With the upcoming release of Wrath of the Lich King Classic, there has been quite a bit of talk in the Twitterverse and greater blogging community about this expansion. I have no plans to go back and try out the classic experiment because across the board I think it has failed. World of Warcraft Classic was quite a bit of fun… until we all remembered the work commitment that game required for doing anything serious at the endgame. I think I personally petered out somewhere in the mid-50s and I ultimately lasted longer than a good number of my friends. Those who remained however represented some of the more toxic players, and I’ve heard stories from folks who played like Namaslays about the sexual harassment represented in that community.
For years I have idolized the Wrath of the Lich King expansion as the last truly good time in World of Warcraft, and similarly, I have placed the transition squarely on the shoulders of the Dungeon Finder tool. It was late in the Wrath patch cycle that we were first introduced to this tool, and rapidly folks stopped forming groups on their own and instead relied on random chances to throw them together with other players. As someone who used to cultivate a wide network of social channels and friends lists so I could rapidly pull together groups from a huge pool of hundreds of “known good” players, this was an earthquake that shattered the infrastructure that I had built. However, as I look back on this era, I am pretty certain that I have been wrong about the Dungeon Finder all of these years.
I think the larger truth is that “online social interaction in a video game” no longer held the novelty that it once did. I very much remember my early days in Everquest were spent being amazed that I could be online with that many other players at once. We went into these games carrying with us the lineage of MUDs and IRC chat rooms… that were by nature deeply social enterprises. So the fact that we could play a game and do it while chatting with friends, was a groundbreaking scenario. World of Warcraft was probably the first MMORPG I played that was legitimately by its own merits a “Good Game”. What I mean by that is a game that was capable of enthralling someone who had no interest in “Online Worlds” and only really cared about the mechanical moment-to-moment gameplay. I think those of us who came to these games for the social interaction that they provided… eventually “aged out” of it. It isn’t so much that we lack the desire, it is just that real-world responsibilities eventually replaced the ability to maintain in-game responsibilities.
Since then I have played a lot of different MMORPGs at a good number of different levels of seriousness. It is really Final Fantasy XIV that proved to me that the dungeon finder tool could be a seriously good thing. The key difference here is that Yoshi P and crew wanted to create a structure that rewarded the player for good play or at least good behavior. The subtle pressure of wanting to win a commendation has been enough to curb most of the worst behavior for years. That is not to say that a good deal of toxicity has not crept into this game as well, but most of that can be seen at the highest levels of play and not necessarily in the “duty roulette”. It did plant the idea in my head though that with the correct social structure and systems that reward fair play, you might be able to rehabilitate even the worst of environments.
I’ve also played a good number of games since then that have had no grouping functionality built into them at all. While I can go through the social labor of trying to find groups, it is so much harder for me to be willing to put myself out there when I am grouping with strangers. There has been a long series of games lately where I have been the last one playing or one of the last few playing. This means I am spending almost all of my time soloing, and do not have a ready-made pocket healer to go with my tanky nature. If I could somehow transplant the Final Fantasy XIV Duty Finder and its social structure into New World for example… I would do so in a heartbeat. I know with the removal of dungeon keys, they are putting in some manner of group finding tool, but I believe it is a manual process and not an auto-matching system. Regardless having even that minimal infrastructure is an improvement over spamming trade chat.
Guild Wars 2 has a lot of grouping options for certain segments of the game, but thus far has done little to help me ease into other areas. For example, if we are talking about Open World or WVW content, I can simply click on the commander tag on the map and join the group (pending the group is open, which most are). If it is some daily objective like bounties in a specific region, there are also often manual group finder groups active for folks trying to accomplish that. Similarly, big reoccurring meta events have group finder groups allowing you to drop into RIBA in Silverwastes at will. However, up until this point they have not been a terribly viable way of finding a Dungeon, Strike, or Raid group because those communities tend not to use them. Arena Net knows this and is trying to implement some changes to make them more random player friendly… but still it is not “push button get group” easy.
I think the thing that the Dungeon Finder tool did do, was limit the importance of a server community and the social structures that are entangled with that notion. At the time… I mourned this greatly, but modern me is generally in favor of just completely abolishing the concept of a server and opening up grouping freely across the entire game. One of the greatest faults that I can find in both Diablo Immortal and New World is the deeply limiting server infrastructure that almost guarantees that over time server merges will be consistently required. At the end of the day, the ethic that I care the most about in an Online Game is the ability to play with my friends, regardless of what region they might be playing in. Sure it might be a pain in the butt to organize a play session, but having any sort of basic social infrastructure greatly improves my experience in the long run. Given that it is deeply difficult to keep players engaged for more than a few months at a time, the ability to hop around between different pools of active friends is key to the long-term success of a game.
