Mechablogzilla Is Shutting Down
By : Mr. 100I originally created Mechablogzilla as a sister site to Blogzilla 1985 because I wanted a site to focus primarily on games. I have a lot of friends who skip the BZ85 posts that don't deal with the gaming industry, and this site was primarily for them. I had so many different writers posting so many different things on the main site that lots of posts got lost in the shuffle. Of course, those writers are all gone now, so....
With BZ85 as popular as it has ever been, I felt it was time to formally shut down Mechablogzilla. I just don't have time to keep both updated, and BZ85 is the primary site with access to all of the stories anyway.
So, it was a short ride, but I'd say it was still enjoyable. I tried some new design styles with the site, and while not all of them worked, it was a learning experience.
I remind you all that you can still read the latest and greatest ramblings of a mad duo on our Blogzilla 1985 site. I will leave Mechablogzilla up for another week, and then the site will go offline completely. Thank you all for reading, and I hope to keep seeing you guys at BZ85!
Farewell, Mechablogzilla!
With BZ85 as popular as it has ever been, I felt it was time to formally shut down Mechablogzilla. I just don't have time to keep both updated, and BZ85 is the primary site with access to all of the stories anyway.
So, it was a short ride, but I'd say it was still enjoyable. I tried some new design styles with the site, and while not all of them worked, it was a learning experience.
I remind you all that you can still read the latest and greatest ramblings of a mad duo on our Blogzilla 1985 site. I will leave Mechablogzilla up for another week, and then the site will go offline completely. Thank you all for reading, and I hope to keep seeing you guys at BZ85!
Farewell, Mechablogzilla!
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Site News,
WWE 2K15 Looks Fantastic...Literally! Now with Hulk Hogan Collectors Edition Info!
By : Mr. 100
I was getting worried about the new WWE 2K15 game since it's coming out in about two months and we hadn't even seen a screen shot of it yet. It's not unusual to keep a game under wraps and build anticipation for that big epic reveal, but this was just cutting it too close for my tastes. To me, it was similar to when they don't screen movies for critics. You can almost bet your life savings that that movie is going to suck. Not that I even read movie reviews anymore, after Roger Ebert died...
Regardless, my hype level went through the roof today after my friend Louie sent me a picture that John Cena tweeted from the WWE 2K15 game.
Holy. Crap.
For those of you who haven't seen it yet, I present it below along with a side by side comparison to how Cena's in game model looked in WWE 2K14. The differences are astronomical. My fiancee actually thought the new Cena model was a legitimate photograph of the grappler. She wondered why he looked like a gorilla, which I assured her was accurate.
It's not even a challenge. Finally, Cena is a cartoon character in personality only! |
Let that eye candy rot your mental tooth for a second and we'll move on.
Blogzilla joins Tumblr!
By : Mr. 100So why not check us out on Tumblr? It's fast, responsive, and easier to connect with our fans. All three of them! Follow us today, because if it's not sexy we don't eat.
Follow BZ85 on Tumblr!
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Site News,
5 Star Reviews in 5 Paragraphs - Diablo 3: Reaper of Souls Edition
By : Mr. 100Disclaimer - Any promise of a 5 Star award to any game reviewed during the 5 Star Reviews in 5 Paragraphs segment is a mistake on the readers part. At no point in the conception for the segment titled 5 Star Reviews in 5 Paragraphs did anyone ever promise a 5 star review for any game. The review is 5 stars because it's so good, but the game might not be. Makes sense!
I like Diablo III. I beat it multiple times and loved every play through. My demon hunter was so BA that I had new crossbows made for him out of solid gold, which made them unusable. I traded those crossbows in at Bowstop and got 6 bucks each for them, and I used that 12 bucks in the real money auction house. I slapped Diablo's ass down so many times he put a restraining order against me. I kindly explained that with the proper disguises and alibi, restraining orders are practically useless. Ask any of my ex-girlfriends.
If they were still alive HEH HEH HEH HEH.
Still, Diablo III had its problems. The game felt short and kind of incomplete. The auction house basically destroyed the most important aspect that the previous two games were built upon, which is finding mad loot and making yourself cooler than the other side of the pillow. If you wanted better gear you didn't have to take your lazy ass out into the Underworld to find it, you could just buy it from some random dick with even less of a life than you! And great news, you could even use REAL money to buy gear now! HELLO, FUTURE OF GAMING!
Still, problems aside, it was a great trip. Loved the characters, loved the art style, loved the story. I assumed my need to play Diablo was over though, as my multiple journeys through the exact same story had taken a toll on my weary soul. Then, like the grim reaper himself, the expansion set for Diablo III came to take that very soul. Addiction, thy name is Reaper of Souls.
So what's new? The Crusader class is so good it'll make you wanna slap your mama. Why even play as any other class when you can play as a tough as shit plate armored knight of God ass slamming demons back to Hell with a tower shield in one hand a two handed weapon in the other? The auction house is as dead as my hope for Ghostbusters 3, and the new adventure mode lets you take on bounties and open rifts in a separate journey from the story line, allowing for an almost MMO style experience in the Diablo world.
Are there problems? Of course there are. The story for the expansion doesn't take long to complete, and most of the new additions probably could have been patched in for free. But also, shut the fuck up! Diablo 3: Reaper of Souls is a damn fine expansion, and it has completely rekindled my love for the flagship series from Blizzard. If you have Diablo III, you owe it to that part of your sexuality that you can't satisfy to buy this game and show Malthael the power of friendship!
It doesn't quite get five stars, but it gets a solid four out of five for being exceptionally fun, addicting, and for having 100% less auction house.
If they were still alive HEH HEH HEH HEH.
Still, Diablo III had its problems. The game felt short and kind of incomplete. The auction house basically destroyed the most important aspect that the previous two games were built upon, which is finding mad loot and making yourself cooler than the other side of the pillow. If you wanted better gear you didn't have to take your lazy ass out into the Underworld to find it, you could just buy it from some random dick with even less of a life than you! And great news, you could even use REAL money to buy gear now! HELLO, FUTURE OF GAMING!
Still, problems aside, it was a great trip. Loved the characters, loved the art style, loved the story. I assumed my need to play Diablo was over though, as my multiple journeys through the exact same story had taken a toll on my weary soul. Then, like the grim reaper himself, the expansion set for Diablo III came to take that very soul. Addiction, thy name is Reaper of Souls.
So what's new? The Crusader class is so good it'll make you wanna slap your mama. Why even play as any other class when you can play as a tough as shit plate armored knight of God ass slamming demons back to Hell with a tower shield in one hand a two handed weapon in the other? The auction house is as dead as my hope for Ghostbusters 3, and the new adventure mode lets you take on bounties and open rifts in a separate journey from the story line, allowing for an almost MMO style experience in the Diablo world.
Are there problems? Of course there are. The story for the expansion doesn't take long to complete, and most of the new additions probably could have been patched in for free. But also, shut the fuck up! Diablo 3: Reaper of Souls is a damn fine expansion, and it has completely rekindled my love for the flagship series from Blizzard. If you have Diablo III, you owe it to that part of your sexuality that you can't satisfy to buy this game and show Malthael the power of friendship!
