO or designed to be a WoW killer.  It's simply an original idea for a game play style to fit into MMO world.  I come up with the ideas, either you like them or not.  :0 )

For this to work you would need a community that enjoys co-op game play, a love for the lore and patience to work with other people to advance your own character in the world and enjoy everything the game has to offer.  I do see where you could end up with a lot of LFD or LFR calls in global chat for those who just are hard to get along with or bad luck of partnering with someone who is.

But ultimately I think for those who love this kind for game play this would be a fun way to experience it in the MMO space.

The Ultimate Crafting System.

Posted by gom276 Sunday April 13 2008 at 11:14AM
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OK, so I have this great idea for a crafting system and since I am in no way able to get this idea created myself i figure put it out into the public domain and hope to see it implemented somewhere.  As long as they give me at least an inspired by credit.  :0 )  Or heck I just want to play it.

Anyways I have played many many games over the years and tried and mastered many crafting systems.  As a gamer who prefers action to sitting in a room crafting all day.  I came up with a revolutionary new idea for crafting.  Instead of a system where a person has to choose a particular crafting profession.  My system would allow anyone to create any item in the game.  This would free people up from having to get saddled into one profession and missing out on creating the items they want.

The system would be interactive and interesting.  And here is how it breaks down.

 

Recipe's

Recipes are received as drops from MOB's or received as rewards from NPC's for quests.

Each recipe has a level and essence requirements. (Which I will explain later.)

Recipe's will also have solo, group or raid requirements. (Also explain later.)

 

Crafting mechanism (crafting station.)

To craft you must rent a crafting room from the local magistrate or crafting guild.

The crafting room is a dimensional gateway and based on the scroll you received the room changes for the scroll ceremony type. (solo, group or raid.)

It can be huge or tiny based on the scroll and will be different each time no matter what. (no two crafting session will be the same.  even if your making the same item.)

 

Crafting. (this is the best part.)

To begin crafting you take the scroll into the room and read the scroll which opens a doorway to another dimension.  And the scroll then begins to pull demons through the portal which you then have to kill.  Each type and mob that is killed gives its essence to the scroll until the requirements are met. 

The type of MOB's that come out are random and they flow of MOB's will continue until the required essence are gathered at which time the scroll will close the portal.

Based on the scroll type, solo, group or raid will determine the level of difficulty in creating the item.  The more powerful the item the more friends you will need to help you craft it.  The less powerful it is the easier it will be to craft.  And items at epic level will require whole raids to create.

Once the MOB's have been defeated and the essence gathered the scroll then transmute the power into the item using the creatures essence to create it.  And viola new item.

 

For non-combat crafters,

we could do a timed event requiring them to click on stones in sequence or arranging artifacts or items in a certain place requiring logic and reasoning skills, the faster they can complete them the possibility for the items to get a bonus.  If they don't complete in time then they MOB's start coming through the portal.

  • For solo scrolls it can be done by one person.
  • For group scrolls the event will require a group to complete the event.  (you stand on this switch and you here and so on and so forth.)
  • There would be no option for this for epic items.

 

This system takes crafting out of the boring grind in a basement and bring it out into the world requiring friends to help create that new chest piece or new weapon.  And allows solo player to create their own goods.  But this system will make crafting feel more inclusive in the game world. 

Some of the best raids I was on was the first time you were going into some dungeon to craft something.  With this system you would have no idea what was gonna come out at you as a raid... so its not some scripted event you can memorize and repeat over and over.   Or that would get boring.  It could also be a money maker for guilds who could charge services to people to help them craft their epic scroll drop.  Or they could sell them to guilds to raid.

This would make raiding more interesting as well.  While raiding some mob a scroll drops and the guild gets a brand new random raid to do again.

Now I have pondered the idea of the potential for the MOB's you kill while crafting to drop goods as well I mean they are mobs and it is possible while crafting one scroll another one drops.  Or enough trash loot drops to cover the rental fee's for the room.  Or you come out with nothing but the item you went in to create.  But at least that would make it interesting.

The flip side to this is.  If you are killed while trying to create the item you fail at crafting it and the scroll is destroyed to prevent the portal from staying open.  So you lose the scroll the item and the room fee's.  So you best be prepared.

The other side of this is you could also potentially have a rare mob come out and if your successful in killing him you item is upgraded due to the unique essence of the MOB.

