Where's the Massive in MMOGs? 105
Grimwell writes "Like MMOG's? Concerned about their future? You should read Darniaq's article questioning the general approach to these games. From the article: 'I expect invention from Blizzard as I much as I would from the local Top 40 radio station. I'd hate to think that the entire breadth of MMOs is measured by the playing of a few of the hot selling titles. It's great what WoW has done for the genre, but man I hope people don't give up on the genre just because they hit 60 and realized they didn't want to spend 3 hours a night in Molten Core.'"
MMOGs (Score:1)
Re:MMOGs (Score:1)
Re:MMOGs (Score:2)
Re:MMOGs (Score:3, Insightful)
I think saying that the endgame of dungeon running and PvP is the "real" game is BS. Plenty of people hit the level cap in a game and quit soon after... or sit around and bitch that there is nothing to do.
Re:MMOGs (Score:2)
Re:MMOGs (Score:2)
Re:MMOGs (Score:2)
Re:MMOGs (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:MMOGs (Score:1)
I'm the type of player that likes to explore and make numerous achievements besides leveling. For me, WoW holds years of entertainment as it stands right now.
The "power players" would consider me slow because I've been playing since
Re:Bullshit (Score:1, Insightful)
There isn't m
You are talking across cultures here (Score:3, Insightful)
The poster you react to would point out that at level 1 it is sewer rats, at level 10 it is dire rats and level 100 it is were rats.
The difference is minor BUT nontheless it is a huge culture shock to try to understand the other person mindset.
To them another high level dungeon is a complete new challenge with an AI that uses different spells and rewards that gi
Yes! Exactly! (Score:2)
This is why I can't stand MMORPG's. They all seeme so much the same. Different environments and such but the basics are the same. In Everquest you cast magic spells. In City of Heroes, you cast spells or invo
Re:Bullshit (Score:5, Insightful)
I got into WoW during the first christmas it was out.. I'm quite a casual player, basically took me 8months to hit 60.. I then started getting into the high end content spending hours and hours in ZG, MC, UBRS, LRBS, etc, etc..
My bro who played on another server was apart of the most powerful/organized guild I've ever seen! Every single player had tier 2 armor/weaps pretty much all of the best.. One day my bro snapped and sharded all of his items and quit the game. So I asked him "wtf you do that for? you had the best shit, were uber strong" . His answer was the following
"you know what, why the hell am I wasting my life getting fat while running BwL and all these other instances to get good gear and items when all I can do is just stand in orgimmar like a complete moron with nothing to do but go back into these instances and waste more time"
So I thought, damn.. your right.. After spending hours, if not days worth of playing time the only thing I can look forward to is gear.. And I seemed to have the worst luck with instancing, i literally walked away with nothing but shitty blues and maybe one purple ring that was a complete waste. Big fakin deal.. once you hit 60 there really is nothing to do except running instances over and over again.. Sure there were BG's, but even then that become boring as hell..
I quit WoW, but I'm hoping burning crusade will bring back that spark in the game.. Until then, I'm going to spend my WoW time doing other things.
MrJynxx
Re:Bullshit (Score:2, Insightful)
Er, I think the emphasis was on "3 hours a night", not on "Molten Core". Most of the end-game content in WoW requires a pretty serious time committment, well beyond that which is required to reach level 60 i
This Bull Shat Gold (Score:5, Insightful)
No thanks, I don't want to do Scholo for the three hundredth time. Seen enough of Strat, live and dead. UBRS is a Uber Bore. I play a holy spec priestess because my guild demanded I switch from shadow - faction grinding or farming gold for repairs is therefore incredibly slow and anything but fun.
I made alts, but the realization I'd have to subject myself to nights and nights more of Scholo, Strat and UBRS just to get geared enough to torture myself with more MC and ZG made me hang up my WoW account.
Guild after guild on my server imploded when they got to the endgame; and after awhile, so did the one I was in. Too many people left or restarted on other servers or returned to previous servers.