It doesn't quite get five stars, but it gets a solid four out of five for being exceptionally fun, addicting, and for having 100% less auction house.
Elder Scrolls Online Impressions...not impressed so far.
By : Mr. 100I won't waste your time today with a lot of clever remarks or personal stories about Ultima Online. I'll save that for future stories when I need to fill space.
No, right now we're here to talk about Elder Scrolls Online. They just finished up with another beta, and while I only dipped my toes in this one, I did play the last one quite a bit. I don't know if the NDA is still in effect or not, but who cares! MechaBZ is small enough to skirt by the law anyway. That's how we get away with obvious copyright infringement and our award winning whiskey distillery!
Before we get started, who wants some hooch?
So I started playing the last beta thanks to Chris from our LoL Zone affiliate. He scored invites when even I could not. I guess the developers are unaware of my reputation, because as you all know I'm kind of a big deal.
The first thing I noticed upon logging in was the way the races were all tied into three different factions. That's fine by me, as the three way PVP is one of the biggest draws of the game for me. I've always loved open world PVP, from the intense life and death battles in UO to the grand battles in Warhammer Online. A three way dance sounded right up my alley, as I hadn't experienced an epic three way since the No Mercy ladder match between myself, Chaps, and Justin.
Hope you weren't expecting something more scandalous. I'm really quite boring. But that match was an hour and half long and we all became best friends after that. Show me a tryst that can create the kind of bond that steel on skeleton can make!
From what I've read, the whole faction thing can be avoided through either preorder or by buying the collectors edition, I forget which. It seems to be a hot button topic for a lot of gamers, but the ability to play any race in any faction makes sense to me. I hate when games like WoW force you to be a certain race on a certain side with no way to cross factions. Yet, at the same time, members of the enemy races are constantly seen in your towns and as allies. Gah!
Character customization is pretty good. You have your basics here - sliders, a handful of hair styles, and even voice options. I've never been a big fan of my online characters having voices. It was cool in The Old Republic, because even though you didn't have a choice in the way you sounded, the well written script made everything your character had to say seem interesting ad pivotal. Here it's mostly grunts and yells. Not very exciting. Plus, you only get a sample of what the character sounds like, and it's not always indicative of how it'll be when you're actually in game. When I played Aion I thought I picked a great voice for my female archer, but once I started playing I quickly discovered she had the most obnoxious voice I had ever heard and I honestly did not play her because of how annoying she came across as.
The meat and potatoes of an Elder Scrolls game is the story. That's a no brainer, right? After all, this is a series built on some classic single player RPG traditions. A lot of people wondered how they would handle the kind of personal narrative of an Elder Scrolls game in a massive multiplayer setting. Well, in my opinion at least, it works about as well as you could imagine.
The introduction quest has you escaping a sort of prison and rescuing an important individual. While I originally thought this to be instanced, I soon found myself surrounded by other adventurers all on the same quest to rescue him. Succeeding did not recognize it as a group effort though. Much like your other theme park style MMO's, you're the hero of the story, even if there another hundred right behind you with the same heroic aspirations.
You wind up in a desert town, look around, fight some pirates, meet new people, etc etc. If it doesn't sound like it's terribly thrilling, it's because it isn't. It really is your standard MMO fare just wrapped in a more attractive package. Yes, ESO is a beautiful game and seems to run well on most systems. Thanks to all the money I sunk into my PC and not into paying my bills, I was able to run the game on max settings and I was very impressed by the visuals. Some of the animations still need work, and the scenery is a bit generic fantasy, but otherwise it's a fine specimen.
The class system is surprisingly robust. I picked a mage but was able to use a two handed sword proficiently. I'm sure there will be limitations and reasons to pick one weapon or another later on, but at least in the beginning I felt like I had some control over what kind of character I wanted to build. The same goes for the abilities, which at first felt foreign to me. An Elder Scrolls game with slotted hotbar abilities? It doesn't seem right, but you quickly adapt. It works very well, and I never felt like I had a screen full of abilities and little room to actually see the game, like when I play World of Warcraft.
The combat system plays almost identically to the single player games, except with the added hotbar. For some people this will be awesome, and that's including myself. I love the twitch style MMO's like this and Tera, as it makes you feel like personal skill can triumph over higher levels and better equipment. For someone like my girlfriend though, this would be a deal breaker. She much prefers the tab targeting and auto attacks of your basic MMO.
Really, the only problem with the game is how by the book it is. I can't keep doing the same thing in these games. Fetch quests, kill X amount of X, talk to this person and return, blah blah blah. It's not an inferior game, it just doesn't bring anything new to the genre.
And for an Elder Scrolls game, it feels surprisingly apathetic from a player perspective. I'm used to being immersed in a world that I've helped mold, but it's hard to do that in an MMO. One of the early quests has you either giving a pirate a potion to save her life or letting her die a horrible death on the floor of her ship. In any single player ES game I would feel like her life is in my hands, but when there are 20 other people standing around me making the same decision, I could really care less what happens to her. I feel no connection with the world, and that's the worst possible thing that could happen to an Elder Scrolls game.
It actually made me realize something kind of depressing about the series as a whole. I don't really give a damn about the world of any Elder Scrolls game. The only reason I enjoy them as much as I do is because I'm a PC (master race) gamer and I take much joy in modding them. My Fallout 3 game had so many mods in it you wouldn't even realize it was a Fallout game anymore. I had terminators, Highlander swords, anime companions, Warhammer 40k skins for the different factions, floating fortresses, and so much unnecessary nudity that you would think it was sponsored by Larry Flynt.
Part of the fun of a Bethesda RPG is to dismantle it any way possible and rebuild it as something completely different. Despite being a solid and beautiful MMORPG, can Elder Scrolls Online keep my interest without the ability to alter it any way I see fit?
I reserve complete judgment on this game until it is released. For the most part I've chosen to ignore the beta, as too many times in the past I've poured days into a beta only to repeat the same steps once the game is released and lose interest. I've yet to experience the PVP, and perhaps over time I'll warm to my character and the world will open up for me. There have been plenty of other MMO's that I was on the fence on and ended up enjoying immensely - Aion, Tera, Defiance to just name a few. And, to be fair, there have been some games I was absolutely hyped about that ended up leaving a bad taste in my mouth.
I'm looking at you, Guild Wars 2.
For now I'm putting Elder Scrolls Online on my list of games to pick up, but I have serious reservations about it's long term appeal. So many MMO's now crash and burn within the first few months, and despite having unlimited potential I'm worried this one will follow the same path.
We'll all find out in June, when Elder Scrolls Online launches. Until then, I'm crossing my fingers for the ability to become a vampire or a werewolf. Or a vampire werewolf. A werepyre!
Wait, didn't Underworld try that once? How did that turn out?
