How is it too little too late when the game has only been out since April? I mean come on.
I would agree with this completely, but would add one thing. Who freakin' CARES what the people who left the game think of it, and whether or not they will come back?
khele23eb17_ESO wrote: »
How about the devs and their bosses running Zenimax? In fact you should care too because in the long run less money for ZOS means less content for you.
fromtesonlineb16_ESO wrote: »
The first six months didn't kill warhammer ... trust me. First of all I worked on the Warhammer contract (not a dev) and had lots of inside info and that game was doomed from the start. I am not going to get into all the ugly but what killed the game was that after months of not doing well they released content that sucked even more! It wasn't the starting months that killed it ... it is what they considered the fix to those months. If the content had been a great improvement the game would not have died .....
I also think the devs learned a valuable lesson about listening to your community with that project. Anyway, the game did not die in the first 6 months ... it took time. Time that could have been used to get people back into the game ... death came later. I stand by my statement.
edit:The OP touches on something that occured to me the other day. I've mentioned socially to people I know that I've been playing ESO. This game has an absolute dog doodoo reputation amongst people who've never played, in my experience. No bueno.
This part of what you said is what is hurting the game the most right now imo. People love to suck up hype/drama and run with it. Fortunately/unfortunately all it takes is a celebrity or two to tell people it's cool and BANG the crazy train reverses directions! I think this game will be a win in the long run as long as they continue to be objective, know when to listen to their player base .. and know when not to. Eventually a gaming "celebrity" will take notice, do a hype chant and the tide will turn.
The last couple of days I've talked with friends that left the game at various stages of play for various reasons to find out if the upcoming changes will sway them to coming back.
Out of the four friends with myself included(all huge Elder Scrolls fans) who started playing in beta. One never logged after launch and has no intentions of playing again. Another left after hitting 50 and has no intentions of coming back. The last friend left after grinding to VR12 and may come back when/if Dark Brotherhood gets released.
That leaves me with just over one week left on my sub. I've played most of the solo content available. I feel to get the most out of the upcoming changes I would really have to start again. But the game is so linear and themepark by design I can't really fathom going through all the same quests again.
Is anyone else feeling the same way? Are the changes too late to get the early leavers back? Are they enough to bring the game up to players, especially Elder Scrolls fans, expectations?
Insignia91 wrote: »Every update brings people back. This game will be populated once more!
khele23eb17_ESO wrote: »
How about the devs and their bosses running Zenimax? In fact you should care too because in the long run less money for ZOS means less content for you.
Because if you build the game to cater to the people who left, then you will make a game that no one else wants to play.
So, you had two friends that burned out in Beta, another that exploited to V12 and had no challenge and another that didn't try any content after getting to V1.
This is the problem with avid fans that Beta hard. They don't disregard the time spent previous to launch and are overly critical after launch because to them it's not a "new" game...shrug.
This is a new game that's been taking subs for 3 months now. They've had a couple major content updates and a ton of balance and bug fixes with more of both on the way. The game is beautiful. I get in a PvP with hundreds of players at one keep and I still get over 12-15 fps. That's freaking unbelievable. Granted, I had 30fps a month ago under the same circumstances but still.
I believe this game will only improve from here and is going to have a long and prosperous life. I hope your with us throughout it...cheers.
I think a large number of people who played initially and then leave are the ones who rushed through the game to the max levels, did what they could do with it, and have moved on to another game. These people will never come back. Even if the content was there from the beginning, they would have rushed through it, min maxed it, and still left, just maybe a week later. It has happened with Morrowind, Oblivion, and Skyrim. Heck, in those games, there were a large number of people who did little outside of the MQ.
What was left were the people like me, the ones who are either enjoying the experience of the game, or who savor the content and are in no rush to finish everything tonight. I think this series will have more of them staying longer than other MMO's do.
I have been playing steadily since release, so it is not like I am ignoring the game. I still have an entire Alliance to do, I have not finished the AD with any character, I have one DC character who has finished Coldharbor (but still has the last two MQ battles to finish up). I have not found all the lore books, have not researched all the traits, have not found all the dungeons and delves even in the areas that I have been spending time in. Based on Achievements, I still have a ton of PvE to do. Then, I might get around to doing PvP.
I think a large number of people who played initially and then leave are the ones who rushed through the game to the max levels, did what they could do with it, and have moved on to another game. These people will never come back. Even if the content was there from the beginning, they would have rushed through it, min maxed it, and still left, just maybe a week later. It has happened with Morrowind, Oblivion, and Skyrim. Heck, in those games, there were a large number of people who did little outside of the MQ.
What was left were the people like me, the ones who are either enjoying the experience of the game, or who savor the content and are in no rush to finish everything tonight. I think this series will have more of them staying longer than other MMO's do.
