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[GW2] Look Behind You

Pro-tip to people at events: while you are fighting the boss, normal enemies continue to spawn, and sometimes the event even spawns more. You should kill those, too.

This weekend, there were forty to fifty people piling on a champion centaur boss (one of those fights that takes 5-10 minutes because its hit points have scaled up for forty to fifty people), and perhaps two of us were watching the outer edges for respawns. Melee respawns were no problem; they ran into a cloud of AE and fell down without anyone noticing them. Meanwhile, the Harathi Sharpshooters were forming a line. Fun math: assume 1/3 chance of getting a ranged attacker each spawn; assume death within 5 seconds if melee and respawn 15 seconds later; assume 12 spawns; how long until you have a solid line of 12 “Sharpshooters” casually standing 4 meters behind a horde of oblivious, unmoving PCs and just picking them off? Identifying where the damage is coming from can be a problem in games, and it can be loud with 40 to 50 people attacking constantly, but at some point you need to look around.

: Zubon

[GW2] Questless Side-Effects

Going through the PvE zones at a calmer, realer pace is an eye opener compared to the brief periods of play I had before launch. The questless design is simply a different animal than a quest-based MMO. I wouldn’t say that one has victory of the other, but I do know that I am having more fun in Guild Wars 2 than I’ve had knocking out all the quests in a hub and then moving on.

The biggest side effect is the “who cares” effect. I am not fighting for resources or time against other players anymore. We are not racing to the shiny moss or seeing who can tag the respawn first. I am just about to kill a centaur and Joe Bob Ranger runs up and hits it for a few shots. I know he will get experience and loot, and who cares. Some people still do, it seems, as I’ve seen a few chat occasions where players whine about leeching.

For the most part open world PvE can be played “solo”. Ignore downed players. Don’t join events. Play how you want to. The game, I feel, is a lot more fun when my actions do respond to the nearby players. If I see a player taking down a normal mob, I will help out. I may have only saved that player a second or two of their time, but I also get an easier pass at experience and loot. Not a bad tradeoff. Continue reading [GW2] Questless Side-Effects

Dear Bookah

Dear Bookah. I have lost track of how long I have been here, and how many visits I have made overall. Certainly, the labs are now so familiar to me that I have to remind myself to actually see some useful structure instead of a few slabs of rock housing a few more idiots. I could stumble in to these labs and easily fix their problems as if in hindsight. Perhaps time is nonlinear here repeating everso with problems that will never be solved. Besides, I have always considered that if one is to progress, it is critical to help those of lesser intelligence. Continue reading Dear Bookah

[GW2] At Least the Informal Grouping Works

That the trading post is nigh perpetually “down for maintenance” is annoying but ignorable. I’m sick of trade spam in every zone, but I’m sick of guild recruitment spam in every zone, too.

What is really bothering our guild is that the grouping interface is not working properly. I think players can get to the same overflow/layer of the world/whatever. It can be hard to tell because, unless you are within sight distance of each other, the avatars are blanked out and you get a “join” button they way you would if you were not in the same instance of the world. Speaking of instances, joining each other there can be spotty. We have had people unable to join each other in personal stories and in dungeons.

Some of the pain is ameliorated by the game’s mechanics that make formal grouping less necessary, and this is less bad than Asheron’s Call 2’s lack of functional chat around launch, but one of the basic things you should be able to demand from a multi-player game is being able to form groups with your friends. Well, we can form groups, but they don’t work right, which is just inviting us to try it and hate the experience.

: Zubon

Finding family members at grocery stores and real theme parks would be so much easier with dots on a mini-map.

Quote of the Week

I know people for whom the sum total of the “game industry” is Angry Birds, Madden, and Call of Duty. These are not vile “dudebros” … they’re just people who can literally play like three games all year and feel like that was a good year. They’ve got a game to play with their friends, a game to play by themselves, and something to do in line at the Butt Store or whatever. As a point of comparison, I have been installing a game while typing this paragraph.
Tycho Brahe

[GW2] Crowd Control

You are the crowd in this context, and Guild Wars 2 uses events to collect groups of players and channel them between theme park rides. In the early days, when everyone is the same level, this creates massive zergs that are fun although not necessarily optimal. This will really pay off in the coming years as a solution to the common problem of finding groups after the population center is at the level cap.

First, we collect the players. Continue reading [GW2] Crowd Control

[CoX] City of Heroes Closing

City of Heroes will go offline in a few months after 8.5 years, two expansions, and 23 issues (major updates). I played for about half that time, level-capping 11 characters, getting my money’s worth, and finding examples I still keep citing under the heading, “Congratulations on catching up to CoX in 2004” (or “…ATitD in 2002”).

Ethic’s 2005 post about the end of Asheron’s Call 2 remains one of the most popular pages on the site.

: Zubon

[GW2] Just Around the Riverbend

Many people have observed how Guild Wars 2 content flows naturally across the map. In WoW or LotRO, you know you are done with your current quest hub when your quest list fills up with “go talk to Alice, Bob, Cogsworth, and D’rkesh in the next hub.” In GW2, theme park ride A exits by the entrance to ride B, and because you do not need to go back to town to turn in your quests, you just keep rolling. “Protect the caravan” events are an obvious, justified way to move people between towns, and frequently a defense event will transition into an assault event that has a similar effect. (More on that tomorrow.) Scouts also point out the rides in advance, in case the flow fails.

My point today is simpler: the mini-map design is excellent. The right side of your screen naturally pushes you to keep rolling through new content. I have often spotted and followed a trail of resource nodes into a new area. More importantly, the map includes things that are off-map. A waypoint you have yet to find will appear at the edge of the map, guiding you toward that new content. It hovers enticingly, retreating as you approach until it is legitimately on the map. I never would have thought that I would want a map that shows things not on the map, but it works beautifully. Look, a dully colored thing! Go light up the dully colored thing!

Just above it, you have a list of hearts and events. Those work beyond the mini-map, too, particularly the events that alert you to nearby opportunities. Look, an orange thing! Go see the shiny orange thing!

: Zubon

The grinning bobcat refused to disclose why he grinned.