*shudder*
No, right now we're here to talk about Elder Scrolls Online. They just finished up with another beta, and while I only dipped my toes in this one, I did play the last one quite a bit. I don't know if the NDA is still in effect or not, but who cares! MechaBZ is small enough to skirt by the law anyway. That's how we get away with obvious copyright infringement and our award winning whiskey distillery!
Before we get started, who wants some hooch?
So I started playing the last beta thanks to Chris from our LoL Zone affiliate. He scored invites when even I could not. I guess the developers are unaware of my reputation, because as you all know I'm kind of a big deal.
The first thing I noticed upon logging in was the way the races were all tied into three different factions. That's fine by me, as the three way PVP is one of the biggest draws of the game for me. I've always loved open world PVP, from the intense life and death battles in UO to the grand battles in Warhammer Online. A three way dance sounded right up my alley, as I hadn't experienced an epic three way since the No Mercy ladder match between myself, Chaps, and Justin.
Hope you weren't expecting something more scandalous. I'm really quite boring. But that match was an hour and half long and we all became best friends after that. Show me a tryst that can create the kind of bond that steel on skeleton can make!
From what I've read, the whole faction thing can be avoided through either preorder or by buying the collectors edition, I forget which. It seems to be a hot button topic for a lot of gamers, but the ability to play any race in any faction makes sense to me. I hate when games like WoW force you to be a certain race on a certain side with no way to cross factions. Yet, at the same time, members of the enemy races are constantly seen in your towns and as allies. Gah!
Character customization is pretty good. You have your basics here - sliders, a handful of hair styles, and even voice options. I've never been a big fan of my online characters having voices. It was cool in The Old Republic, because even though you didn't have a choice in the way you sounded, the well written script made everything your character had to say seem interesting ad pivotal. Here it's mostly grunts and yells. Not very exciting. Plus, you only get a sample of what the character sounds like, and it's not always indicative of how it'll be when you're actually in game. When I played Aion I thought I picked a great voice for my female archer, but once I started playing I quickly discovered she had the most obnoxious voice I had ever heard and I honestly did not play her because of how annoying she came across as.
The meat and potatoes of an Elder Scrolls game is the story. That's a no brainer, right? After all, this is a series built on some classic single player RPG traditions. A lot of people wondered how they would handle the kind of personal narrative of an Elder Scrolls game in a massive multiplayer setting. Well, in my opinion at least, it works about as well as you could imagine.
The introduction quest has you escaping a sort of prison and rescuing an important individual. While I originally thought this to be instanced, I soon found myself surrounded by other adventurers all on the same quest to rescue him. Succeeding did not recognize it as a group effort though. Much like your other theme park style MMO's, you're the hero of the story, even if there another hundred right behind you with the same heroic aspirations.
You wind up in a desert town, look around, fight some pirates, meet new people, etc etc. If it doesn't sound like it's terribly thrilling, it's because it isn't. It really is your standard MMO fare just wrapped in a more attractive package. Yes, ESO is a beautiful game and seems to run well on most systems. Thanks to all the money I sunk into my PC and not into paying my bills, I was able to run the game on max settings and I was very impressed by the visuals. Some of the animations still need work, and the scenery is a bit generic fantasy, but otherwise it's a fine specimen.
The class system is surprisingly robust. I picked a mage but was able to use a two handed sword proficiently. I'm sure there will be limitations and reasons to pick one weapon or another later on, but at least in the beginning I felt like I had some control over what kind of character I wanted to build. The same goes for the abilities, which at first felt foreign to me. An Elder Scrolls game with slotted hotbar abilities? It doesn't seem right, but you quickly adapt. It works very well, and I never felt like I had a screen full of abilities and little room to actually see the game, like when I play World of Warcraft.
The combat system plays almost identically to the single player games, except with the added hotbar. For some people this will be awesome, and that's including myself. I love the twitch style MMO's like this and Tera, as it makes you feel like personal skill can triumph over higher levels and better equipment. For someone like my girlfriend though, this would be a deal breaker. She much prefers the tab targeting and auto attacks of your basic MMO.
Really, the only problem with the game is how by the book it is. I can't keep doing the same thing in these games. Fetch quests, kill X amount of X, talk to this person and return, blah blah blah. It's not an inferior game, it just doesn't bring anything new to the genre.
And for an Elder Scrolls game, it feels surprisingly apathetic from a player perspective. I'm used to being immersed in a world that I've helped mold, but it's hard to do that in an MMO. One of the early quests has you either giving a pirate a potion to save her life or letting her die a horrible death on the floor of her ship. In any single player ES game I would feel like her life is in my hands, but when there are 20 other people standing around me making the same decision, I could really care less what happens to her. I feel no connection with the world, and that's the worst possible thing that could happen to an Elder Scrolls game.
It actually made me realize something kind of depressing about the series as a whole. I don't really give a damn about the world of any Elder Scrolls game. The only reason I enjoy them as much as I do is because I'm a PC (master race) gamer and I take much joy in modding them. My Fallout 3 game had so many mods in it you wouldn't even realize it was a Fallout game anymore. I had terminators, Highlander swords, anime companions, Warhammer 40k skins for the different factions, floating fortresses, and so much unnecessary nudity that you would think it was sponsored by Larry Flynt.
Part of the fun of a Bethesda RPG is to dismantle it any way possible and rebuild it as something completely different. Despite being a solid and beautiful MMORPG, can Elder Scrolls Online keep my interest without the ability to alter it any way I see fit?
I reserve complete judgment on this game until it is released. For the most part I've chosen to ignore the beta, as too many times in the past I've poured days into a beta only to repeat the same steps once the game is released and lose interest. I've yet to experience the PVP, and perhaps over time I'll warm to my character and the world will open up for me. There have been plenty of other MMO's that I was on the fence on and ended up enjoying immensely - Aion, Tera, Defiance to just name a few. And, to be fair, there have been some games I was absolutely hyped about that ended up leaving a bad taste in my mouth.
I'm looking at you, Guild Wars 2.
For now I'm putting Elder Scrolls Online on my list of games to pick up, but I have serious reservations about it's long term appeal. So many MMO's now crash and burn within the first few months, and despite having unlimited potential I'm worried this one will follow the same path.
We'll all find out in June, when Elder Scrolls Online launches. Until then, I'm crossing my fingers for the ability to become a vampire or a werewolf. Or a vampire werewolf. A werepyre!
Wait, didn't Underworld try that once? How did that turn out?
*shudder*
My Favorite Final Fantasy Moments
By : Mr. 100With the recent release of Final Fantasy XIII: Lightning Returns, the relaunch of FFXIV, and the excitement for the upcoming FFXV, I decided to honor my once favorite series with a list of my favorite moments from the series.
I've been told that lists on a blog site are both creative and fresh.
Final Fantasy has a wealth of great moments. The storytelling in the game has always been phenomenal, even though the series has been lacking ever since the original Playstation era. The SNES to PSX transition was smooth as butter, leaving behind the solid but lackluster Nintendo entries and not yet corrupted by the anime infused PS2 era and beyond.
It is entirely my own personal opinion, but comparing a game like VI to XIII is like comparing apples to Spam. Both will feed you, but while one makes you healthier and keeps the dentist away, the other festers in your bowels until you're doing a mad dash for the bathroom. XIII-2 is what is left over after the trip.
