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Revisiting the "Holy Trinity" of MMORPG Classes 362

Posted by Soulskill
from the or-druid-as-the-case-may-be dept.
A feature at Gamasutra examines one of the foundations of many MMORPGs — the idea that class roles within such a game fall into three basic categories: tank, healer, and damage dealer. The article evaluates the pros and cons of such an arrangement and takes a look at some alternatives. "Eliminating specialized roles means that we do away with boxing a class into a single role. Without Tanks, each class would have features that would help them participate in and survive many different encounters like heavy armor, strong avoidance, or some class or magical abilities that allow them to disengage from direct combat. Without specialized DPS, all classes should be able to do damage in order to defeat enemies. Some classes might specialize in damage type, like area of effect (AoE) damage; others might be able to exploit enemy weaknesses, and some might just be good at swinging a sharpened bit of metal in the right direction at a rapid rate. This design isn't just about having each class able to fill any trinity role. MMO combat would feel more dynamic in this system. Every player would have to react to combat events and defend against attacks."

Comment: Re:it's not a good deal (Score 1) 169

by Mr._Galt (#29222251) Attached to: Microsoft Drops Xbox 360 Pricing
unless of course you don't care about blu-ray, or you don't care if a game has more than one disc (a lot of them used to, it wasn't a big deal), or if you want to do things like have custom soundtracks and chat across different games, etc etc Then some people might think it was an ok deal. The PS3 is a solid machine, but people care about different things. Whats important to you, is not necessarily important to me.

Comment: Re:New? Again? (Score 1) 257

by Mr._Galt (#28951501) Attached to: Major New Function Discovered For the Spleen
Actually, as mentioned above, the discovery is not about the monocytes exactly, but rather that the spleen hordes and dumps them when a trauma occurs. That abstract you quoted is talking about monocytes in general, and mentions the spleen in passing with the liver "and other parenchymal organs." We've known about the importance of monocytes for a long time and that the spleen was important to the immune system, just not exactly how it performed its function. So, yes, it's a new discovery.

"Conversion, fastidious Goddess, loves blood better than brick, and feasts most subtly on the human will." -- Virginia Woolf, "Mrs. Dalloway"

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