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BioShock


Down with the goblins - Or how to make MMOs fun again

We rip the genre apart, dig up its foundations, and then put it back together.

Words: David Houghton, GamesRadar UK

Different settings and themes for MMOs would give the scene far more of a freshen-up than any amount of new level caps ever will. There’s no reason at all that RPGs can’t inhabit the same worlds as any other game style. Whether we’re kerb-stomping a flying turtle or removing a zombie’s brain tissue through the back of his skull by way of a Magnum, we’re still playing a role in a story. It’s just that RPGs usually only get labelled as such once the grinding and troll-smacking kicks in.

Take Bioshock as your example. It might involve shooting guns from a first-person perspective, but it’s also a brilliant role-playing game. It exists within a startling vivid world, better-realised than that of any traditional RPG we’ve played in years. It drips with a personality, plot, and rich back-story that puts most of the genre to shame. Throw in some powerful but accessible character customisation which has a genuinely dynamic effect on the gameplay and the approaches your character can take to his environment, and you’ve got a game that’s a far better role-player than 90% of the dungeon-crawlers out there.

And now that fantasy has become duller than poop in a ditch, why not go in the opposite direction and experiment with role-playing in a more realistic setting? Part of what’s dull about fairy-tale adventuring is the way that everything is painted in broad, pantomime strokes, and accessorised with last season’s cliches. The real world might not be as grandiose on the surface, but it’s far more intricately layered and packed with shades of grey when you scratch that surface. The little human dramas of real life are far more epic and affecting in their own way, and they’re made up of things we can all relate to. If MMO worlds were scaled back a little, we’d probably be surprised by the vast number of new and engaging scenarios available to us. We enjoy killing a balrog as much as anyone else, but sometimes those kind of events are just too big to really feel involved in.


 
4 Comments
Order Comments: Newest First | Oldest First
Shotgun_Ninja  - 10 months 26 days ago 
Interesting article. I've never found much use for the MMO genre on the whole due exactly to the reasons mentioned here. I have long pined for the day a GTA-esque game comes along offering online multiplayer that actually works. Bring on APB!
td823934  - 10 months 22 days ago 
How true. I've always noticed the wall between the MMO and the player. When I play WoW, I can tell I'm not a bad@$$ Tauren Shaman.
Sly_Fox  - 10 months 12 days ago 
yea but i havent felt connected to a character in wow since pre bc. All wow is these days is trying to get better and better gear

everything you do in the game revolves around that
jjthesurvivor  - 3 months 27 days ago 
i say that all you have to do is make a realistic, fps zombie- related mmo
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