colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »Red_Feather wrote: »I really hope this game doesn't keep selling out to gimmick cash shop skins.
Look at what guild wars 2 just did. It makes playing hard to stomach.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QoCh75C4dI
They actually have a lore explanation for that at least, the mount is based on the GW2 April Fools Event called Super Adventure Box which is a virtual reality world created by a race called the Asura.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hJJyma0mMU&ab_channel=GuildWars2
I however have a hard time seeing players with these lore-breaking skins and not to mention the many glowing mounts running around in Tamriel.
You probably should try out any of the content/stories related to those skins before you call it "lore breaking" or read some descriptions at the very least.
Sure, but then you got descriptions like this:
"“Kaoc! That luridly patterned Scale Skin style worn by the Bright-Throats is far too gaudy. Could a serious person appear in public like that? I think not.” – Jaxsik-Orrn of the Dead-Water Tribe"
Hardly an explanation of the lore.
If I'm getting you right it's lore breaking that some particular argonian tribe may cover their scales with some pigment or chalks? Not sure you're serious or not with that exact example. Other skins represent kinda same concept, like being afflicted by some disease or curse, undergoing some reachman ritual or simple paining yourself with ritual paint for the sake of it. Hardly it's breaking anything, but it seems subjective and depends on ones imagination and experience.
Do you try to police how people look and dress irl? Because part of sharing the world with other people means dealing with the fact that they sometimes behave or appear in a way we wouldn’t want them to. And that’s their choice.
I too dislike the flashy mounts and skins. But I do not want any developer time being spent on suppressing them.
Well, I would like to be able to derender all but friends - what about that?- It is an MMO and in the end we will have to tolerate each other to a certain point. I don't like the glowing mounts with all these noisy and flashy summoning effects and lasting particles later on, but it is unlikely that it will disappear. People paid for it and I guess they want it to be seen.
There's clearly justification in the argument that having paid for it they want to see it themselves, but I don't see any justification in the argument that they want other people to see it. That simply puts them in the same category as forum posters who insist on creating a new topic with the heading in caps rather than adding their comment to an existing topic.It's attaching a level of self-importance among others that simply isn't justified.
What I propose is that there be a game setting where other PCs are drawn with their stock racial styles. That's it. I dont want to see a male orc in a Technicolor wedding dress when I'm exploring the new Blackreach.
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »
That being said, am I open to the idea of there being a toggle or a mod that allows people to play the game this way? Sure. You do you- I have no desire to control what your preferences are either
A_Silverius wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »Red_Feather wrote: »I really hope this game doesn't keep selling out to gimmick cash shop skins.
Look at what guild wars 2 just did. It makes playing hard to stomach.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QoCh75C4dI
They actually have a lore explanation for that at least, the mount is based on the GW2 April Fools Event called Super Adventure Box which is a virtual reality world created by a race called the Asura.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hJJyma0mMU&ab_channel=GuildWars2
I however have a hard time seeing players with these lore-breaking skins and not to mention the many glowing mounts running around in Tamriel.
You probably should try out any of the content/stories related to those skins before you call it "lore breaking" or read some descriptions at the very least.
Sure, but then you got descriptions like this:
"“Kaoc! That luridly patterned Scale Skin style worn by the Bright-Throats is far too gaudy. Could a serious person appear in public like that? I think not.” – Jaxsik-Orrn of the Dead-Water Tribe"
Hardly an explanation of the lore.
If I'm getting you right it's lore breaking that some particular argonian tribe may cover their scales with some pigment or chalks? Not sure you're serious or not with that exact example. Other skins represent kinda same concept, like being afflicted by some disease or curse, undergoing some reachman ritual or simple paining yourself with ritual paint for the sake of it. Hardly it's breaking anything, but it seems subjective and depends on ones imagination and experience.
It's not lore breaking if an argonian pc uses the skin, its lore breaking when a non-argonian pcs uses the skin and grows scales. Which is why I used the picture earlier as an example.
ImmortalCX wrote: »ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »
That being said, am I open to the idea of there being a toggle or a mod that allows people to play the game this way? Sure. You do you- I have no desire to control what your preferences are either
Exactly. Live and let live.