I read the article. He's spot on about the lack of imagination in current MMOs. One thing about EQ1 - leveling was so slow that many stopped worrying about getting a level a day (or week) and started doing the social things - the buff days, races, arena battles, role playing in Plane of Hate - the kinds of things you end up doing when levels and loot are fairly hard to come by.
Nobody would stand for that now. WoW, EQ2 and the others (including EQ1 since Luclin) have conditioned people to thinking that if they aren't making levels and not getting uber loot, that there is no fun to be had in the game.
The author of the article says sandbox PvP is the answer. I'm not sure about that - griefers live to ruin those kinds of things - but heck, it's about time for a game that can see beyond the grind.
It is time for player who can see beyond the grind (Score:3, Interesting)
EQ2 has plenty of fun inside. Provided you allow yourselve to have fun. There is an option to switch of XP gaining. Since certain quests can't be completed when you reach beyond a certain level this allows you to remain stuck until you complete it.
And stuck you will be because it is very hard to find players wil
NWN (Score:2)
Re:Bullshit (Score:1)
Re:Bullshit (Score:1)
Guild Wars (Score:1, Interesting)
Not a fanboi of RPG's but ArenaNet does seem to attempt innovation, albeit slowly.
The problem is development. You think creating a console game is anything like creating a world for millions of interactive users?
Besides, most of what you see in MMORPG's these days are rehashes of rules and attributes that go all the way back from
Re:Guild Wars (Score:3, Insightful)
- it would be way, way more fun if the actions of the player community as a whole were to drive a continuous evolution of game content, as opposed to the current paradigm of seting up a rat's maze of static content that is destined to run out sooner or later (or become boring if it's repeatable)
- removing the experience treadmill and level segragation would put players on more
Re:Guild Wars (Score:1)
Welcome to Eve Online [slashdot.org].
- it would be way, way more fun if the actions of the player community as a whole were to drive a continuous evolution of game content, as opposed to the current paradigm of seting up a rat's maze of static content that is destined to run out sooner or later (or become boring if it's repeatable)
Player controlled
Ugh (Score:3, Interesting)
Game evolution comes incrimentally. Not only that, it is shaped by the interest of the public.
What the author seems to want is a many thousand player MOO or MUSH. I'm sorry to be the one to break it to him, but most people just have no interest in such an open-ended environment. MOOs and MUSHes were always more niche and less popular than their MUD brethren (though there were big ones out there, don't get me wrong.) But whereas anyone is capable of typing in a few lines of text and thus creating an object in a MOO, a modern game requires the ability to create 3D Models. And not only that to animate them. And not only that to do so well enough that it warrants repetitious viewing.
The bottom line being, what we got is what we got, and it's going to evolve from there. If he is really dedicated to his "revolutionary" idea (which is as much a rehash of the past as anything on the market today), then he should put his time and effort into creating it.
Re:Ugh (Score:2)
I dunno that that's all that generally true; it certainly seems to me to be punctuated by major leaps.
Re:Ugh (Score:2)
No market? Ever heard of Second Life? (Score:2)
Re:No market? Ever heard of Second Life? (Score:2)
Looking at their website, they do list a population of currently 230,000. But folks online? A measly 5,902 right now. So I take it population is essentially just a list of everyo
Re:No market? Ever heard of Second Life? (Score:1)
Riiiight.
Despite that over-hyping Second Life has received on
As I stated, there is no market for that type of thing. The people who are interested in it are a very, very small minority.
Games are predicatable because the players aren't (Score:2)
Re:Games are predicatable because the players aren (Score:2)
It's true, Blizzard has boiled down the MMORPG genre to the elements that, ideally, are most fun (quests, exploration, small group runs). Of course, that runs out and people want more, so they concentrate on what's addictive enough to keep people playing (rep grinding, raiding end-game instances for uber loot, PvP battlegrounds, etc.
