
Heya! Thanks for commenting!
Why would anyone care about what achievements everybody else has?
Because many achievement hunters and completionists enjoy optional comparison, public profiles, and leaderboards. Sites like Exophase, PSNProfiles, TrophiesHunter, and MetaGamerScore exist because a portion of players enjoy tracking progress outside of the game itself.
I completely understand that this is not for everyone. Some players only care about their own achievements in-game, and that is totally fine. That is why I think it should be opt-in only.
What value does it add to the game?
In my experience, achievement tracking gives some players more long-term goals. Seeing what other players have completed can help people discover achievements they did not know existed, encourage them to try different content, and give them another reason to keep playing.
It also helps community sites, guilds, guide makers, and completionist communities build around the game.
Are people not playing because they can't see what achievements other people have?
Probably not in most cases, no. I am not saying this is a major reason people do or do not play ESO. I am saying it would add extra value for a specific part of the community that enjoys completion tracking and achievement hunting.
What are the unforeseen consequences of this?
That is why I think it should be strictly opt-in and read-only. If someone does not want their achievements visible, they simply do not enable it.
Other MMOs and games expose achievement data publicly or through APIs, such as WoW, FFXIV, Guild Wars 2, and EverQuest 2. It is not an unusual feature, as long as privacy controls are handled properly.
Will it lead to an increase in trolling?
I do not think it would if it is opt-in only. If someone is worried about being judged or bothered over their achievements, they would not opt in.
Basically, why should ZOS spend resources on this?
Because it gives a portion of the community another reason to stay engaged with ESO long-term.
Achievement hunters, completionists, leaderboard users, guild communities, guide makers, and third-party tracking websites all create extra visibility and activity around a game. When achievements can be shared publicly, compared, tracked, and displayed externally, it gives players more goals to chase and more reasons to keep logging in.
It also helps ESO appear on wider achievement-tracking websites alongside other MMOs and online games. That is essentially free community-driven promotion. People browsing sites like MetaGamerScore, TrophiesHunter, Exophase, or similar platforms may discover ESO achievements, see what other players are working toward, and be encouraged to try the game or return to it.
I am part of a few achievement hunting communities, and achievement tracking with an active community is a lot of fun. At the same time, it does not affect casual players who choose not to use it. To me, it would be a positive optional feature that helps grow ESO’s completionist community both inside and outside the game.
Hope this helps you understand where I am coming from!
Thanks for reading!
ivaylo.krumoveb17_ESO wrote: »One word - NO. This would just give the elitists more tools to shun people from veteran trials and other challenging content. And opt in? Come on, you will be *required* to have this enabled by raid leaders.
ivaylo.krumoveb17_ESO wrote: »One word - NO. This would just give the elitists more tools to shun people from veteran trials and other challenging content. And opt in? Come on, you will be *required* to have this enabled by raid leaders.
@Gabriel_H
It may not add value to you, but there are communities out there that it certainly does add value for. That's why these communities and tracking websites exist. Please, take some time having a look at one of them. It's completely OK that this is not for you.
ivaylo.krumoveb17_ESO wrote: »One word - NO. This would just give the elitists more tools to shun people from veteran trials and other challenging content. And opt in? Come on, you will be *required* to have this enabled by raid leaders.
frogthroat wrote: »Would be nice if the old ESO-database would be back since it encompassed so much more than just achievements. It helped me to theorycraft a specific build for a specific toon when I was not in the game.
frogthroat wrote: »Would be nice if the old ESO-database would be back since it encompassed so much more than just achievements. It helped me to theorycraft a specific build for a specific toon when I was not in the game.
https://en.uesp.net/wiki/Online:Build_Editor