Essentially for the last decade and some change, I have branded the Dungeon Finder as the great killer of games when in truth that was a flawed perception. I’ve realized that Wrath of the Lich King is a specific moment in time for me that could never be replicated. While some of that experience was wrapped up in the social infrastructure that I had built, probably more of it was associated with the deep depression that I was in at the time. I was clinging to World of Warcraft and the friends I had made in it as a lifeline to keep me from fading away. It is weird to me that I hold the game in such nostalgia when I was playing it through quite possibly the darkest period in my life. I can’t go back to the way I felt at that time, and I honestly would never want to knowing how close I came to ending it all. Instead of realizing it was me that was changing, I placed the blame squarely on the shoulders of the biggest innovation to be brought into the game that I loved.
The hard truth is, I would love to see the Dungeon Finder or something similar to it in more games. Even with the toxic community of players that it brings along with it… having access to run dungeons and harder content is far better than having to expend the emotional energy to make it happen without one. My more modern mindset is that all of the barriers that keep people from doing content, easily with friends should be leveled. Constructs like the Trust system in Final Fantasy XIV are great, but could be even better if they were more flexible and allowed you to build a group of what you had available, and then use NPCs to fill out the rest of the party. There were so many times I wish we had systems like SWTOR where you could run content with two people and two companions. No game has really nailed these systems, but I now have to fully admit that we are far better off with them than without them.
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Sometimes a Rift just does not go your way. Yesterday I was trying for a level 72 to keep moving that needle forward and just ran into a chain of deaths and then got behind the timer. That is one of those things that happens in Diablo 3 sometimes, and it sort of highlights just how dependent upon RNG some of your success ends up being. I dusted myself off immediately and tried to just a straight 70 instead of the maximum I could do and breezed through it. I am having a freaking blast right now, in spite of the occasional death storm. There is just something about Diablo III that I have never found in another game. I’ve been spending some time playing Torchlight III a bit more, and it is a better game than I gave it credit for… but the dopamine cycle just isn’t the same.
When it comes to the Season 26 Journey, I have knocked out most of the low-hanging fruit. The one that is ALWAYS the bane of my existence is the set dungeon mastery. I hate doing set dungeons so much and I avoid them until I absolutely cannot any longer. This is a reoccurring theme and if you look up me talking about ANY past season… there is always a point where Slayer and Champion are done apart from the set dungeon. As far as conquests go I will probably start chewing away on those as well. I need to see if I am at a point where I can farm bounties on T16, and then start stockpiling caches for Avarice. Ultimately in an Avarice season, I tend to wait to do the cube 20 and 40 powers until after I have finished with that conquest because I will be swimming in materials. I need to also focus on doing a really fast T13 Neph Rift in order to knock out that under 4-minute run, which will tick two boxes.
Right now I am running a Thorns Bombardment build, mostly because it was something easy to build into from the Akkhans set granted by Haedrigs Gift. I have almost everything I need to switch over to a straight Invoker Thorns build, and I am contemplating making that shift at some point. I think Invoker might be an easier dungeon to do, but I am not entirely certain. I at least know it is a dungeon I have done several times. I have always thought Omnislash thorns build would be cool and apparently, some patch changes have now made that a viable thing. It is sorta dumb the amount of enjoyment I have by running back-to-back rifts trying to farm additional gear for gaining some power. I have a shockingly sparse number of Ancients at the moment, and my Primal gained from the 70 greater rift… was awful. My second primal wasn’t much better, but at least it was something I could hand to my Templar.
In other news, I am still logging into New World at least once a day and running around and collecting a few easy pieces of Gypsum. I’ve managed to slowly work all of my armor slots up to 600 expertise, and am now starting on weapons. I got my Sword all the way to 600 already, and Greataxe/Warhammer is in the 575ish range. I am not entirely certain WHY I continue to play other than running around and harvesting materials is still pretty enjoyable. I think ultimately I am waiting for the dungeon patch that removes keys, and then I will probably be spending some time trying to get groups tanking dungeons to finish out my expertise grind. I am also farming keys on the side because they have stated that each key will become a box full of dungeon loot. Especially now that all of my armor is at 600, there might be some interesting items that come from those.
The other game I am spending time in each day is Guild Wars 2, but lately, that has been limited to farming daily PVP Potions. For the time being the only members of the Greysky Armada that PVP at all… are me and Kodra and we are trying to farm up as many pots as we can. We’ve already farmed up to 50 a few times and unlocked some of those upgrades and now we are chewing away at one of the 100 potion requirements. At a minimum each day I do enough dailies in order to get the completion reward and the free 2 gold that comes with it. If I happen to be paying attention at Tequatl time, I still try and catch that whenever I can. However, the last few days of being in “Diabble land”, have caused me to miss those.
All in all, I am having quite a bit of fun, but I do need to revisit some other projects like finishing out Horizon Forbidden West.
The post Always the Set Dungeon appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.
Last night I finished up the second part of Living World Season 1. I enjoyed it mostly, but there is still this part where you are dumped into Bloodtide Coast and told to fill a bar. I am fairly certain that this is bugged because it took me somewhere in the neighborhood of 35 events to fill the said bar. Other folks were in chat talking about it as well, so I am hoping that some sort of patch drops to resolve this for the rest of the folks who will likely experience it on the weekend. [Edit] – It appears the patch that dropped while I was doing Tequatl last night addressed this. As far as the actual content… it was a bit shallow. This part seemed much faster than the first drop. Essentially you have some content in Lion’s Arch, followed by some running around and finding a bunch of people, then the Bloodtide Coast sequence, and finally a big set piece instance. If my recollection of part one is correct we got two different set piece instances, but I am guessing they wanted to limit this story arc to only involving Kas and Jory.