Re:Games are predicatable because the players aren (Score:2)
Then I'm going to be a level 30 casual-playing character on that server and suddenly realize that th
Re:Games are predicatable because the players aren (Score:2)
This presumes the game would be driven by a "level up" drive; while that's an easy to code concrete reward system, its not the only possible model for a game, even an MMO. A game with a more dynamic environment wouldn't, ideally, have to feature levelling u
Re:Games are predicatable because the players aren (Score:2)
Exactly. In fact, the best thing would then be for the developers to try to balance things so that the Alliance players and NPCs would push back the Horde players in a desperate battle, eventually restoring
Re:Games are predicatable because the players aren (Score:2)
If you take away leveling, every character is brand new every time you log in. That would mean a les
Re:Games are predicatable because the players aren (Score:2)
Yes, if you redefine levelling to mean "any persistent change to a character's features" than there will always be lebelling, assuming you have a game based on persistent player avatars (which isn't the only peristent MMO possibility, though it defines the MMORPG genre).
OTOH, if you take levelling to mean a single, common unidimensional measure that applies to all characters, then, no, there doesn't have to be levelling. And, yeah, its easier to say I have a
Re:Games are predicatable because the players aren (Score:2)
That's one part of development, the other part is finding new elements. You could look at it as a necessary Revolution/Evolution duality -- there should be a constant process of recombining existing gameplay elements to find the best combination -- and perhaps Blizzard has done that well with what is out there, currently, that works in the MMO realm.
But there also needs t
Re:Games are predicatable because the players aren (Score:2)
In a less permanent way, however, it is doable and has been done. In DOAC and Neocron, players can conquer places that give their realm or clan an advantage. While that can be reversed by a counterattack and things are back to the status quo, it does not happen automatically.
So the first step beyond the static amusement park exists.
Another idea are player-built cities, which have reportedly been tried in SWG with mixed results. I think the conc
Re:Games are predicatable because the players aren (Score:2)
I am tired of being the hero (Score:2)
Ever heard of the anti-hero. There was a time when that was new. Before everyone only made movies with the hero who overcame the baddie. Then someone somewhere dared to create a hero who wasn't all the different from the baddie, or even worse who was the baddie.
Could a RPG but made in wich you are not the main hero. In wich it ain't you who gets
I'm not worried about the future (Score:5, Insightful)
Sandbox mmos... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sandbox mmos... (Score:1, Informative)
EVE will not hold your hand at all. If you can't figure out what *you* want to do to have fun, the game will be very boring, very fast.
There is no level 60. There is no Boring End Game Dungeon With The Same Old Monsters Only With Different Models. There's even no grinding unless you want there to be - a player with some decent skills (both coded and basic lessons you can learn from your friendly neighborhood pirate), a player in
Re:Sandbox mmos... (Score:4, Informative)
Another thing to mention is that Eve doesn't use "shards". There's none of this "Oh, you play WoW? What server? Oh, too bad, I'm on Mediveh". It's ONE SERVER, but at times, we've hit 25,000 simultaneous connections. They accomplish this with big hardware (IBM dual core dual xeon blades, at the moment, i think) and a RAMSAN [superssd.com] from a company in Texas.
The game is... it's really hard to explain it to someone who hasn't seen it. It's almost entirely player controlled. All of the low-security space is permanantly up for grabs, and Might makes Right, period. The economy is by far the most complex I've ever seen in a game. Anything you can think of to make money is fair game. There is no "end game" - i.e. there is no lvl 60. If you get bored, join an alliance. Start a war. Train your character in a different direction. I mean... just go check it out. That's all there is to it.
(and I've only been playing since Feb.)
~Xiaodown
Piloting a Ferox with more tech 2 gear than you can shake a stick at.
Eve's problem is lag (Score:1)
In my mind, all Eve has proven is that the technological barriers are still to high for MMOGs to be a single world based on one group of servers in one location.
Re:Eve's problem is lag (Score:2)
If you're having a lag problem the first place to look is probably your own local configuration. Are you playing using wireless? Do you have a g
Re:Sandbox mmos... (Score:2)
This sentiment is actually common in the industry (Score:2)
At any rate, the main sentiment of the conference was "Hey, let's do new things", with talk of abandoning things like:
The "server" construct. Why do you have to pick a server and stick with it in every MMO to date? Shouldn't this be abstracted away? In fact,
No Developer will figure it out. (Score:1, Interesting)
As with CRPGS and MMOs they are limited by code and time. People want open ended end game content. How? How do developers develop everything and nothing for an ending. How many people would it take to constantly add an countinous ending to a story? How many GMs would it take to r
There are more than four virtual worlds! (Score:2)
I have played AO, SWG, COH, and WoW.