I think this crafting system would be the most fun and interesting I have ever seen.  My hope in posting this is that some day I get to play this idea.  So feedback is welcome think of this as open source so feel free to add to it and tweak it to meet your needs.

MMO without RPG?

Posted by gom276 Friday April 11 2008 at 9:24AM
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I have heard and read a lot of people talking about what makes an MMO an MMO and the technical definition is. "Any game that has the massively Multi-Player Online."  But Then games like Halo3 would be considered MMO's as well as any online multi-player title.

Wiki defines MMO's as "A massively multiplayer online game (also called MMOG or simply MMO) is a video game which is capable of supporting hundreds or thousands of players simultaneously. By necessity, they are played on the Internet, and feature at least one persistent world. They are, however, not necessarily games played on general purpose computers; most of the newer game consoles (Xbox 360, PSP, PS3, Wii, etc.) can access the internet, and thus can have MMO genre games."

So can we differentiate the MMO from the RPG?  The community of MMORPG fans hold tight onto their definition.  Which is a "persistent world" where players can have interactivity, trade and cooperation where characters are developed and improved upon.  Yet more and more FPS and console titles are moving towards persistent character development meaning they work on developing and improving a character buying new gear and equipment for him.  They often participate in co-op missions with other online partners.  With the goal of leveling up their character to give them advantages in the game.  While the world itself is not persistent the characters are.  Yet the media and most MMO fans do not call this an MMO

Has the term MMO been hijacked by the RPG?  Could we not have MMOFPS or MMOPVP?  Yet I only tend to hear MMO when it relates directly to RPG online titles.   most console titles are defined as an "FPS with online play" or a "VS game with online capabilities."  As someone who is a huge MMO RPG fan and also a huge console and PC game fan.  I enjoy both equally and spend about equal time on both.  (*begins to understand why my wife hates them both now that I think about it.*)  But I have always pondered... why we can't have a MMO without the RPG element?

Perhaps we could say that no medium except RPG lends itself to the MMO name more since it can have the largest online community at any given instance.  Since most console online titles or PC games with online "capabilities" do not require them to be online to play.  But since most titles are made for online play and in most cases the "Campaign" portion of the game is considered secondary to it's online component.  Could we not call these titles MMO?

I know some of you are saying "what's the difference." or "boy you wonder about stupid...  crap." (I know some of you would use something more colorful but I will refrain.)  But it just piqued my curiosity as to psychological reason we tend to only use the MMO moniker with the RPG.  Would we gain anything by calling titles like halo 3 MMO's or the many other online FPS and other games out there?  Most likely not.  But wouldn't someone be justified in using MMOFPS to explain such titles without the wrath of the MMORPG community falling down upon them?

Now in saying that I am as guilty as the next guy as using the MMO term exclusively to reference all MMORPG titles.  But should we not try to share it with others so that we can have a single term to use for any and all online games.  Would it not be nice to say MMO and know it means any game with massive multi-player online community.  Then let each tag on their genre of play style to the end?  Would it not be the right thing to do as such generous and kind people that us MMORPG fans are?..... 

On second thought... You know what... it's quite a pain to always have to type MMORPG when I want to reference my MMORPG games... let those "other" people get their own acronym. ;P

Unrated Versions of Games????

Posted by gom276 Tuesday April 8 2008 at 1:32PM
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So I was thinking the other day with more and more PC gamers moving to direct downloads and digital distribution to get their games.  Should the game companies and publishers start looking to offer unrated versions of the games.  To their adult community of gamers. (Of course.)

I have noticed a great trend of unrated movies being released on DVD, where the movie industry is not required to get or seek the rating boards blessing to distribute their DVD's to outlets.  I wonder if we will see or if we SHOULD see the gaming industry offer uncut/unrated versions of their games for download.  Now i don't think we will see this for console markets but could the PC market possibly get access to these.  As more console games are being ported to PC, and more and more over 18 only MMO's are being released.  Will other game makers start producing these, game equivalent of director cut unrated versions of their games.

I personally would love to have access to unrated versions of some of my favorite titles.  I hear to often about games having to cut lots of content and tone down original content and gore to meet the distribution required MA (mature Audience) rating and avoid the AO (Adults Only) rating.  Could the move of more MA MMO titles offer hope of this as an eventual reality.  And maybe a resurgence of PC gaming?