I have been playing steadily since release, so it is not like I am ignoring the game. I still have an entire Alliance to do, I have not finished the AD with any character, I have one DC character who has finished Coldharbor (but still has the last two MQ battles to finish up). I have not found all the lore books, have not researched all the traits, have not found all the dungeons and delves even in the areas that I have been spending time in. Based on Achievements, I still have a ton of PvE to do. Then, I might get around to doing PvP.
This is exactly what I think of the players Nestor that have left and continue to spew bile all over the internet about this game and probably every other MMO before it.
Serves them right for rushing through the quests and levelling as fast as possible and for what?
So now they get bored of the game after 3 months because their mates have got to max level and left because they thought erm what's there to do now, NOTHING because you were stupid enough to rush a game that is meant to be taken slowly and enjoyed, nobody thinks they are any better for reaching VR levels any quicker than anyone else it just means they most likely don't have a full time job and clearly don't have a social life if they are glued to your computer 24/7 getting frills out of getting to next level as fast as possible, drifting from MMO to MMO and getting no satisfaction out of any of them.
These people are always in the minority you get them in all games, hey look at me I am number one I have all the best gear, weapons etc and I beat all of you to max level when in reality nobody gives a s@#t.
These people are not the ones going to keep this game going for years the ones that keep this game going are the ones that take in the lore, scenery, quests and can get immersed in the game world and are looking forward to every update and realise that they will be the ones that see this game grow and are happy to wait it out because they enjoy the game.
This game is as busy as I have seen it since I started subscribing last month and it will only grow every month and will explode onto consoles at some point in the next year and will be massive guaranteed, you heard it hear first.
So haters go and max out some other MMO or go back to one of the others you probably said you would never go back to and stop spreading lies about a game that clearly doesn't deserve it just because you levelled to fast and have nothing to do.
Am I the only one who doesn't play an MMO like some sort of racecar driver trying to get to the finish line as fast as possible? I've been playing since April and am still not even at Vet rank. Yet I see these gameplay videos online of players just running through the game like coked-up madmen, skipping every bit of dialogue and just going from fight to fight at breakneck speed, desperately trying to get XP as fast as possible, as if Vet12 is their one and only objective in the game.
So yeah, I guess if you played like that, the game would get boring at the end. But then again, if you played like that, it would be pretty boring at the beginning and middle too.
I'm sure there must be others like me though--who actually take the time to follow the story, follow the sidequests, listen to the dialogue, explore for exploration's sake, craft and trade, etc. And I'm certainly not bored yet.
Hell, sometimes I'll just sit around around dolmens and world bosses watching the fights.
Am I the only one who doesn't play an MMO like some sort of racecar driver trying to get to the finish line as fast as possible? I've been playing since April and am still not even at Vet rank. Yet I see these gameplay videos online of players just running through the game like coked-up madmen, skipping every bit of dialogue and just going from fight to fight at breakneck speed, desperately trying to get XP as fast as possible, as if Vet12 is their one and only objective in the game.
So yeah, I guess if you played like that, the game would get boring at the end. But then again, if you played like that, it would be pretty boring at the beginning and middle too.
I'm sure there must be others like me though--who actually take the time to follow the story, follow the sidequests, listen to the dialogue, explore for exploration's sake, craft and trade, etc. And I'm certainly not bored yet.
Hell, sometimes I'll just sit around around dolmens and world bosses watching the fights.
Well it depends on what you want from the game and if you want to be competitive with other players. I leveled my main to VR12 in less than a month, grinding from lvl 35 to VR12, because I know that the earlier you're on top, the easier it is to be competitive. I've been taking my time to play with an alt, enjoy the game while still enjoying competitive gameplay with my max leveled character.
Sad thing about most MMOS is that once you've got players that are far ahead, you can't keep up with them if you take things slowly & actually enjoy the game. It takes an incredible amount of time to search for the best sets to suit your gameplay or to adapt your gameplay so it's op, it takes even more time to actually find the sets like the epic sets you get from trial runs that drop randomly, the warlock set or the PVP sets like Syrabane (nerf inc) set for DKs.
After some time, the gap is so huge, that most games end up implementing player & XP buffs to help new players get closer to the competitive ones at a fast pace (I know it's like it for Lineage II and I think it's also the case for WOW).
If you enjoy the game taking it slow, then don't feel bad or alone or concerned about people that rush to end game but don't expect to be able to compete at high level by doing so.
It's all a matter of personal preferences and choices
Dude, people say this in every game. And ride it to the bottom of the ocean like the orchestra on the titanic.
Dude, people say this in every game. And ride it to the bottom of the ocean like the orchestra on the titanic.
Yes, because no one plays Morrowind, Oblivion, and Skyrim anymore....
All these things were said by the Min-Maxers before about all 3 of these titles. They all left, and the games are still being played, more importantly being bought and played.