Still, even the newer games have their moments. Unfortunately, they're probably not moments you'll see on this list because it's my list, and I'm the kind of guy that hugs a cartridge and puts a CD up for adoption.
On the black market.
And then I use that money to buy Little Caesers. That's the cheapest of all pizzas.
I've lost my love for the series over the years. Eastern RPG's as a whole have gone downhill it seems, with most of them now appealing to the most hardcore fans of anime and Japanese culture. Western RPG's have become much more enjoyable to me, as I feel they are close to how Final Fantasy used to be, with mature writing and interesting protagonists. Still, there will always be a spot in my heart for that series that revolves around giant horse birds and stylish moogles.
Also, the very style of Final Fantasy makes this list harder than it may seem. All in all, FFIX is my absolute favorite game in the lot, and I could very easily make this entire list about that game. But, for the sake of showing off my knowledge of the series and giving you guys more than just Garnet to look at, I'm going to limit myself to two moments from any particular game.
Except for one certain game. And yes, I'm actually adding this in post publishing because I forgot I broke my own rules. I could have made it just one moment from any game, but I decided not to let you push me around. I do what I want.
Keep in mind that this isn't a list of the BEST moments in the Final Fantasy series, just my own personal favorite ones. If you don't see your favorite moment on this list it's because we have different opinions.
And your opinion sucks.
You also won't find many spin offs on this list, like the Game Boy games or Mystic Quest. It's not that they're bad, just less memorable. And once we start diving into games that are sort of like Final Fantasy but not quite, we'd have to look at games like Chrono Trigger and Chrono Cross. I could make a top twenty list on either of those games alone.
Of course, SPOILERS abound, so if you've not played these games and intend to do so, avert your eyes.
So, without further stalling to extend the length of this article, let's get to the action.
We start off our list with the kidnapping scene from Final Fantasy Tactics: War of the Lions on PSP. In this scene, our heroes Ramza and Agrias defend Princess Ovelia only to have her kidnapped by Delita, an old friend of the main character.
Final Fantasy Tactics was an amazing game that broke a lot of the rules for the FF series. It was a tactics game that used a grid style battle system in place of the traditional left vs. right turn based one that the series was built on. There was also an in depth job system and an interesting graphic style, but what stood out most to me were the characters and plot.
This was a well written game that had such mature writing, as a kid I often felt lost because I truly didn't understand the world of grown ups. There was much betrayal, sorrow, triumph, and a sense of being forgotten that the game really assaulted you with at every turn. You didn't know it at the time, but after this cut scene you were in for a world of heartbreak.
The visuals alone in this video are amazing, and the PSP port did a fantastic job of creating a unique art style for a very unique game.
I'm not a fan of sequels to Final Fantasy games. The title itself should give some kind of indication on what to expect, which is a single story played from beginning to end. Each new game is its own chapter that really doesn't need to be extended.
But, I guess when they ushered in the PS2 era someone in charge discovered they could make more money by rehashing the same beloved worlds and characters instead of creating new ones. I don't know who thought X would be a good one to start with, but someone gave it the okay and in turn we got X-2.
It wasn't nearly as bad as other people made it out to be, and to be honest I enjoyed it more than X. It was goofier for sure, but I thought the characters were well written and it had a playful tone that you could tell hid a layer of sadness. And if there is one thing Square did right in the world of gaming, it is creating sadness.
In one of the best rendered scenes in any game, Yuna performs the song "1000 Words" at a concert meant to create peace or promote her new album, I'm not sure. Her change from a summoner to a songstress is one of the weirder aspects of the game. Earlier in the game it is established that when using a dress sphere the memories of the person who had it before can kind of take over. In this video the spirit of Lenne comes out and sings with Yuna, while everyone experiences the tragedy surrounding her death. It was a very serious and poignant moment in an otherwise lighthearted game.
This one still brings a tear or two.
Speaking of tear jerkers, we have a more subtle heartfelt moment in my favorite of the series, Final Fantasy IX. Our heroes, having already defeated the soulless Black Waltz 1 and 2's, come face to face with number 3, who heartlessly destroys the other black mages while Vivi watches helplessly.
The Vivi character, though faceless, carries more emotion in the way he walks and fixes his hat than any RPG character could today with an hour of voiced dialogue. His quest of self discovery is a tragic one, and that he must watch his brothers die so carelessly is one of the saddest in the entire series.
On the other hand, Black Waltz no. 3 is such a great villain without even trying. His design is amazing without being ridiculous, and the way he destroys his own people without remorse makes him a truly frightening monster.
It doesn't take CG video to make a great moment.
Final Fantasy VI, or FFIII in the states, is arguably the best in the entire series. The characters were multidimensional, the graphics were astonishing, the music was epic, and the story lines were meaningful and memorable. You can pick apart any section of FFVI and it stands the test of time and remains high above the trash they call an RPG these days.
This is not my favorite moment of FFVI, as I've saved that video for last. However, this is probably the saddest moment in the entire game. Yes, that's including the END OF THE WORLD, which also happens,
Loyal and brave knight Cyan lost his wife and child earlier in the game, when main villain Kefka poisoned them along with the entire town of Doma. It's not unusual to see death in an RPG, but to see it on such a massive scale by a complete sociopath like Kefka is really unsettling. The joy he takes in death makes him a legendary bad guy.
But there is no joy in the Phantom Train scene. After making it to the end of this spooky locomotive, Cyan can do nothing but watch as his beloved wife and son are taken to the afterlife. His wife thanks him for his love, and his son vows to keep practicing with his sword to protect his mother as the train carries them off into nothingness.
All the while you sit there, controller in hand, mouth wide open, and tears running down both cheeks.
Final Fantasy VIII was the first FF I ever fell in love with. I had played 6 on SNES when I was younger, but I didn't truly appreciate the art of storytelling until I was a teenager and started writing my own tales. It influenced a lot of my writing early on, and I still love it to this day. It got a lot of flack for focusing so much on love, but I understand and appreciate it even more now as an adult.
The ending FMV to VIII was just about perfect in every way. It tied together all the loose ends and really gave you a sense of closure. It is a little odd to have a FF antagonist, in this case Seifer, actually have a happy ending. His scene with Raijin and Fuujin is fitting, and I'm sure my friend Michelle will get a kick out of this one.
The best part ties into the song that plays, which is the lovely "Eyes on Me" by Faye Wong. Everyone assumed the game was based on the love between Squall and Rinoa, but it was really designed for Laguna and Raine. Laguna is my favorite character in the entire Final Fantasy catalog, being a handsome journalist just like myself. When it sinks in that his wife is dead, I feel a little stab in my own heart.
But it's not completely sad, as it has a hopeful and sweet twist at the very end. I really was under the assumption that Squall had died, and I remember watching the credits and being furious that he was gone. When they show him through the camcorder at the party I knew then what it meant to really care about a character.