Regarding the whole "free will" argument... Thats kinda BS. You and I both know the players who wear these garish outfits are doing it for attention, they know it is lore breaking and don't care.
Lore breaking costumes are in the same category with hackers. They both ruin the game experience, but in different ways.
A hacker hacks the game so he can win at PVP. Who am I to tell him he cant do it? Well, its because it ruins MY game expereince.
Most other players have good judgement, but the ones wearing pink wedding dresses are doing it to screw with other players.
Thats why I suggest a toggle setting.
I saw all those Greymoor preview videos and realized it would be ruined by the clown costumes.
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »ImmortalCX wrote: »ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »
That being said, am I open to the idea of there being a toggle or a mod that allows people to play the game this way? Sure. You do you- I have no desire to control what your preferences are either
Exactly. Live and let live.
Regarding the whole "free will" argument... Thats kinda BS. You and I both know the players who wear these garish outfits are doing it for attention, they know it is lore breaking and don't care.
Lore breaking costumes are in the same category with hackers. They both ruin the game experience, but in different ways.
A hacker hacks the game so he can win at PVP. Who am I to tell him he cant do it? Well, its because it ruins MY game expereince.
Most other players have good judgement, but the ones wearing pink wedding dresses are doing it to screw with other players.
Thats why I suggest a toggle setting.
I saw all those Greymoor preview videos and realized it would be ruined by the clown costumes.
The free will argument is there to give you a way to wrap your head around the presence of these costumes and these people in the game while still giving you a "appropriate" explanation for why they are there. Turning on your mental filters and expanding the story by creating explanations within your own mind can be a powerful tool to actually opening up and enriching your experience rather than limiting yourself to the small boxes in which many people think the world- fantasy worlds and otherwise, need to fit. I've learned to have a sense of humor about it rather than sitting around feeling that people are deliberately attempting to attack me. I hope you can too.
ImmortalCX wrote: »ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »ImmortalCX wrote: »ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »
That being said, am I open to the idea of there being a toggle or a mod that allows people to play the game this way? Sure. You do you- I have no desire to control what your preferences are either
Exactly. Live and let live.
Regarding the whole "free will" argument... Thats kinda BS. You and I both know the players who wear these garish outfits are doing it for attention, they know it is lore breaking and don't care.
Lore breaking costumes are in the same category with hackers. They both ruin the game experience, but in different ways.
A hacker hacks the game so he can win at PVP. Who am I to tell him he cant do it? Well, its because it ruins MY game expereince.
Most other players have good judgement, but the ones wearing pink wedding dresses are doing it to screw with other players.
Thats why I suggest a toggle setting.
I saw all those Greymoor preview videos and realized it would be ruined by the clown costumes.
The free will argument is there to give you a way to wrap your head around the presence of these costumes and these people in the game while still giving you a "appropriate" explanation for why they are there. Turning on your mental filters and expanding the story by creating explanations within your own mind can be a powerful tool to actually opening up and enriching your experience rather than limiting yourself to the small boxes in which many people think the world- fantasy worlds and otherwise, need to fit. I've learned to have a sense of humor about it rather than sitting around feeling that people are deliberately attempting to attack me. I hope you can too.
But when I play, its MY game. Why should I have to do some sort of mental twister to come up with an alternate explanation.
A thug beats you and robs you, but instead of reporting it to the police, you reinterpret the event as, "I decided to give him some money" so you can feel good about yourself and the world. No.
ArchangelIsraphel wrote: »Again, I don't consider myself to be abused or debased by other people wearing things I don't like.There is also absolutely no comparison between seeing someone run by in a costume you don't like and being physically injured and stolen from in the real world. Now, if the person were trolling you, following you, and mud balling you every 5 seconds along whispering you while wearing their dress because they delibrately want to destroy your experience? I'd certainly call that harassment. But someone running by in a costume that doesn't please you aesthetically is not injuring you in any way.
ImmortalCX wrote: »
It was just an example of what youre suggesting I do. Come up with an alternate (yet not true) explanation of what is happening so I can "feel better" about the game.
A_Silverius wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »Red_Feather wrote: »I really hope this game doesn't keep selling out to gimmick cash shop skins.
