Unregistered wrote:well
i played UO when it first came out. I stayed with it for about 2 years. I loved it, but then Asheron's call came out. I wanted something new so i went with that. AC lasted for a while and then i just got too dam busy. I have a bit more time and the stand-alone PC game BITE! They are no comparison to the MMORPGS!
Anyways...i just d/l the 15day trial for AC2 and its kinda cool. I guess..it just seems like a more graphically enchanced version of AC1. Maybe i should just give it more time.
I guess my main question is...
Is ryzom just like AC or AC2...but just a different setting?
I played AC2 for just a little while. I liked it to an extent, but I've always been looking for the missing "RP" aspect of MMORPGs. AC2 was actually the first MMORPG that I tried, and I wrote it off b/c I felt the RP aspect was totally missing.
Four MMORPGs later and my attitude has changed a bit. I'm looser in my standards. I don't try to go around IC all the time in Ryzom, like I did in SWG. Actually, it's been quite rare so far for me to be IC in Ryzom. It's just easier and, I dare say--and surprise myself by saying--more enjoyable to play this way.
That's not what you're asking, though. You want to know if Ryzom is like AC and AC2. I don't know about AC, b/c I never played it, but I'd say it shares a few things with AC2. Beautiful graphics. Races that are attempts to diverge from the stock fantasy races of elves, dwarves, hobbits, etc. AC2 may have an edge on Ryzom in that department, actually; hard to say. Ryzom has a simple and fun crafting system, like AC2. The foraging, or harvesting, by contrast, seems more complex than most other MMO's I have played.
I guess all MMORPG's are just that?
You run around the world...fight monsters and build your char?
I like doing quests and whatnot.
If you like doing quests, I think you should keep an eye on these and other Ryzom-related boards. Right now, the only quests are available are dinky, dimensionless hunt, gather, and craft missions that truly stretch the definition of the term "quests." I remember in AC2, there are campaign-type quests right from the beginning, which are tied into cinematic presentations of the storyline. There is no such content in Ryzom as of yet. Quests are coming though, with the first two patches; but, I am not sure exactly what they will be like.
I'm optimistic about Ryzom, and would recommend it. It seems that you are still a bit unceratain about the whole MMORPG concept. Like me, there seem to be aspects of it that you love and aspects that you hate. I think all MMORPG players have to learn to compromise their standards to fit the mold of the game. Many people don't like to do that, have a set of expectations that they expect to be completely fulfilled, and get amazingly, and in my opinion, ridiculously and
childishly angry over what should be a trivial time-filler, not a life-shaping obsession (although these games easily turn into that). This is a game, after all, and if it makes you angry, or stirs up some kind of hate in you, then you need to step back and put things into perspective. I'm getting onto another soap box here, and straying away from your question, but I had to make that comment.
I guess, as an MMORPG player with maybe similar tastes towards and issues with the genre as you have expressed, and as one who is
currently playing this game (unlike some who have been posting in this thread), my advice to you is, keep an eye on Ryzom, but don't bite yet. You seem to have a set of standards and expectations about the kind of game you want, as you should. The kind of quests you are looking for are not available yet. Right now, you will pretty much "run around the world, fight monsters, and build your character." I should add that there's a healthy amount of foraging, crafting, and socializing going on, as well. Plus, there has been already at least one GM-oriented mass invasion of Kitin. I think, perhaps, that these invasions and the RAID engine, are going to be the focus of development, rather than static quests that are available at any time.
Anyhow, my fitty cent worth.
Peace out.