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I've played lots of MMOS...

MorHawk
MorHawk
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...so that means my opinion must be valid.

Seriously, can we all agree to quit trying to use this lame attempt at validation? Just present your opinion. We'll decide for ourselves if it's cogent or not, thanks.
Observant wrote: »
I can count to potato.
another topic that cant see past its own farts.
WWJLHD?
  • Rescorla_ESO
    Rescorla_ESO
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    When it comes to how all the various game systems in a MMO are designed, someone who has been playing MMOs for a long time and seen several different methods of how game systems were designed has a much broader perspective compared to a first time MMOer.
  • jrgray93
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    While that might be true, @Rescorla_ESO, it doesn't automatically mean they have a solid grasp of the concepts they experienced. You have to remember we're all looking at things from a subjective point of view, and one person's "works" is another person's "horribly broken."
    EP: Slania Isara : Harambe Was an Inside Job
  • Zubba
    Zubba
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    Many people get stuck in the "idea" of mechanics in their first favorite MMORPG. Therefor the players who didnt play other mmorpgs might have a more open perpective.
    Add PvP loot drops for some risk/reward in this game.

    Captain Morgan Society
    Zub

    How'd ya feel like scraping the barncles off me rudder.. Matey..
  • Sallington
    Sallington
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    I find that most people who haven't played many (or any) MMOs had very unrealistic expectations for ESO. These are the same people that were most actively involved in the "ESO sucks" campaign at launch that accounted for a lot of bad press.

    I've been playing MMOs since Eq1/SWG, and really haven't been anything but impressed with ESO in it's infancy. It's hard to take opinions seriously when they have nothing backing them up besides their own wild expectations.
    Edited by Sallington on August 13, 2014 1:08PM
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  • WyndStryke
    WyndStryke
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    I usually read it to mean "... and I want it to behave identically to WoW/SWTOR/GW2/my favourite MMO ..."
  • kitsinni
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    MorHawk wrote: »
    ...so that means my opinion must be valid.

    Seriously, can we all agree to quit trying to use this lame attempt at validation? Just present your opinion. We'll decide for ourselves if it's cogent or not, thanks.

    Having previous experience in what you are commenting about does make the opinion somewhat more valid. I'm not saying that people that have not played other MMO's don't have valid opinions or that an MMO vets suggestions are good because they are a vet.

    If you are hiring someone to run a non-profit and they say "I have run 12 non-profits in the past" their experience is going to be valuable to you right?
  • seaef
    seaef
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    MorHawk wrote: »
    ...so that means my opinion must be valid.

    Seriously, can we all agree to quit trying to use this lame attempt at validation? Just present your opinion. We'll decide for ourselves if it's cogent or not, thanks.

    Good idea.

    The statement has never been valid as far as I'm concerned because you don't know the quality of that play time.

    Who's the better judge of an MMO, the person who played 5 MMOs all the way to end game and beyond or the game hopper who played a hundred MMOs for 3 days each?

    "Lots of MMOs" usually means the latter and those people can be safely ignored.
    "The Illuminati are very achievement focused. It's like Xbox - only everything is hardcore."
    - Kirsten Geary
  • MorHawk
    MorHawk
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    When it comes to how all the various game systems in a MMO are designed, someone who has been playing MMOs for a long time and seen several different methods of how game systems were designed has a much broader perspective compared to a first time MMOer.

    Thanks for being a classic example of what I'm saying. Look up "appeal to authority". Instead of someone just telling us about their vast experience, it would be far better to present the substance of it (e.g: in game X we did Y and it worked because Z). It's like a reverse ad hominem.
    Observant wrote: »
    I can count to potato.
    another topic that cant see past its own farts.
    WWJLHD?
  • TehMagnus
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    I've made a lot of useless posts, and I think yours is one of those.

    But who can be sure of anything anymore?... :|
  • Raash
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    MorHawk wrote: »
    ...so that means my opinion must be valid.

    Seriously, can we all agree to quit trying to use this lame attempt at validation? Just present your opinion. We'll decide for ourselves if it's cogent or not, thanks.

    Cant even begin to guess how the use of experience offend you? If I have played, lets say 3 other mmos, and all those been worse or better at a particular thing then eso, then its quite obvious to most to use that experience when providing opinions.
  • fromtesonlineb16_ESO
    fromtesonlineb16_ESO
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    Sallington wrote: »
    I've been playing MMOs since Eq1/SWG, and really haven't been anything but impressed with ESO in it's infancy. It's hard to take opinions seriously when they have nothing backing them up besides their own wild expectations.
    Because having played EQ/SWG gives you superior incite into ESO so your expectations have a solid foundation and aren't 'wild' at all.