Look at what guild wars 2 just did. It makes playing hard to stomach.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QoCh75C4dI
They actually have a lore explanation for that at least, the mount is based on the GW2 April Fools Event called Super Adventure Box which is a virtual reality world created by a race called the Asura.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hJJyma0mMU&ab_channel=GuildWars2
I however have a hard time seeing players with these lore-breaking skins and not to mention the many glowing mounts running around in Tamriel.
You probably should try out any of the content/stories related to those skins before you call it "lore breaking" or read some descriptions at the very least.
Sure, but then you got descriptions like this:
"“Kaoc! That luridly patterned Scale Skin style worn by the Bright-Throats is far too gaudy. Could a serious person appear in public like that? I think not.” – Jaxsik-Orrn of the Dead-Water Tribe"
Hardly an explanation of the lore.
If I'm getting you right it's lore breaking that some particular argonian tribe may cover their scales with some pigment or chalks? Not sure you're serious or not with that exact example. Other skins represent kinda same concept, like being afflicted by some disease or curse, undergoing some reachman ritual or simple paining yourself with ritual paint for the sake of it. Hardly it's breaking anything, but it seems subjective and depends on ones imagination and experience.
It's not lore breaking if an argonian pc uses the skin, its lore breaking when a non-argonian pcs uses the skin and grows scales. Which is why I used the picture earlier as an example.
Darkstorne wrote: »The events are canon. That doesn’t mean every single visual detail is canon. You know that. You wouldn’t take the world’s scale in ESO as canon, or the “whoops, we forgot to leave a space for Blacklight in Morrowind” as canon, or the presence of loading screens separating zones as canon, would you? Some aspects are clearly for the game, not canon, and selling whales peacock outfits and mounts are part of that.
ESO has done a lot to challenge MMO norms and evolve the genre though, and I love them for that. One Tamriel removing level gating for example, when a lot of unimaginative folks would say “it’s an MMO, it has to have level gating.” I’m convinced that one day we’ll see an MMO learn when it’s a good idea to phase players into solo instances, and when it’s best to phase into multiplayer instances. Delves and questing in the overland or villages and small towns would be much better solo for instance, where the game challenge is designed for solo play, and MMO tropes like respawns would no longer need to be relied on as a crutch. Delve design could be vastly improved as a result, with guaranteed chests at the end of dungeons like single player TES games. World bosses, dolmens, public dungeons, and larger towns and cities could all auto phase in other players. That way immersion is improved while questing or exploring, and players are still around when you actually want them to be. Until then, we’re stuck with peacocks though
Take this beautiful gameplay video for Greymoor for example. Looks gorgeous! But sadly not representative of the game without smart phasing tech, since it’s missing all the peacocked players running and jumping around, sprinting through the delves animation cancelling their way to the boss faster than you can so you just have a corpse-littered walk instead of a fun delve...
https://youtu.be/gJodQfNx-ws
StormeReigns wrote: »Could use more Caligula. A healthy mixture between the historical lunatic emperor and Malcolm McDowell's cinematic version rolled into being a new ESO antagonist would bring all sorts of entertainment as well to outshine the self loathing peacocks who hate that they got outshined by another peacock in game.
ImmortalCX wrote: »One of the things I hate about eso is that we're forced to view other players with their goofy, gaudy, unrealistic costumes.
I know this is something people pay money to do,, customize their character, but does it really matter if not everyone else can see it?
All this work is being put into Greymoors environment and the immersion, but it will be ruined by players running around in their clown costumes.
What I propose is that there be a game setting where other PCs are drawn with their stock racial styles. That's it. I dont want to see a male orc in a Technicolor wedding dress when I'm exploring the new Blackreach.
Nord_Raseri wrote: »StormeReigns wrote: »Could use more Caligula. A healthy mixture between the historical lunatic emperor and Malcolm McDowell's cinematic version rolled into being a new ESO antagonist would bring all sorts of entertainment as well to outshine the self loathing peacocks who hate that they got outshined by another peacock in game.
Caligula, as in the Emperor who had his army attack the sea because his brain was deteriorating probably due to Syphilis?