An honorable mention goes to the FFVIII opening, as it's just as cool, if not cooler. I didn't want to put both of them on the list, and I feel the ending carries more emotion, but go out of your way to see the intro. It's worth it.
Speaking of Final Fantasy VIII, imagine the shock and awe you experienced the first time you saw this. Odin was one of the best summons in the game, but what happens when you put him against Seifer?
He dies.
In fact, he gets cut in half completely, and so does his horse.
I remember yelling at the TV about how unfair that was. You can't kill a summon! Literally, you could NOT kill a summon! But Seifer does it one hit? Also, I use the term "hit" loosely. Seifer never even moves his damn hand. He just points his sword forward, and suddenly Odin wonders if he left his door unlocked and forgets to not run directly into Seifer's gunblade.
The only saving grace for that stupidity is that you got an even greater summon in the form of Gilgamesh, who promptly whoops Seifer with the RAGE OF A THOUSAND SUMMONS.
Even so, Tonberry King > Gilgamesh.
And sure enough, there was Aeris getting impaled by Masamune. I was in shock. Aeris was one of the purest characters in video game history. She was sweet, loyal, strong, and fully dressed. She was not the typical JRPG heroine, but she was still a heroine! She was a main character! Never before had I ever seen a main character get killed, especially so early in the game! It was the game equivalent to when Janet Leigh was stabbed to death in the shower in Psycho. I imagine somewhere in Japan, the creators of the game were laughing maniacally as they swam in their bin of money and fanboy tears.
The battle music is haunting, and it's a subtle change from the pulse pounding theme that usually accompanies a fight. It's fitting, too, because she whoops you, plain and simple. It doesn't matter what level you are. It doesn't matter how hard you train or what items you equip. Beatrix is here to pummel you into the dirt no matter what you do.
And she looks gorgeous doing so!
This is it. This is the moment we've been building up to. You're probably asking yourself why I have so many entries on this list for FFVI, and rather than rage kick you into a Marlboro, I'm going to tell you.
A lot of the moments on this list are great, but at the time it was easy for a CG cut scene to be awesome. When you spend most of the game looking at blocky sprites, it's hard not to gasp at beautifully rendered scenes of sorrow and glory. It's even more amazing to invoke the same kind of response using nothing but SNES synth sounds and 16 bit graphics. A lot of FFVI did just that. It took the technology of the generation and made it so phenomenal that it could stand the test of time.
And my favorite moment of any Final Fantasy game I've ever played doesn't have flashy action or destruction. It takes place in an opera house, where the heroes are trying to lure out the enigmatic Setzer by placing Ceres in the role of Maria, an actress who he is in love with. What follows is one of the most legendary moments in gaming history, and in essence it's just a simple stage play set in a game about the end of the world.
And I love it.
It would be a lie if I said the actual SNES sounds were easy on the ears. It doesn't sound bad, but you really appreciate the scene more when you listen to a full operatic version of the music on display here.
And here it is! Enjoy, and I hope you enjoyed the trip down memory lane as well. Agree or disagree with my choices? Let me know.
For now, let's strike up the band...
I've been told that lists on a blog site are both creative and fresh.
Final Fantasy has a wealth of great moments. The storytelling in the game has always been phenomenal, even though the series has been lacking ever since the original Playstation era. The SNES to PSX transition was smooth as butter, leaving behind the solid but lackluster Nintendo entries and not yet corrupted by the anime infused PS2 era and beyond.
It is entirely my own personal opinion, but comparing a game like VI to XIII is like comparing apples to Spam. Both will feed you, but while one makes you healthier and keeps the dentist away, the other festers in your bowels until you're doing a mad dash for the bathroom. XIII-2 is what is left over after the trip.
Still, even the newer games have their moments. Unfortunately, they're probably not moments you'll see on this list because it's my list, and I'm the kind of guy that hugs a cartridge and puts a CD up for adoption.
On the black market.
And then I use that money to buy Little Caesers. That's the cheapest of all pizzas.
I've lost my love for the series over the years. Eastern RPG's as a whole have gone downhill it seems, with most of them now appealing to the most hardcore fans of anime and Japanese culture. Western RPG's have become much more enjoyable to me, as I feel they are close to how Final Fantasy used to be, with mature writing and interesting protagonists. Still, there will always be a spot in my heart for that series that revolves around giant horse birds and stylish moogles.
Also, the very style of Final Fantasy makes this list harder than it may seem. All in all, FFIX is my absolute favorite game in the lot, and I could very easily make this entire list about that game. But, for the sake of showing off my knowledge of the series and giving you guys more than just Garnet to look at, I'm going to limit myself to two moments from any particular game.
Except for one certain game. And yes, I'm actually adding this in post publishing because I forgot I broke my own rules. I could have made it just one moment from any game, but I decided not to let you push me around. I do what I want.
Keep in mind that this isn't a list of the BEST moments in the Final Fantasy series, just my own personal favorite ones. If you don't see your favorite moment on this list it's because we have different opinions.
And your opinion sucks.
You also won't find many spin offs on this list, like the Game Boy games or Mystic Quest. It's not that they're bad, just less memorable. And once we start diving into games that are sort of like Final Fantasy but not quite, we'd have to look at games like Chrono Trigger and Chrono Cross. I could make a top twenty list on either of those games alone.
Of course, SPOILERS abound, so if you've not played these games and intend to do so, avert your eyes.
So, without further stalling to extend the length of this article, let's get to the action.
Delita Kidnaps Ovelia
We start off our list with the kidnapping scene from Final Fantasy Tactics: War of the Lions on PSP. In this scene, our heroes Ramza and Agrias defend Princess Ovelia only to have her kidnapped by Delita, an old friend of the main character.
Final Fantasy Tactics was an amazing game that broke a lot of the rules for the FF series. It was a tactics game that used a grid style battle system in place of the traditional left vs. right turn based one that the series was built on. There was also an in depth job system and an interesting graphic style, but what stood out most to me were the characters and plot.
This was a well written game that had such mature writing, as a kid I often felt lost because I truly didn't understand the world of grown ups. There was much betrayal, sorrow, triumph, and a sense of being forgotten that the game really assaulted you with at every turn. You didn't know it at the time, but after this cut scene you were in for a world of heartbreak.
The visuals alone in this video are amazing, and the PSP port did a fantastic job of creating a unique art style for a very unique game.
1000 Words
I'm not a fan of sequels to Final Fantasy games. The title itself should give some kind of indication on what to expect, which is a single story played from beginning to end. Each new game is its own chapter that really doesn't need to be extended.
But, I guess when they ushered in the PS2 era someone in charge discovered they could make more money by rehashing the same beloved worlds and characters instead of creating new ones. I don't know who thought X would be a good one to start with, but someone gave it the okay and in turn we got X-2.
It wasn't nearly as bad as other people made it out to be, and to be honest I enjoyed it more than X. It was goofier for sure, but I thought the characters were well written and it had a playful tone that you could tell hid a layer of sadness. And if there is one thing Square did right in the world of gaming, it is creating sadness.
