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| | #2326 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 592
| I think I pointed out that it was only for 50-60 players at peak, however just because I can do something doesn't mean its NOT doable on a much larger scale. I believe with proper planning and a robust scripting engine you can do much more than I was able to do with the nwn engine. (most especially if I had access to the base code) |
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| | #2327 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 592
| Quote:
The ideas are out there, its up to the developer to look outside of the box to find them. | |
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| | #2328 (permalink) |
| ҉̵̞̟̠̖̗̘̙̜̝̞̟̠͇̊̋̌̍̎ ̏ Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 6,634
| It was never the case that you COULDN'T do it. But it was more of the case of how it impacts people around you. There are plenty of scripted events in WOW dungeons that I know of. Case in point like Unchained said, what else do you want? Think carefully. You have a whole zone, you populated it with caves and camps and war/battle fronts or towns or whatever you normally find in an area. What are you sending your players in there? Now you can't have a full linear driven plot line through the whole zone because you need to keep your players there for a decent amount of time as they level. You need to give players something to do in between these story elements. You can't create enough content for an MMO if it's entirely driven by story. So instead of fedex quests (which are there to force you to other places), instead of collection/kill quests, which give you grinding goals, what do you purpose to do? If you hate them so much come up with an alternative. Make sure you think from a dev point of view as well as a player point of view. You need to be able to get as much as you can from any form of content so players just don't blow through it the first time around. |
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| | #2329 (permalink) | |
| ҉̵̞̟̠̖̗̘̙̜̝̞̟̠͇̊̋̌̍̎ ̏ Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 6,634
| Quote:
That's really not outside the box. | |
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| | #2330 (permalink) | |
| OMG, it's Alpha!!!11!one! Join Date: May 2006 Location: West Coast
Posts: 1,032
| Quote:
Another idea I'll throw in there: What about having NPCs approach you based on your level, faction, gender, secondary sphere, etc. and offer a quest/storyline tie-in? Personally I'm tired of always seeking NPCs out. If I'm a hero well on my way, wouldn't there be folks seeking me out? | |
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| | #2331 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 592
| Random encounters complete with scripting, heck I'll use Drizzt for an example. In the Dark Elf Trilogy he would go out on patrols with his classmates...put the player characters in the role of a patrol for fast, easy experience. The players accept the patrol, the server runs a script that randomly populates the caves with a few encounters...perhaps these encounters can lead to a devious plot against your house? Perhaps you ignore that lead and just go out and kill stuff. There definitely needs to be some sort of sandbox here for players to do whatever they want outside of questing and I have plenty of idea's on systems that could keep players involved but this really is outside of what we've been talking about over the past couple of pages. I primarily was focusing on the quest delivery methods and why I think quest hubs ruin immersion. |
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| | #2332 (permalink) |
| Insert Quarter Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 11,159
| Also the key quest in BRD.. and the entire Arena PvP system.. just add in some sound effects for the crowd and replace NPCs with real people.
__________________ I got a list of demands written on the palm of my hand. I ball my fists and you gonna know where I stand. |
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| | #2333 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 592
| Perhaps its not outside of the box as obviously you CAN find examples of this at work in todays MMOs...the quest in Nagrand you are talking about is a great example of this...heck I REMEMBER that quest because it was not another boring quest hub type of quest. I guess the point is that is an example of looking outside the box because it is not the norm. |
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| | #2334 (permalink) |
| ҉̵̞̟̠̖̗̘̙̜̝̞̟̠͇̊̋̌̍̎ ̏ Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 6,634
| WOW is full of scripted quests, but all you seem to remember are the filler ones. Hell all the top end quests in Netherstorm and SMV are full of interesting events. Great one is where you help a small force of guys to kill a large boss. It's almost like a solo raid. I think you would end up doubling if not tripling (who knows, maybe even more) your dev time if everything was scripted like this. Or else you end up with just grinding mobs inbetween these events. Producers and CEO's don't like more dev time because that = more money. |
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| | #2335 (permalink) | |
| Registered User Join Date: May 2007
Posts: 592
| Quote:
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| | #2336 (permalink) |
| ҉̵̞̟̠̖̗̘̙̜̝̞̟̠͇̊̋̌̍̎ ̏ Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 6,634
| So what happens when the NPC that delivers this quest to someone and you come around looking for it? You now have to wait around for it. Or what happens if you miss it? Then find out about it weeks later and now are to high level for it and it's boring? Stationary NPC quest givers are stationary so people can't grief others. Some quests are mailed to you also I believe, which is neat. Games like Tabula Rasa radio in quests to you. See my previous post about dev time for the reason why I think they don't do that everywhere. |
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| | #2338 (permalink) |
| Registered User Join Date: Jan 2002
Posts: 1,308
| I wonder if there's a market for progressive unlocking of features/events in a game. Ie, you start the game with only a few quests, like some light delivery ones. Everyone has access to these same delivery ones, but nothing else. When a person completes a delivery to a certain npc, that npc now offers to everyone a new quest. Ideally, you don't level to 10 and get the "slay the orc chief" quest, but someone on the server has to have opened up that quest line before you can accept it. You could even put individual/party/guild names into the quest text of who enabled the quest. Same goes for endgame content. Big Bad Undead citadel off in the woods has a series of prequests before you get a quest to go inside. Until then, nobody can enter said Citadel. Once someone has completed all the prequests, like the gates of Ahn'Qiraj it opens up and there's a mini event, now it's a normal dungeon. No silly resource collecting, just progressive content. Do this for every real "dungeon" in the game. It would actually also help with people wanting the big guilds on their server to progress through the content, as it in turn means more available content for them. It would also help you gauge when you have to release additional content via patches or expansion. I'm not sure what precisely the technical parameters of that would be, but it's been done before on the extremely large scale, so the smaller scale shouldn't be that much more difficult to code. Not really a solution to the never-ending Fed-Ex questlines of games post EQ1, but it's an idea, so to speak.
__________________ Jesus on the dashboard, Whenever it feels right. |
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| | #2339 (permalink) | |
| Jesus hates the yankees Join Date: Jun 2006
Posts: 337
+5 Internets | Quote:
Armor/Weapon quests, constant farming of an area for random low drop armor and/or weapon "pieces" is not fun. Vanguards The Ancient armor quests at Wardship of the Sleeping Moon is/was a prime example where, after hours upon hours, my character eventually out leveled the area and never collected all the items needed so in the end I just gave up. Evil races starting out with a hefty faction negative did not help either. Factions, in Wow pre-TBC I came to loathe the mere word. Argent Dawn, Cenarian, Furblog or whatever. I am all for gaining reputation with the magic roundabout but not if it is a fun less and painful time sink. Quest chains, the Shadowhound quest in Vanguard was fun for me. The quests took me to all parts of the world where I got to see places that I might never have seen otherwise and at the end of the lengthy quest I had my sweet ride. | |
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| | #2340 (permalink) |
| Insert Quarter Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 11,159
| People vastly overstate the amount of Fed-Ex quests. You do one in WoW maybe every 5-10 levels or so. So let's say 15-20 over the course of 70 levels. I don't see how people can consider this too many. Unless people consider kill quests to be Fed-Ex quests.. but they aren't. Fed-Ex is 'take this somewhere' usually designed to introduce you to new places. Kill quests are designed to hide the grind. You'd be killing random shit anyway to level up so may as well get a bonus.
__________________ I got a list of demands written on the palm of my hand. I ball my fists and you gonna know where I stand. |
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