https://venturebeat.com/2017/06/07/magic-the-gathering-is-becoming-an-mmo/
Setting the over / under at 99%.
Setting the over / under at 99%.
The lovers that made Neverwinter?! That was the worst lovin' MMO I've ever played!
I'll admit it had some neat ideas but they were all executed poorly. Also it was Pay-to-Win (P2W) as love.
Poop, Neverwinter is the example I use for: "Just because you had fun with a game doesn't mean it's good." As a Rogue I was able to 1-shot players in PvP, from stealth. Also worst economy I've ever encountered, probably due to its Pay-to-Win nature.
I haven't played since a few weeks after they released the Feywild expansion or whatever. They perma-banned the largest guild in the game for using an exploit to bypass the time gate on the new content. The exploit? Sharing the weekly quest.
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To be fair, they spent like, all day doing the exploit. They did it dozens and dozens of time. And rather than roll their characters back and patch it they just felt like banning them.
It's funny because that guild was advertised as being THE P2W guild. Their description was something like "We have credit cards and we'll use them to be better than you," or some nonsense.
They probably banned anyone that used the exploit too much, but it's funny that the biggest guild pretty much evaporated.
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They did the same with (Star Trek: Online) STO players. They dropped an (expansion) xpac with exponential (experience) XP demands and XP gates on content. Inadvertently, their XP rescale made one short patrol mission on one planet the best XP gain in the game. So everyone and their lovin' cousin started grinding it, bringing sector servers to a screeching halt.
Cryptic's response? Limited acct bans, a mass XP rollback based upon an algorithm that caught people that NEVER WENT NEAR THAT PLANET, and they locked out that particular mission. Didn't normalize the XP and turn it back on. Years later still have the mission turned off, because presumably they don't understand what they broke.
Ladies and gentlemen: Craptic.
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In response to, "What is Caturday in the context of NW?"
The cat part is mostly incidental. It's an absolutely massive clusterlove though.
Simply put, the auction house wasn't programmed to reject negative values when they were entered as bids.
When you bid on an item, the system deducts the amount of Astral Diamonds you bid from your account. In the case of bidding negative amounts, a negative amount was deducted from your account - which meant that you actually got a positive value added to your account, causing you to gain money from bidding.
However, when the auction ended and you didn't win it, you would be compensated for your bid. In this case, you would be compensated for your negative bid, which means that the amount you earned from the negative bid would be deducted from your account.
So, people preserved their Astral Diamonds by either converting them into Zen (which is used for micro-transactions) or by buying one of the most high value products that could be bought with Astral Diamonds in the game at that time, the Cat companion. People then proceeded to sell their millions and millions of cats on the auction house, leading to a rollback, a series of bans, and a day forever known as Caturday.
WotC is really amazing at being so far behind the trend that it's kinda charming.
>tries to make a more casual MtG experience for beginners
>...way after hearthstone basically tenderly loved the entire market
>Hey, a good idea would be to make the planeswalkers (which people already are sick of by this point) into a super hero gang and make movies and poop
>...thousands of years after superhero market has been established and by the time the mtg movie is actually released I bet most people will be burned on superhero movies a bit
>announce an MMORPG
>after literally every other company on planet earth has beaten that horse, killed it, cremated it and spread the ashes across the world
I'm starting to get worried the WotC HQ is in like a time rift where they are constantly 10 years behind the rest of humanity and making poopy business decisions is the only way of communicating with the outside world for help
This one almost made me spill my drink as I mentally pictured itI'm starting to get worried the WotC HQ is in like a time rift where they are constantly 10 years behind the rest of humanity and making poopy business decisions is the only way of communicating with the outside world for help
I liked this particular comment on mtgsI have little faith in any MMORPG managing to get off the ground thanks to WoW's iron grip on the genre.
But I guess if Warcraft is allowed to try its hand at TCGs with Hearthstone, it's only fair that Magic gets to try making an MMO.
Loading Ready Run - bought and owned by Wizards.
It's hyperbole. They're not actually owned by Wizards. But they do get paid by Wizards given their Magic content is on the Magic: The Gathering YouTube channel.I haven't followed LRR in years. Is this true or just some verbal hyperbole?
It's hyperbole. They're not actually owned by Wizards. But they do get paid by Wizards given their Magic content is on the Magic: The Gathering YouTube channel.
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL3rP64NRtmbjJFGumln1bvmYHaqhxYvlt
http://loadingreadyrun.com/videos/archive/MtG
They have multi-platform appeal which allows Wizards to access various audiences without having to engage in-house resources to figure out exactly who those audiences are or whether they care. They're unoffensive, family friendly, and one can easily vet their quality of output because of free and public access to their works. They have strong social media restraint and will not invite controversy - they are, in short, professionals. It is so much cheaper to outsource to them for their equipment and expertise than developing and maintaining the infrastructure in-house just like it's easier to hire wide-eyed Pro-Tour hopefuls for a song than consult with math professors that have a mind for game development.
To be fair, I would go work for them in a heartbeat simply because they are such professionals and I myself would embrace the hypocrisy and shill with the best of them. I respect that they police their public behavior and can provide for corporations and businesses something that is rare in traditional geek media: wholesome, groomed, and high-school-drama grade humor. I wouldn't say they sold out because they're a business - they're in the business to plug or sell whatever it is that needs selling and it's a tight ship they seem to run.
I have no doubt that if I were to meet them in real life we would all be amicable and we would have a nice conversation about issues and problems in Magic that would be productive and informative for all parties. But that doesn't change the fact that I frown and get mopey over the fact they're helping market a game that could be better in all the ways that aren't actually related to the game itself.
They write things like this https://www.nytimes.com/2017/06/14/us/politics/bernie-sanders-supporters.html?mwrsm=Facebook
WotC is doing a great job and Vampires belong in the Modo Cube