The other piece that I was not quite prepared for was the fact that I had already experienced this “dungeon”. I had heard along the way that a lot of the fractals were based on instances from Living World Season 1, but I was not exactly prepared for them to just exactly be those same instances. As a result, completing this area felt probably shorter than it actually was, because I had done it a few times now as a fractal. I guess I did not make that connection quite so succinctly during the first part, though I had also completed that instance as a fractal. All of that said I am still very happy to now have access to this, and I think it is pretty great that we seem to be getting a 20 slot bag for completing each step in this chain. I am wondering if this occurs only the first time you complete it, or if all characters that you run through this sequence are now going to end up fully equipped in bags as a result.
In other news, I have finished my process of leveling every profession in Guild Wars 2 to 80. Most of them, however… are in no condition to actually play. At this point, I feel pretty confident about Warrior, Necromancer, Ranger, and Engineer. All four of those are fairly well geared and have a reasonable build. My Mesmer is getting pretty close but I still feel like I need to do some tweaking. Thief is the one that I finished leveling the last and is a complete mess as is Elementalist. Revenant could be played in a pinch but really I need to get some elite specializations unlocked to make that a more enjoyable experience. I am not sure WHY I decided I wanted one of each, but it is a thing that I have completed nonetheless. Ultimately I am probably going to start doing map completion work on them while I sort out how best to play them.
Right now I am devoting my time to getting Dragonhunter unlocked for my little Asura Guardian. This is likely going to be the next character that I “figure out” and get some viable gear and a build that is enjoyable. Essentially I am abusing my addiction to World vs World to unlock Elite Specializations on the various alts that are still in progress being figured out. Heart of Thorns is my least favorite of the content drops and as a result, are the Hero Points that I am least interested in chasing. So every time I get a Skirmish Chest I am spending it on Testimonies of Jade Heroics, which I then spend at the Heroics Notary for Notarized Scrolls of Maguuma Heroics. Over time this allows me to unlock elite specializations on characters that I am not really actively playing. It might seem cheesy but it is all part of my process and I am very thankful that the game gives me an easy way to work on my alts… while not actively playing them.
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Good Morning Friends! I find myself being forcefully cheery this morning because I have no clue what is up with me… but Wednesdays are hard. I am not exactly certain what is going on with me, but I have the hardest time getting started and actually blogging on hump day. We are starting off this post with this image that I found hilarious because I never noticed that the statue of Balthazar had a bucket over its head with two eyes drawn on it. This is an expert rebellion right here, because when a god goes amok… you don’t just remove a perfectly good statue… you make it look silly. I guess those are some spoilers right there but minor ones. Suffice to say that I have noticed the Guild Wars 2 maps are all loaded with similar attention to detail, and it is pretty cool.
Yesterday dropped the second part of Living World Season 1, and I was super excited about this. So far this content has not aged nearly as well, because there is a whole mystery aspect to it… and knowing what I know having finished End of Dragons… there are certain characters that are named that give these events away completely. I get that this is revising history here… but were it me I would have had that character be operating under an Alias given that we have seen and heard a lot about them over the years. Otherwise, I was exceptionally happy to finally see the official introduction to Kas and Jory, characters that I initially did not like in Season 2… but have come to love greatly over the subsequent content.
I thought I would end up playing through all of this new content last night but ultimately stalled out. they did it again with this content drop where they added a “do events” section in Bloodtide Coast. However, it seems like maybe not ALL events count evenly because it seemed like I was getting more credit when doing the events connected to pirates. There are also now a number of event areas around the zone without really clear objectives on how to progress them. Instead of bashing my face against this last night I proceeded with my usual nightly routine of a little WvW and a little PVP and figured I would regroup today in trying to get past the “help some people out” time gate. I am not sure if this factored into the actual events or if this is just a way of padding out the content. Whatever the case I don’t love it given that there was been one of these seemingly disconnected sections in both Living World parts so far.
Earlier in the evening though I participated in my nightly reset Tequatl kill, and it was one of the weirdest groups I have experienced. The entire zone felt like a bowl of fruity pebbles because seemingly EVERYONE had a commander tag up. Specifically, look at my minimap and if my count is correct, there were eighteen tags of one form or another active last night. Granted a few of those were mentor tags which don’t really count, but the vast majority were bonafide commanders. I mean it was a good meta and maybe went more smoothly than I am used to, but I fear my one map starved the rest of the server of commanders for a time. There is a part of me that wants a commander tag, but another part of me that doesn’t really want to spend the 300 gold on it.
Today I hope to sort out what I am supposed to do in those few situations that did not seem to have clear objectives. The story is great so far, and ultimately that is really what I am after when it comes to this content. It is weird having finished all of the other content in the game and then filling in key bits of information that would have been nice to know all those years ago.
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