    Really?
  • BodeanG
    BodeanG
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    But, but, but...

    My resume! It's fo' realz!! I must have validation!
  • kitsinni
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    MorHawk wrote: »
    When it comes to how all the various game systems in a MMO are designed, someone who has been playing MMOs for a long time and seen several different methods of how game systems were designed has a much broader perspective compared to a first time MMOer.

    Thanks for being a classic example of what I'm saying. Look up "appeal to authority". Instead of someone just telling us about their vast experience, it would be far better to present the substance of it (e.g: in game X we did Y and it worked because Z). It's like a reverse ad hominem.

    Let me guess college student who just took a class that covered logical fallacies? Just because "appeal to authority" doesn't guarantee the conclusion it also doesn't in any way exclude the conclusion.
  • Aett_Thorn
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    It really depends.

    Using previous game experience to shape how you think a current game experience should be is neither a bad or a good thing by itself. It is how it is used that makes it bad or good (much like a lot of things in life).

    For instance:

    Bad - "I used to play UO and then WoW, and they both had feature X, so this game should have feature X even though it doesn't make any sense here."

    Good - "I used to play UO and WoW, and they both had feature X. Now, I know that a direct port of that feature to this game wouldn't work, but here is a way that I think we could put something similar into this game."


    Bad - "I've played several other MMOs, and this is the worst of them all for [no reasons given]."

    Good - "I've played several other MMOs, and ESO could be as good as them if they did X, and X isn't a problem to put into this game."



    Basically, using it to form constructive criticism is a good thing to do. Just comparing them without thinking about how systems work, how the games are different, etc., is just asking for trouble. Thinking about how systems that you've liked previously, or haven't liked, and making constructive feedback regarding those systems is just fine.
  • Elad13
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    I haven't played alot of MMO's....does that make bugs and crashes less real? I have played a lot of video games however...so I know when things seem odd in a $80+15+15+15+15 (and counting) game.
  • kitsinni
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    Elad13 wrote: »
    I haven't played alot of MMO's....does that make bugs and crashes less real? I have played a lot of video games however...so I know when things seem odd in a $80+15+15+15+15 (and counting) game.

    Good example! This shows perfectly how an MMO vet would recognize that in fact it is not odd at all and quite normal for the genre.
  • Rosveen
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    Sallington wrote: »
    I find that most people who haven't played many (or any) MMOs had very unrealistic expectations for ESO. These are the same people that were most actively involved in the "ESO sucks" campaign at launch that accounted for a lot of bad press.
    This may have been true pre-launch and around release, but I don't think it is anymore. People who wanted Skyrim Online and would be satisfied by nothing else moved on long ago. And anyhow, there have been unrealistic expectations on both sides. I've seen a lot of people asking for features X, Y and Z in ESO for no other reason than because another MMO had them. Which is fine if they can explain how these features would enhance ESO and fit into its design, but often they don't.
  • BodeanG
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    I think people are missing the point.

    Your resume is actually pretentious. Just write coherently, concisely and with knowledge. The people you want to discuss your point with don't need a resume to verify your knowledge, they'll know.

    Don't wast our time with your credentials.
  • UPrime
    UPrime
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    When I saw the title, I thought to myself "oh boy, here we go. This should be interesting."
  • MorHawk
    MorHawk
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    kitsinni wrote: »
    Let me guess college student who just took a class that covered logical fallacies? Just because "appeal to authority" doesn't guarantee the conclusion it also doesn't in any way exclude the conclusion.

    Lol, nope. Just a humble wiki warrior. My college days are far behind me. Yes, I recognize that I horribly misuse these terms at times. I'm just kinda figuring these things out as I go here.

    Like for example right now, that sounds suspiciously like a straw man. I never said that the use of the fallacy excludes the conclusion. Many of these "I R leet" posters genuinely have played a buttload of MMOs, and know the systems inside out. My head spins every time I hear about these Dragon loot and DKP systems.

    I'm simply saying that waving around your credentials does nothing to forward your argument. Actually presenting the substance of your argument does.
    Edited by MorHawk on August 13, 2014 1:56PM
    Observant wrote: »
    I can count to potato.
    another topic that cant see past its own farts.
    WWJLHD?
  • MorHawk
    MorHawk
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    Mudfin wrote: »
    I think people are missing the point.

    Your resume is actually pretentious. Just write coherently, concisely and with knowledge. The people you want to discuss your point with don't need a resume to verify your knowledge, they'll know.