In one of the best rendered scenes in any game, Yuna performs the song "1000 Words" at a concert meant to create peace or promote her new album, I'm not sure. Her change from a summoner to a songstress is one of the weirder aspects of the game. Earlier in the game it is established that when using a dress sphere the memories of the person who had it before can kind of take over. In this video the spirit of Lenne comes out and sings with Yuna, while everyone experiences the tragedy surrounding her death. It was a very serious and poignant moment in an otherwise lighthearted game.
This one still brings a tear or two.
Black Waltz no. 3
Speaking of tear jerkers, we have a more subtle heartfelt moment in my favorite of the series, Final Fantasy IX. Our heroes, having already defeated the soulless Black Waltz 1 and 2's, come face to face with number 3, who heartlessly destroys the other black mages while Vivi watches helplessly.
The Vivi character, though faceless, carries more emotion in the way he walks and fixes his hat than any RPG character could today with an hour of voiced dialogue. His quest of self discovery is a tragic one, and that he must watch his brothers die so carelessly is one of the saddest in the entire series.
On the other hand, Black Waltz no. 3 is such a great villain without even trying. His design is amazing without being ridiculous, and the way he destroys his own people without remorse makes him a truly frightening monster.
The Phantom Train
It doesn't take CG video to make a great moment.
Final Fantasy VI, or FFIII in the states, is arguably the best in the entire series. The characters were multidimensional, the graphics were astonishing, the music was epic, and the story lines were meaningful and memorable. You can pick apart any section of FFVI and it stands the test of time and remains high above the trash they call an RPG these days.
This is not my favorite moment of FFVI, as I've saved that video for last. However, this is probably the saddest moment in the entire game. Yes, that's including the END OF THE WORLD, which also happens,
Loyal and brave knight Cyan lost his wife and child earlier in the game, when main villain Kefka poisoned them along with the entire town of Doma. It's not unusual to see death in an RPG, but to see it on such a massive scale by a complete sociopath like Kefka is really unsettling. The joy he takes in death makes him a legendary bad guy.
But there is no joy in the Phantom Train scene. After making it to the end of this spooky locomotive, Cyan can do nothing but watch as his beloved wife and son are taken to the afterlife. His wife thanks him for his love, and his son vows to keep practicing with his sword to protect his mother as the train carries them off into nothingness.
All the while you sit there, controller in hand, mouth wide open, and tears running down both cheeks.
Final Fantasy VIII Ending
Final Fantasy VIII was the first FF I ever fell in love with. I had played 6 on SNES when I was younger, but I didn't truly appreciate the art of storytelling until I was a teenager and started writing my own tales. It influenced a lot of my writing early on, and I still love it to this day. It got a lot of flack for focusing so much on love, but I understand and appreciate it even more now as an adult.
The ending FMV to VIII was just about perfect in every way. It tied together all the loose ends and really gave you a sense of closure. It is a little odd to have a FF antagonist, in this case Seifer, actually have a happy ending. His scene with Raijin and Fuujin is fitting, and I'm sure my friend Michelle will get a kick out of this one.
The best part ties into the song that plays, which is the lovely "Eyes on Me" by Faye Wong. Everyone assumed the game was based on the love between Squall and Rinoa, but it was really designed for Laguna and Raine. Laguna is my favorite character in the entire Final Fantasy catalog, being a handsome journalist just like myself. When it sinks in that his wife is dead, I feel a little stab in my own heart.
But it's not completely sad, as it has a hopeful and sweet twist at the very end. I really was under the assumption that Squall had died, and I remember watching the credits and being furious that he was gone. When they show him through the camcorder at the party I knew then what it meant to really care about a character.
An honorable mention goes to the FFVIII opening, as it's just as cool, if not cooler. I didn't want to put both of them on the list, and I feel the ending carries more emotion, but go out of your way to see the intro. It's worth it.
Odin Gets PWNEDlolz
Speaking of Final Fantasy VIII, imagine the shock and awe you experienced the first time you saw this. Odin was one of the best summons in the game, but what happens when you put him against Seifer?
He dies.
In fact, he gets cut in half completely, and so does his horse.
I remember yelling at the TV about how unfair that was. You can't kill a summon! Literally, you could NOT kill a summon! But Seifer does it one hit? Also, I use the term "hit" loosely. Seifer never even moves his damn hand. He just points his sword forward, and suddenly Odin wonders if he left his door unlocked and forgets to not run directly into Seifer's gunblade.
The only saving grace for that stupidity is that you got an even greater summon in the form of Gilgamesh, who promptly whoops Seifer with the RAGE OF A THOUSAND SUMMONS.
Even so, Tonberry King > Gilgamesh.
The Coming Death
This is what probably set the tone for a lot of Final Fantasy fans that grew up in my era. An era which isn't that old, thanks for judging me. A lot of gamers may have played the original NES title or Final Fantasy IV (II, whatever, shut up), but it was VI that changed the landscape of Eastern RPG's in the United States.
The opening to Final Fantasy VI is amazing enough with the ominous music and thunderous background. But it's when we first meet a brainwashed Terra and watch as she's guided to the town of Narshe by two lackeys that we realize something epic is going to happen. They have destruction on their minds as they march towards annihilation in their Magitek armor while Terra's theme plays like a calm before the storm
VI was a prime example of how good storytelling and direction can overcome big budget computer generated graphics. I really wish SquareEnix would remember that.
Death From Above
This one is kind of a given. Let me tell you a little story about this particular moment.
Final Fantasy VIII was the first one in the series that I ever finished. I will always remember it as the entry that really made me love RPG's. I had played FFVI, but as I said before, I just didn't appreciate it at the time. I picked up a PSX to play Symphony of the Night a few years after the console launched, and I bought FFVII a little later based mostly on the unimaginable hype that surrounded it. And though I did enjoy it, I put it on the back burner once I got VIII. After I finished Squall's quest I went back to VII with an invigorated love of all things JRPG. I started downloading soundtracks to all of the various titles from Napster, and...
Yes, that's right, Napster. Ask your parents. But don't tell them I used it.
Anyway, while looking through track lists I came upon the song "Aeris Death." Needless to say, I was not to this point in the game yet. As far as I knew, Aeris was alive and well somewhere with the gang getting into hijinks and shenanigans. This song spurred me to read ahead in the story, which is always a mistake when you're playing an RPG. For the love of God, just don't do it.
But I did it.
It was controversial, it was disheartening, and it made me really want to bring justice to Sephiroth.
And I did.
Knights of the Round, jack wagon.
Save the Queen
Ah, what a great moment. Final Fantasy IX has the best round up of characters in the entire series. From the smooth talking thief Zidane to a colorful supporting class, I thoroughly enjoyed the adventures of this rag tag group of heroes. The enemies were even more diverse and are easily the most interesting villains in any Final Fantasy game. Usually, you have one main bad guy, and you might get a named miniboss or two, but they keep the focus on the big bad, for the most part.
But FFIX shattered that rule with a host of memorable antagonists. This video shows off three of them, and it is the first time you fight the beautiful and deadly Beatrix.
And she looks gorgeous doing so!