I have enjoyed some of the newer MA title games with increased gore and nudity, as immersion really includes the seedy side of the world.  We are all humans and basic nature is to participate in some adult activities.  Especially for us adults.  I know of a AO title MMO about to hit beta, that... is a little to far to the AO side than I would like... but some times you have to have those extremes in order for more moderate AO title to get a foot hold. 

But will the increase in digital distribution offer wary dev teams an opportunity to release the game they wanted to.  Without the heavy hand of the ESRB beating them down.  I have not heard this talked about as a possibility and it kept popping into my head so I thought I would throw it out into the public forum and let us gamers debate the idea.

Would you as (adult) PC gamers and MMO players like the option of buying and downloading an unrated/uncut versions of your games?

Is it feasible to do this under the current policies of digital distribution and ESRB requirements?  As I understand it its a voluntary program to get and participate in the ESRB rating system.  As self governance to keep the goverment out of our gaming world.  But could a game not get a ESRB rating for console and sales distribution and then offer to their online customers and direct download for a unrated version?  Since primarily the reason for the rating is because game distro companies and sales companies. (walmart, gamestop/EBgames, etc..)  Said they wont sell AO titles.

By offering it online only, they could control and limit access through age verification systems and tools that are all to common in this space.  Would that be acceptable you think to some of the more vocal critics to AO titles?

Please share?

Is Open Beta becoming more about marketing a game than testing it?

Posted by gom276 Monday April 7 2008 at 2:29PM
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Well, as the title suggest I have begun to wonder is open beta is more of a marketing thing than an actual test.  90% of the open beta users are there to play the game for free or to get a head start on learning the game.  Some even just so they can brag they helped "beta" the game.

The recent marketing of open beta by Warhammer Online: Age of Reckoning for Collectors edition purchasers created a mass run on online and brick and mortar shops to get the CE and a place in the open beta.  Now was this a play to get fans to rush out and buy the CE they normally wouldn't have bothered with?  Or was it a reward to those fans who wanted to spend the extra cash for a CE?

Now I am a fan of the games and played them when I was younger. (feeling old now that I can actually use that term.)  So I was excited about the CE, it has some great value with nice books and content to me that was worth the extra cash.  I typically buy CE's for games I am excited about.  Heck i even admit to owning a Tabula Rasa CE.  (great packaging by the way.)  So the open beta was kind of like a thank you for me.  But as I saw the increasing number of braggarts and haters.  I wondered is the practice of baiting fans into spending money becoming too commonplace.  

Take for instance the Halo 3 beta, if you bought another title for the 360, you also got a code to participate in the open beta for Halo 3.  Suddenly everyone was running out to buy Crackdown. (a good title by the way.)  And media suddenly shined a light on Microsoft saying it was a baiting program to sell more games using Halo's brand name.  Yet practices like this have existed for a long time in the MMO beta world.  Buy a subscription to this web site and get access to open beta, or even sometimes a closed beta.  We are suddenly a source of revenue to the game companies just for testing the game.  As it becomes more common place and the numbers prove out the practice.  (money talks as they say.) More and more gaming titles will follow suit.  They will get more revenue putting out an open beta where you have to buy something or pay for a service to get access.

Now I am not knocking the service I mean I am sure the game companies are constantly buried under the pile of please let me beta e-mails, forum posts and the like.  And I don't fault them for making money off us gamers.  heck that's why they do this anyways.  To make a living doing what they love.  (unless your EA...  jab jab... duck for cover.)  But is doing this lowering the quality of testing they would otherwise be able to do just for the sake of the mighty $?  This is my main question.  I beta test and have for a long time.  I get into beta's because of my past experience and recognition.  I keep my mouth shut on what I am testing and how.  and I keep my head down and test for the love of the games and to help improve the experience for others who come after.

The sense of joy you get when you find a bug and see it in the patch notes is wonderful.  Being the first to discover a hack and then getting a thank you PM from the dev team.  And ultimately the joy of seeing the boxed game on the shelf and knowing you had a part in it all.  A real part in it...  and it is kind of sad to see it twisted into a marketing ploy to make some extra money and then see the beta board littered with "this game sucks." or "this game is totally broken I wont play it when it releases."  For me getting into any beta is an honor.  It's like we are contract employees almost.  So to see this kind of stuff is sickening.  I expect that stuff on release day.  But not during open beta, and even some of the closed beta's now days.

So what do you all think, my fellow MMO lovers.  Will this ultimately become a fixture in gaming or will it fall away as the community of quality testers are put off by it?