    Don't wast our time with your credentials.

    Posts like these make my inability to add more than one tag quite frustrating. Well said sir.
    Observant wrote: »
    I can count to potato.
    another topic that cant see past its own farts.
    WWJLHD?
  • Elad13
    Elad13
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    kitsinni wrote: »
    Elad13 wrote: »
    I haven't played alot of MMO's....does that make bugs and crashes less real? I have played a lot of video games however...so I know when things seem odd in a $80+15+15+15+15 (and counting) game.

    Good example! This shows perfectly how an MMO vet would recognize that in fact it is not odd at all and quite normal for the genre.

    This is a good example of why the video game industry is about the only industry that rewards laziness and broken features...I have never understood why so many people defend bugs and poor design...I feel we has consumers only support the trend of "we might fix it later" or the view "we have been aware of the issue for months but we are working to fix that at some point in the future"

    If eso was an album it would have 1 hit song and then about 3 others that were off beat...out of sync...and bad reverb....With the promise that sometime in the future you can pay to download the "remix"...

    If it was a movie it would be released with only 1/2 the special effects but then promised to be re released at a later date with new updated effects.

    By defending and calling poor design, rushed concepts, poorly tested, and broken features acceptable, we has a community have lowered the bar and raised the cost of future disappointments and sub par qualities.
  • Xeres14
    Xeres14
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    In order to make a point it's a good idea to support your idea with something concrete. So if I can bring up an idea and mention that it worked in <insert MMO here>, I don't that's a bad thing. Plus it brings up a frame of reference other people who many have played <insert MMO here> can relate to.

    However, if you feel that's pretentious there's nothing the poster can do about that. That's your opinion.
  • R1ckyDaMan
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    The only thing that annoys me is when they then say those MMO's worked a certain way so that is the way all MMO's should work.

    Why?
    Why does an MMO have to use the exact same formula as every other MMO?
  • KhajitFurTrader
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    Frankly I don't care whether someone has played a lot of MMOs and has hopefully gained some perspective from it, or just feels entitled from doing so.

    It's those armchair designers, who've never written a single line of code in their lives, without even the slightest clue what designing, programming, and debugging for a code base with multiple millions of lines of code entails, but who propose or demand features to be implemented/fixed on the double, or else they pull their subscription now, who drive me up the wall.

    For the live of me, I can't take those seriously. But telling them so doesn't help or change matters, so what? :P
  • Swampster
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    Sallington wrote: »
    I find that most people who haven't played many (or any) MMOs had very unrealistic expectations for ESO. These are the same people that were most actively involved in the "ESO sucks" campaign at launch that accounted for a lot of bad press.

    I've been playing MMOs since Eq1/SWG, and really haven't been anything but impressed with ESO in it's infancy. It's hard to take opinions seriously when they have nothing backing them up besides their own wild expectations.

    This quite eloquently, and somewhat ironically supports the OP's premise though.. you're basically dismissing all those people's opinions who thought the game "sucked" after launch and elevating your opinion that it didn't suck because you know better having 'played more mmos'. All while dismissing the notion that those who were saying the game "sucked" couldn't possibly have played many mmo's previously because their expectations didn't match your own..

    From a subjective point of view I thought the game did suck after launch, and in many ways still does.. and yes I've played lots of MMO's too (though not WoW I might add) and I've Alpha/Closed Beta tested quite a few too! So now where do we go? Who do we believe? We've both played many MMO's yet we both have divergent opinions. Or because my opinion doesn't meet with yours you write me off as a noob who's never played an MMO before?

    The fact is opinions are subjectively drawn from our own experiences, and using the "I've played tons of MMOs" trump card to bolster your argument is a meaningless exercise.. as 2 sides to the argument can both lay claim to that card, yet still have opposing opinions...

    As the OP states.. put forward an intelligent opinion, and the readers if they're capable of being objective will decide if it has merit or not.

    There's nothing wrong with referencing previous games you've played in a discussion, as to emphasise or illustrate what a particular game did right (or wrong) and using that experience to compare with how that applies to ESO..

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  • kitsinni
    kitsinni
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    Elad13 wrote: »
    kitsinni wrote: »
    Elad13 wrote: »
    I haven't played alot of MMO's....does that make bugs and crashes less real? I have played a lot of video games however...so I know when things seem odd in a $80+15+15+15+15 (and counting) game.

    Good example! This shows perfectly how an MMO vet would recognize that in fact it is not odd at all and quite normal for the genre.