I'm not having a dig at the parent but I just wanted to use that quote to illustrate a point.
According to MMORPG.com there are over a hundred MMO's active at the moment with another 90+ in development and/or in testing but I've lost count of the times that I've seen articles and comments here and elsewhere that seem to use the subjective experiences of a handful of games - usually the most hyped ones - as some kind of general indicator of the entire marketplace.
Actions Matter? (Score:2)
No, what that sounds like is Halo. Create a character, equal in power to anyone else, and just go fight against them? What's the point of it being an RPG if there's no reward for exploration and creation?
The issue is that repeating the same content ad
Players don't want to be played (Score:1)
Re:Players don't want to be played (Score:2)
Interestingly enough, that's the same way you get social interaction in Halo. WoW was not built to be this incredibly deep social experience. It was meant to be about getting together with other people to kill stuff. There are a lot of games ou
Re:Players don't want to be played (Score:1)
Raids were setting the mods right, listening for instructions where to stand over Vent, then hitting my two buttons. I never got the chance to "try and crack that hard egg". On my server, half the people had been in endgame guilds on other servers, and knew exactly how to do everything. We never had to try and figure ANYTHING out. Was just a matter of executing the script perfectly (and getting the correct re
Re:Actions Matter? (Score:2)
Re:Actions Matter? (Score:2)
The difference is in the opponents:
While most NPCs are rather stupid and repetitive to fight, in Halo (or my preferred FPS, Day Of Defeat) you fight other players who will throw a lot more surprises at you. The challenge is in beating the other guys, th
Re:Actions Matter? (Score:2)
I dont think he means it in that way a key part of the article is when he says.
'Instead of power depth based on level, focus on power breadth.'
Or in other words you still have the RPG world and way of working but instead of your character leaping in and getting to work ramping up through the levels your reward is essentially to create your character. The only thing I can think of that I can liken it to is Fable. By expanding how you can define your character in the world
Right Here (Score:2, Interesting)
Over 26000 in the same universe (single server, well, cluster of servers) last weekend. Player interaction makes up the end game. That is, pvp actually has a point beyond "points" and revolves around territory/resource conflict. Politics are far beyond anything else available too.
26000 on Eve servers? Must have been laggy mess (Score:1)
Don't have a point to make? Troll away, then (Score:1)
This guy has posted another comment literally identical to this one. Check it out [slashdot.org].
Re:Don't have a point to make? Troll away, then (Score:2)
Re:Right Here (Score:2)
It would be a fascinating anthropology case study if I was an anthropologist. Not worth my time otherwise. I deal with enough of that shit in the rea
SSDD (Score:1)
TFA winds up saying "let players really impact the world." You know what happens when you allow that? You end up with a torn-up, useless crust of a world that no-one wants to visit because those that made the changes were idiots and ruined the wonderful world that was. Case in point:
Re:SSDD (Score:2)
Re:SSDD (Score:1)
Did they do better than UO as far as letting players rule the world? If the numbers on the website are to be believed, apparently so by a slim margin.
Re:SSDD (Score:1)
Re:SSDD (Score:1)
Re:SSDD (Score:1)
I read the quoted text above and just had to laugh at how much that sounds like the real world...
No wonder it played out that way in UO when people were given whatever they demanded... Todd's "monsters," Samurai's... omg... I saw that stuff happening and thought what the hell? Who actually plays that sad, twisted excuse for Ultima?
Re:SSDD (Score:1)
I played for 7.5 years starting in October 1997. I'm not sure how or why I stayed that long. When Samurai Empire came out, I quit "playing" and numbly continued "maintenance" of my account. When WoW came out, I sold my account for a pittance of what it would have been worth in UO's prime. I was grateful to be rid of the addiction.