She was my favorite character of IX, and her transformation from misguided villain to redeemed knight was one of the best aspects of this amazing game. Still, nothing will ever erase the memory of what a straight up beat down you get from her. Not just once, my friend. Not just twice. You have to fight Beatrix THREE times in this game, and each time she stomps you in the mud and wipes her boots on your broken face.
Oh, Beatrix. You give a guy warm feelings. And broken bones.
We also see Kuja laugh at your poor pack of wounded warriors, setting himself up to be a much bigger threat later on. He could use some pants, however. I almost feel like somewhere along the line, Kuja and Beatrix got their gear mixed up and were just too embarrassed to say anything about it.
Opera Scene
This is it. This is the moment we've been building up to. You're probably asking yourself why I have so many entries on this list for FFVI, and rather than rage kick you into a Marlboro, I'm going to tell you.
A lot of the moments on this list are great, but at the time it was easy for a CG cut scene to be awesome. When you spend most of the game looking at blocky sprites, it's hard not to gasp at beautifully rendered scenes of sorrow and glory. It's even more amazing to invoke the same kind of response using nothing but SNES synth sounds and 16 bit graphics. A lot of FFVI did just that. It took the technology of the generation and made it so phenomenal that it could stand the test of time.
And my favorite moment of any Final Fantasy game I've ever played doesn't have flashy action or destruction. It takes place in an opera house, where the heroes are trying to lure out the enigmatic Setzer by placing Ceres in the role of Maria, an actress who he is in love with. What follows is one of the most legendary moments in gaming history, and in essence it's just a simple stage play set in a game about the end of the world.
And I love it.
It would be a lie if I said the actual SNES sounds were easy on the ears. It doesn't sound bad, but you really appreciate the scene more when you listen to a full operatic version of the music on display here.
And here it is! Enjoy, and I hope you enjoyed the trip down memory lane as well. Agree or disagree with my choices? Let me know.
For now, let's strike up the band...
Tag :
Final Fantasy,
Gaming,
WoW Updates - Female Orc Art and Pay to be 90 (And don't bitch about it!)
By : Mr. 100What better way to christen the new MECHABLOGZILLA ship than with an article about the MMO that is most near and dear to me very own heart? No, I'm not talking about Ultima Online.
But I will be in a few paragraphs.
The official World of Warcraft site released pictures of the new female Orc models that will be implemented some time around the new "Warlords of Draenor" expansion. Like the previous releases, this one is both familiar enough to the characters you've grown attached to over the past ten years, while being clearly superior to the point that you don't want to play as your avatar until they upgrade her.
Assuming anyone even plays as a female Orc. Seriously, do they? Male Orcs are impressive for their huge muscles and fearsome look that gives credence to the notion that they are war mongering beast men.
But female Orcs? Gussy that lass up all you want Blizzard, no one is buying it as beautiful or intimidating. To be fair, I feel the same way about female Worgen. Male Worgens are jacked and look like fearsome werewolves, while the female variety kind of look like something your douchebag high school girlfriend would carry in her purse. Seeing these races brings to mind a quote by our president Barrack Obama. Something about lipstick on a pig, which I think was referencing the election but might have just been about Rosie O'Donnell.
Actually, she kind of looks like an 80's punk rocker, but she certainly is not Linnea Quigley in Return of the Living Dead. My advice is to NOT Google that unless you're ready for a lot of nudity and awesomeness from one of the greatest zombie movies ever made.
However, this is all just based on my own prejudice against Horde races. I'm an Alliance player, not because I like losing or having RP sex in Goldshire, but because I'd rather play an honorable underdog knight than a power hungry monster who enrolled in a free course at the Kratos School of Character Development.
RAWR RAWR VIOLENCE ANGER BLOOD BLOOD!
So my own personal racism aside, it looks really good. It retains the overall look, but you can really see the improvements they're making to the aging client. The changes are great so far, and when you combine this with the new expansion dropping later this year and the increase in subscriptions, it looks like it will be a very big year for WoW.
And that brings us to the new elephant in the room.
I saw this leaked on WoWInsider.com first, but I'm pretty sure it's making the rounds on most of the major sites. When the servers went up recently someone noticed and snagged a picture of what appears to be a new service option that lets you instantly upgrade a character to level ninety for a staggering price tag of sixty dollars.
And soon, the darkness.
Players were livid. It didn't matter that this was an apparent accident that wasn't supposed to go live yet. When "Warlords of Draenor" releases, players will be able to upgrade one character to level ninety for free and it seems like this service goes hand in hand with that. I've gone incognegro in some of the forums and listened to an overwhelmingly negative response to the service. To be honest, I kind of jumped on the fury bandwagon at first but soon found myself conflicted and hungry.
On one hand, how dare Blizzard offer up a paid service that basically renders a players time and progress pointless when they can just click click click and become an insta-hero? It's bad enough that Blizzard offers microtransactions on top of being a strictly pay to play service, and as far as my memory goes I believe they're the one of the few companies with the hearthstones to do so. You can play for fifteen dollars a month, and for just ten to twenty five more you can purchase some great pets or uber mounts. It really gives off the impression of "why work yourself to death when you just swipe a card and receive instant gratification?"
That dog won't hunt, monsignor.
The very essence of an MMORPG is the time and love you put into your character. It may be an online game, and the player base of an online game may have devolved into an arena zergfest filled with entitled assholes with inferiority complexes, but it's still an RPG. The reason to play an RPG is to build your character, go on adventures, and create a memory of living as another person in another world far from the sad existence you call your life.
It's an escape, but now we're looking for shortcuts to help escape the escape. Do players really want to just upgrade instead of experience? What about when that player upgrades to level ninety on a class he's inexperienced with, and you're running a raid with him and he doesn't know what the hell he's doing.
Blizzard is running the risk of destroying all the positive attention they've been getting this year.
Once I started to think about it though, and ate some pizza, I reconsidered my stance. Yeah it does belittle the entire point of playing an online role playing game, but it won't change my life at all. In fact, if anything, it would greatly improve my lifespan as a player.
I'll tell you why. I'm going to let you in on a secret. I've been playing WoW since launch, and I don't even have one character at level cap. I did once, before Cataclysm came out, but once they raised it again and I had to drag my feet underwater for what felt like fucking forever I gave up and stopped playing. My warrior, who I've been going to war against the Horde with for years, sits at an embarrassing level 84 while day in and day out I hear the simplest idiots in gaming brag about how many level nineties they have. Rednecks, grandmas, meth addicts, douchebag college kids, you name the stereotype and I can tell you how often they dangle their superiority in WoW in front of my very unimpressed face.
The free level nineties I get from the new expansion will allow me to play the new content without devoting all of my busy time to leveling my proud warrior. Managing two game stores, a dying father, a fiancee, a violent cat, and the other trials and tribulations that always seem to pop up in my life leaves little time for hardcore gaming.
And there are WAY more people out there with rougher lives than me. Do you think parents, college students, religious snake handlers, and other like minded individuals have the time to devote to virtual characters when real life is so demanding? They shouldn't be punished for not having the same time to put into a game they love that your asshole friends who mooch off of their parents money and contribute nothing of their own to society do.