    This is a good example of why the video game industry is about the only industry that rewards laziness and broken features...I have never understood why so many people defend bugs and poor design...I feel we has consumers only support the trend of "we might fix it later" or the view "we have been aware of the issue for months but we are working to fix that at some point in the future"

    If eso was an album it would have 1 hit song and then about 3 others that were off beat...out of sync...and bad reverb....With the promise that sometime in the future you can pay to download the "remix"...

    If it was a movie it would be released with only 1/2 the special effects but then promised to be re released at a later date with new updated effects.

    By defending and calling poor design, rushed concepts, poorly tested, and broken features acceptable, we has a community have lowered the bar and raised the cost of future disappointments and sub par qualities.

    Personally I think people don't give ESO nearly enough credit. There is a lot of really good stuff. There are bugs, there are issues and you could argue that the design is poor but that is just a personal opinion.

    My opinion is that the game is well worth the sub fee but if you disagree vote with your dollars and go to a game that seems designed well, concepts that are not rushed, has been properly tested and doesn't have broken features.

    I think it is misguided to say this game was developed lazily or imply that you are getting ripped off, it is your choice to be here and this is an extraordinarily complex system.

    If I was going to use your music analogy I would say ESO is an original artist that wrote a song, plays their own instruments and recorded it themselves, it is to some people's taste and not to others. It isn't Beethoven or Bach but it is good music and they are working on fine tuning their skills with their instruments. I you prefer a pre-written song that was sold to an "artist" that sings through autotune on top of a drum machine you are free to listen to that also.
  • Awdwyn
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    kitsinni wrote: »

    If you are hiring someone to run a non-profit and they say "I have run 12 non-profits in the past" their experience is going to be valuable to you right?

    Perhaps, however it would behoove you to check on their history and see if eh ran the non-profits well, or into the ground. With someone's personal experience with an activity (such as a MMO) it's not realistically possible to determine due to the subjective nature of our experiences.
  • Azzuria
    Azzuria
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    Point The First: Having invested time in many MMOs, as opposed to playing them all for a few weeks, gives one a more in depth perspective on several areas, progression, mechanics, design, etc.

    Point The Second: Saying that you have 'unique' insight because of your time investment is rather silly, since there are any number of people who have thought and do think the same thing and, if you go look, have probably stated so in these forums.

    Point The Third: As @Aett_Thorn‌ stated...

    Bad - "I used to play UO and then WoW, and they both had feature X, so this game should have feature X even though it doesn't make any sense here."

    Good - "I used to play UO and WoW, and they both had feature X. Now, I know that a direct port of that feature to this game wouldn't work, but here is a way that I think we could put something similar into this game."


    Bad - "I've played several other MMOs, and this is the worst of them all for [no reasons given]."

    Good - "I've played several other MMOs, and ESO could be as good as them if they did X, and X isn't a problem to put into this game."

    Using your experience to compare and contrast is beneficial. Using it to bash this game for not being a clone of another game you may or may not have invested time in is rather silly.

    Point The Fourth: When it comes to discussions about game mechanics, progression, crafting, et cetera, I prefer to deal with someone of vast and varied experience. Stating that experience is not necessarily bad. Using it as a cudgel to bash anyone who disagrees, is.

    Point The Fifth: I like coffee.
    Edited by Azzuria on August 13, 2014 2:56PM
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  • kitsinni
    kitsinni
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    Awdwyn wrote: »
    kitsinni wrote: »

    If you are hiring someone to run a non-profit and they say "I have run 12 non-profits in the past" their experience is going to be valuable to you right?

    Perhaps, however it would behoove you to check on their history and see if eh ran the non-profits well, or into the ground. With someone's personal experience with an activity (such as a MMO) it's not realistically possible to determine due to the subjective nature of our experiences.

    Of course. Just because someone has experience doesn't mean they are competent or have good ideas. I just think experience in a subject does help give some perspective.

    As an example I have an Aunt who is one of the biggest MMO vets I have ever met. She has played MMO's daily since EQ was launched and played online games before that. She met her husband in online games and has played WoW for over seven years. At the same time she has never hit max level in any game and never plans to and just uses them as a social circle. I would not think her advice as far as end game holds a lot of weight.

    Another example would be someone who has never played an MMO suggesting that everyone should be able to interact with the game exactly like Skyrim probably is lacking the knowledge of how an MMO works to make a valid suggestion. They don't understand how that can't work in an MMO. You also have people suggesting they should be bug free, never have lag, have everything working from day one, be free to play with no store and no sub and I think anyone with MMO experience realizes how unrealistic those expectations are.
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