A_Silverius wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »Red_Feather wrote: »I really hope this game doesn't keep selling out to gimmick cash shop skins.
Look at what guild wars 2 just did. It makes playing hard to stomach.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QoCh75C4dI
They actually have a lore explanation for that at least, the mount is based on the GW2 April Fools Event called Super Adventure Box which is a virtual reality world created by a race called the Asura.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hJJyma0mMU&ab_channel=GuildWars2
I however have a hard time seeing players with these lore-breaking skins and not to mention the many glowing mounts running around in Tamriel.
You probably should try out any of the content/stories related to those skins before you call it "lore breaking" or read some descriptions at the very least.
Sure, but then you got descriptions like this:
"“Kaoc! That luridly patterned Scale Skin style worn by the Bright-Throats is far too gaudy. Could a serious person appear in public like that? I think not.” – Jaxsik-Orrn of the Dead-Water Tribe"
Hardly an explanation of the lore.
Argonian appearances range from reptilian to almost human; this is caused by the Hist sap they ingest as hatchlings[31] which ceremonially takes place on their Naming Day.[50] An Argonians' appearance and physiology is almost solely determined by their Hist. This leads to some Argonian tribes differing widely in appearance from their neighbors. For example, the Bright-Throats of Murkmire have brightly colored scales of many hues. Their neighbors, the Naga-Kur, have dark, sometimes iridescent scales and red eyes. Additionally, the Naga-Kur Tribe consists of Naga, a subspecies of Argonian with elongated heads and large mouths.[63] Though an Argonian can have ancestry from a wildly different tribe, they will always display the characteristics of the tribe that they were born into. A good example of this is the Ghost People tribe, known in Jel as the Veeshkleel. All Veeshkleel are impotent and cannot have children of their own, but by stealing eggs and hatching them under their own Hist Tree, all Veeshkleel display the same traits.[64][65] Certain traits may fade the further an Argonian is from their respective Hist, though they will also come back once the Argonian returns to their Hist.[66] Strange and reclusive Argonians that live in places away from sunlight, such as subterranean caverns, will lose the color of their scales and become pale.[67] An Argonian can also ask their Hist Tree to change their gender, which is typically followed by a celebratory ceremony.[68]
Kiralyn2000 wrote: »Hide everyone's outfits so you don't see them? Bah - Fashion Wars™ is endgame.
(achivement-hunter and cash-shop 'cosmetics' are the huge draw they are for a reason.)
Do I agree with every outfit I see? No. But it's still fine - if I want my Nifty Non-technicolor Non-lore-breaking outfit to be seen, I need to let their outfits be seen. Your "replace everything with Default Racial Outfit" gets rid of everything. Even perfectly fine Outfit System outfits made from a mix of well-fitting motifs.
colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »Red_Feather wrote: »I really hope this game doesn't keep selling out to gimmick cash shop skins.
Look at what guild wars 2 just did. It makes playing hard to stomach.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QoCh75C4dI
They actually have a lore explanation for that at least, the mount is based on the GW2 April Fools Event called Super Adventure Box which is a virtual reality world created by a race called the Asura.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hJJyma0mMU&ab_channel=GuildWars2
I however have a hard time seeing players with these lore-breaking skins and not to mention the many glowing mounts running around in Tamriel.
You probably should try out any of the content/stories related to those skins before you call it "lore breaking" or read some descriptions at the very least.
Sure, but then you got descriptions like this:
"“Kaoc! That luridly patterned Scale Skin style worn by the Bright-Throats is far too gaudy. Could a serious person appear in public like that? I think not.” – Jaxsik-Orrn of the Dead-Water Tribe"
Hardly an explanation of the lore.
If I'm getting you right it's lore breaking that some particular argonian tribe may cover their scales with some pigment or chalks? Not sure you're serious or not with that exact example. Other skins represent kinda same concept, like being afflicted by some disease or curse, undergoing some reachman ritual or simple paining yourself with ritual paint for the sake of it. Hardly it's breaking anything, but it seems subjective and depends on ones imagination and experience.
It's not lore breaking if an argonian pc uses the skin, its lore breaking when a non-argonian pcs uses the skin and grows scales. Which is why I used the picture earlier as an example.