It isn't the first game to offer this kind of service, either. Even my beloved Ultima Online, now a hollow shell of its former self, offers the ability to buy an advanced character instead of, you know, earning one.
I'm going to try to reserve judgment on this service until I see how it plays out. I feel like it won't reflect me at all, and people are just looking for a reason to bitch because that's what gamers are conditioned to do now. It's really a reflection on the industry, where DLC and paid services are all the rage now. It's a sign of the times, and as long as the money is there so too will there be a market for it. I hate it, I always have, but I let go of that lie about one person making a difference a long time ago.
If you disagree with WoW's direction, you could always try FFXIV. It's a nice throwback to an old style with just enough new car smell to feel different. You could bore yourself to tears with Guild Wars 2, or try one of the upcoming titles - ESO, EQNext, Wildstar, and a plethora of Asian F2P titles that seem to come out despite the fact that no one cares.
Kind of like Michelle Rodriguez.
Keep your goddamn hands off of my sweet Cara.
But I will be in a few paragraphs.
The official World of Warcraft site released pictures of the new female Orc models that will be implemented some time around the new "Warlords of Draenor" expansion. Like the previous releases, this one is both familiar enough to the characters you've grown attached to over the past ten years, while being clearly superior to the point that you don't want to play as your avatar until they upgrade her.
Assuming anyone even plays as a female Orc. Seriously, do they? Male Orcs are impressive for their huge muscles and fearsome look that gives credence to the notion that they are war mongering beast men.
But female Orcs? Gussy that lass up all you want Blizzard, no one is buying it as beautiful or intimidating. To be fair, I feel the same way about female Worgen. Male Worgens are jacked and look like fearsome werewolves, while the female variety kind of look like something your douchebag high school girlfriend would carry in her purse. Seeing these races brings to mind a quote by our president Barrack Obama. Something about lipstick on a pig, which I think was referencing the election but might have just been about Rosie O'Donnell.
Actually, she kind of looks like an 80's punk rocker, but she certainly is not Linnea Quigley in Return of the Living Dead. My advice is to NOT Google that unless you're ready for a lot of nudity and awesomeness from one of the greatest zombie movies ever made.
However, this is all just based on my own prejudice against Horde races. I'm an Alliance player, not because I like losing or having RP sex in Goldshire, but because I'd rather play an honorable underdog knight than a power hungry monster who enrolled in a free course at the Kratos School of Character Development.
RAWR RAWR VIOLENCE ANGER BLOOD BLOOD!
So my own personal racism aside, it looks really good. It retains the overall look, but you can really see the improvements they're making to the aging client. The changes are great so far, and when you combine this with the new expansion dropping later this year and the increase in subscriptions, it looks like it will be a very big year for WoW.
And that brings us to the new elephant in the room.
I saw this leaked on WoWInsider.com first, but I'm pretty sure it's making the rounds on most of the major sites. When the servers went up recently someone noticed and snagged a picture of what appears to be a new service option that lets you instantly upgrade a character to level ninety for a staggering price tag of sixty dollars.
And soon, the darkness.
Players were livid. It didn't matter that this was an apparent accident that wasn't supposed to go live yet. When "Warlords of Draenor" releases, players will be able to upgrade one character to level ninety for free and it seems like this service goes hand in hand with that. I've gone incognegro in some of the forums and listened to an overwhelmingly negative response to the service. To be honest, I kind of jumped on the fury bandwagon at first but soon found myself conflicted and hungry.
On one hand, how dare Blizzard offer up a paid service that basically renders a players time and progress pointless when they can just click click click and become an insta-hero? It's bad enough that Blizzard offers microtransactions on top of being a strictly pay to play service, and as far as my memory goes I believe they're the one of the few companies with the hearthstones to do so. You can play for fifteen dollars a month, and for just ten to twenty five more you can purchase some great pets or uber mounts. It really gives off the impression of "why work yourself to death when you just swipe a card and receive instant gratification?"
That dog won't hunt, monsignor.
The very essence of an MMORPG is the time and love you put into your character. It may be an online game, and the player base of an online game may have devolved into an arena zergfest filled with entitled assholes with inferiority complexes, but it's still an RPG. The reason to play an RPG is to build your character, go on adventures, and create a memory of living as another person in another world far from the sad existence you call your life.
It's an escape, but now we're looking for shortcuts to help escape the escape. Do players really want to just upgrade instead of experience? What about when that player upgrades to level ninety on a class he's inexperienced with, and you're running a raid with him and he doesn't know what the hell he's doing.
Blizzard is running the risk of destroying all the positive attention they've been getting this year.
Once I started to think about it though, and ate some pizza, I reconsidered my stance. Yeah it does belittle the entire point of playing an online role playing game, but it won't change my life at all. In fact, if anything, it would greatly improve my lifespan as a player.
I'll tell you why. I'm going to let you in on a secret. I've been playing WoW since launch, and I don't even have one character at level cap. I did once, before Cataclysm came out, but once they raised it again and I had to drag my feet underwater for what felt like fucking forever I gave up and stopped playing. My warrior, who I've been going to war against the Horde with for years, sits at an embarrassing level 84 while day in and day out I hear the simplest idiots in gaming brag about how many level nineties they have. Rednecks, grandmas, meth addicts, douchebag college kids, you name the stereotype and I can tell you how often they dangle their superiority in WoW in front of my very unimpressed face.
The free level nineties I get from the new expansion will allow me to play the new content without devoting all of my busy time to leveling my proud warrior. Managing two game stores, a dying father, a fiancee, a violent cat, and the other trials and tribulations that always seem to pop up in my life leaves little time for hardcore gaming.
And there are WAY more people out there with rougher lives than me. Do you think parents, college students, religious snake handlers, and other like minded individuals have the time to devote to virtual characters when real life is so demanding? They shouldn't be punished for not having the same time to put into a game they love that your asshole friends who mooch off of their parents money and contribute nothing of their own to society do.
It isn't the first game to offer this kind of service, either. Even my beloved Ultima Online, now a hollow shell of its former self, offers the ability to buy an advanced character instead of, you know, earning one.
I'm going to try to reserve judgment on this service until I see how it plays out. I feel like it won't reflect me at all, and people are just looking for a reason to bitch because that's what gamers are conditioned to do now. It's really a reflection on the industry, where DLC and paid services are all the rage now. It's a sign of the times, and as long as the money is there so too will there be a market for it. I hate it, I always have, but I let go of that lie about one person making a difference a long time ago.
If you disagree with WoW's direction, you could always try FFXIV. It's a nice throwback to an old style with just enough new car smell to feel different. You could bore yourself to tears with Guild Wars 2, or try one of the upcoming titles - ESO, EQNext, Wildstar, and a plethora of Asian F2P titles that seem to come out despite the fact that no one cares.
Kind of like Michelle Rodriguez.
Keep your goddamn hands off of my sweet Cara.
Tag :
MMO,
World of Warcraft,