MMO Mechanics: 2015’s MMORPG mechanics in review

    
16

It’s my favourite time of the year once again: The mulled wine is flowing, the festive lights are all aglow, the weather outside is most definitely frightful while my fire is indeed delightful, and I have a major increase in my gaming time since uni’s out until 2016! I resurrected this old column earlier this year in March and I decided to see in the holidays by looking back on the 2015 entries and scrolling through your comments. It was great to look back at nine months of writing and feedback and see how the column has progressed in that time, and some of the topics sparked amazing responses in the comments that I believe deserve a second (or tenth!) read.

In this edition of MMO Mechanics, I’m going to revisit some of my favourite topics from this year and regather my thoughts on the topics discussed, popping it all together for you in one quick read. If you missed out on MMO Mechanics this year, this is a good recap before I launch into 2016, and if you’re a regular reader, be sure to take a peek to see if one of your comments is quoted in the article!

fast travel (1)

Fast-travelling to Massively OP!

I kicked off MMO Mechanics with an exploration of some of the most popular fast-travel mechanics offered in modern MMOs, and I was blown away by the depth of the comments on the topic. This column is perhaps the best case that one could put forward to justify our featured comments section: There’s always, no matter the topic, going to be something worth highlighting in there! I presented the argument that although fast-travel mechanics exist for the sound reason of abstracting away tedious and repetitive slack time that eats into our gaming hours, I was also keen to point out that over-reliance on fast and instant travel systems would ruin the rich worlds and context in which each zone is depicted.

The journey is supposed to be adventure, yet many view it as annoyance and just want to face the battle at the end, ultimately the reward at the end. Traveling should be rewarding and your legend should grow through your travels. — Craywulf
The topic was extended beautifully in the comments by several readers, but I particularly enjoyed Jersey C’s response in which the idea of “heat-mapping” an open MMO world to gauge player density and thus potential desire to get to that place for creating smart waypoints for instant travel. I really liked how this mapping could also improve weighted resource spawning mechanics and monster density. Craywulf also brought up an excellent point: We quickly lose the RPG in MMORPG if we cut out the “mundane” or TL;DR the journey, and many MMOs don’t adequately reward the adventurer with notoriety or other benefits for making the journey in the first place. Heroism is a difficult and sometimes boring job that isn’t all saving damsels and slaying dragons, after all.
barrier to entry (1)

Community: A barrier to exit or an exploited guilt trap?

When I wrote an article discussing how MMO developers can mechanise the community to form a strong barrier to exit, I discussed how important it is to create many in-game incentives for those who form and maintain connections with each other, be it in guilds, alliances, or just a similar bunch of players occupying the same map. I considered the perceived casualisation of MMOs to be a damaging force on the community barrier to exit and thus the lifespan of the games in question, and I made particular reference to group-finder tools as an example of these damaging mechanics.

The problem with bad games, lazily designed games, is that they use systems of addiction, compulsion, and control in order to keep the player playing. They sink in their meat hooks and do all they can to see to it that anyone who tries to wriggle off is in as much pain as possible. It’s grotesque when you actually sit and think about it. — Werewolf Finds Dragon
An excellent counterpoint, framed with the help of a very clever YouTube video on the topic at hand, was offered up by Werewolf Finds Dragon; the video argues that manipulating the community of an MMO in such a way is no more than thinly veiled entrapment that is, in fact, an unhealthy barrier to exit that can lead to toxic communities filled with those who don’t really wish to be there in the first place. WFD also links high barriers to exit, and specifically community-related mechanics, to fatigue and burnout, which I’ve tied to horizontal progression and a strongly perceived grind in the past without thinking about how barriers to exit might exacerbate it too.

wot (1)

New IPs and novel mechanics

One of my all-time favourite edition of MMO Mechanics was the piece on how non-MMO IPs could help to reinvigorate the MMO market by introducing more innovation in the mechanics department. The star of the case I presented was World of Darkness and how guild mechanics would be forever improved through the layered depth seen in the franchise. I went on to discuss some more popular ideas and how I’d use them to push various mechanics, even suggesting that turn-based strategic MMO combat could be possible.

The players were just out exploring, but the AI Narrator has crafted a simple little plot and set them on its path, a more complex system might even try something more ambitious, but either way you wouldn’t go around collecting quests from people with exclamation marks over their head, but instead receive dynamically generated quests that are related to the players location and geared towards the party make up. — Wakkander
One particular idea given in the comments made us almost run on our knees to a developer with our threadbare wallets and overspilling enthusiasm to beg them to create our fancies. There were plenty of fantastic suggestions, but when Wakkander mentioned the Wheel of Time series, we knew that was a winner. Several commenters thrashed out the topic and we came up with some excellent ideas that revolved around personalised, dynamic story mechanics and the IP’s political maneuver system, Daes Dae’mar. I adored the books and would potentially enjoy the MMO described in the comments even more, which is a bold statement indeed considering that I still can’t bring myself to read the last few pages of the fourteenth book because then it’ll be over.

Over to you!

MMO Mechanics was the first column I pitched to Bree that helped me secure a contract back at old Massively in 2013, and I still enjoy writing it just as much today. I adore the way the comments fill in the gaps I intentionally or unintentionally leave in my articles, and I’m hoping to see some great responses to this edition too. I only have so many words and so can only cover so many items at once, unfortunately, but I’m sure you can come up with some more great responses to MMO Mechanics articles that really further the topic at hand. If your favourite one didn’t make the list, be sure to let me know below. Happy holidays!

MMOs are composed of many moving parts, but Massively’s Tina Lauro is willing to risk industrial injury so that you can enjoy her mechanical musings. MMO Mechanics explores the various workings behind our beloved MMOs. If there’s a specific topic you’d like to see dissected, drop Tina a comment or send an email to tina@massivelyop.com.
Previous articleCrowfall comic continues to tease ‘big reveal’
Next articleProject Gorgon explains Steam delay

No posts to display

16 Comments
newest
oldest most liked
Inline Feedback
View all comments