Picture isn't showing but i got the point. I personally would like some skins or costumes be gender/race locked like hairstyles or similar stuff but most people would hate the idea of mhk skin being locked to werewolves or brp ones for argonians and I'm ok with it.
Anyway it's pretty easy to come up with idea that someone glued crocodile scales for a ritual or simply fashion reason or made an alteration spell like maomer fish which one probably implies by saying "emulate" in it's description.
A_Silverius wrote: »Red_Feather wrote: »I really hope this game doesn't keep selling out to gimmick cash shop skins.
Look at what guild wars 2 just did. It makes playing hard to stomach.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QoCh75C4dI
They actually have a lore explanation for that at least, the mount is based on the GW2 April Fools Event called Super Adventure Box which is a virtual reality world created by a race called the Asura.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hJJyma0mMU&ab_channel=GuildWars2
I however have a hard time seeing players with these lore-breaking skins and not to mention the many glowing mounts running around in Tamriel.
A_Silverius wrote: »colossalvoids wrote: »A_Silverius wrote: »Red_Feather wrote: »I really hope this game doesn't keep selling out to gimmick cash shop skins.
Look at what guild wars 2 just did. It makes playing hard to stomach.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5QoCh75C4dI
They actually have a lore explanation for that at least, the mount is based on the GW2 April Fools Event called Super Adventure Box which is a virtual reality world created by a race called the Asura.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hJJyma0mMU&ab_channel=GuildWars2
I however have a hard time seeing players with these lore-breaking skins and not to mention the many glowing mounts running around in Tamriel.
You probably should try out any of the content/stories related to those skins before you call it "lore breaking" or read some descriptions at the very least.
Sure, but then you got descriptions like this:
"“Kaoc! That luridly patterned Scale Skin style worn by the Bright-Throats is far too gaudy. Could a serious person appear in public like that? I think not.” – Jaxsik-Orrn of the Dead-Water Tribe"
Hardly an explanation of the lore.
About the lore thing:Argonian appearances range from reptilian to almost human; this is caused by the Hist sap they ingest as hatchlings[31] which ceremonially takes place on their Naming Day.[50] An Argonians' appearance and physiology is almost solely determined by their Hist. This leads to some Argonian tribes differing widely in appearance from their neighbors. For example, the Bright-Throats of Murkmire have brightly colored scales of many hues. Their neighbors, the Naga-Kur, have dark, sometimes iridescent scales and red eyes. Additionally, the Naga-Kur Tribe consists of Naga, a subspecies of Argonian with elongated heads and large mouths.[63] Though an Argonian can have ancestry from a wildly different tribe, they will always display the characteristics of the tribe that they were born into. A good example of this is the Ghost People tribe, known in Jel as the Veeshkleel. All Veeshkleel are impotent and cannot have children of their own, but by stealing eggs and hatching them under their own Hist Tree, all Veeshkleel display the same traits.[64][65] Certain traits may fade the further an Argonian is from their respective Hist, though they will also come back once the Argonian returns to their Hist.[66] Strange and reclusive Argonians that live in places away from sunlight, such as subterranean caverns, will lose the color of their scales and become pale.[67] An Argonian can also ask their Hist Tree to change their gender, which is typically followed by a celebratory ceremony.[68]
As far as Jaxisik-Orrn goes......So the esthetic judgement of a Naga Argonian who thinks its perfectly lovely to use a weapon made from her dead brother's body is to be taken as absolute...... The game has bright, flamboyant npcs; the game has strict and rigid Puritan npcs. Unless you really have to follow the current fashions, what difference does it make? Even if you do have to follow the current fashions, which fashions do you choose, and how do you decide? Pretty sure the Altmer on Summerset aren't going to consider the lastest trend in Grahtwood to be appropriate. What the Nords are wearing in Windhelm won't go over well with the khajiiti. Personal preference.
Do you try to police how people look and dress irl? Because part of sharing the world with other people means dealing with the fact that they sometimes behave or appear in a way we wouldn’t want them to. And that’s their choice.
I too dislike the flashy mounts and skins. But I do not want any developer time being spent on suppressing them.