I had disagreements from the start that UO was not similar enough to the Ultima series. This was rationalized by the multi-split world. In essence, Ultima prime, the Sosa
The "Massive" is in EVE Online (Score:5, Informative)
There's also the in-game universe, which consists of a network of more than 4,000 solar systems. How many zones are there in other MMOGs like WoW, Everquest, Everquest2, and so on? 200? 300? Again, massive.
Oh, and you wanna talk massive? Check out the ships [grismar.net] you can fly. You do of course start the game in a tiny (by comparison) ship, but through the training of skills you will be able to fly bigger and badder ships over time.
Skills are another area where EVE takes the term massive to the limit. Any player can learn any skill, of which there are literally hundreds. You aren't limited by your "class" because there are no classes. The skills you have determine the activities you can perform, period. There are certain types of spacecraft which are designed to be used by members of a particular race (there are four: Caldari, Amarr, Gallente and Minmatar) but there is nothing preventing say, a Gallente pilot from learning the Amarr skills so that they can fly Amarr Battleships. One thing about skills that differs from other games is that you select a skill (one at a time) to train, and then it will train over a period of time, regardless of whether or not you're online. So if it will take you a few days to get the Caldari Cruiser skill from level 3 to 4, you can put the game down for a long weekend and come back to your new skill and the benefits it entails.
Everything (item-wise and ship-wise) in the game is produced in one of two ways: you take it as loot after killing an NPC pirate ("rat" in game terminology) or players make them. Most of the equipment and ships are player-produced. It is possible (although difficult) for a single player to mine her own ore, start her own production queue, and start producing her own ships, guns, ammunition, microwarp drives, armor plating, and so on. It's much easier to be part of a group.
That brings us to Corporations. Corporations of many types exist. Some corporations exist solely to mine the ores of the asteroid belts in the outer regions. Some corporations are pirates, who exist solely to kill other players and take their equipment. Some corporations are explorers, or escorts, or manufacturers. Corporations can be as small as 20 people or as large as 1,000 (or more). Multiple corporations can form Alliances, perhaps granting a Mining corporation the privelege of mining precious ore in an outer system controlled by a Pirate corporation in the alliance.
At the beginning I mentioned the 4,000 solar systems. These systems each have a sovereignity and a security level. The security level determines a player's safety in the system, ranging from 1.0 (secure) to 0.0 (insecure). At a security level less than 0.5, any player can attack any other player. At a security level less than 0.3, players can set up their own space stations (you read that right, you can deploy and operate your own space station) and claim sovereignity over that system, effectively making it "theirs." Alliances will claim sovereignity over vast networks of systems, as well. So of that massive 4,000 systems, perhaps half are at a security level of 0.5 or greater and are "protected" by The Federation. Outside of these systems though, anyone and anything is fair game, and the stakes can be quite high.
Outside of Federation Space, there is one thing that is more massive than any other game out there. If you have two alliances, each with 4,000 players or so, who both want to control a region of space because of, say, the extremely valuable minerals in the asteroid belts required to build a certain type of ship, th
Re:The "Massive" is in EVE Online (Score:5, Informative)
Take WoW for example. Say you have a group of 30 lvl10s. You will never, ever kill a level60. They will just resist, dodge, absorb or tank all your damage and one-shot each of you without breaking a sweat. A level 30 in the 30-39 bracket? Welcome to hurting.
But in eve... big ships have penalties to hit smaller ships. Now, smaller ships can't really put out the damage to kill a big one, so a battleship vs a frigate would basically be a stalemate, as long as the frigate keeps its speed up. But a tiny fleet of frigates can easily pin down and kill a battleship. Some corporations base their operations on that: large groups of cheap ships that always lose a few members when taking on big game, but end up doing much more damage monetarily speaking. (You lost 8 250k frigates, they lost 2 100mil battleships. You win.)
It's such a refreshing change that you can be actually useful in a short period of time, I figured it'd be a shame not to mention it.
Re:Eve griefers grief-and-run (Score:2)
That's the big problem that I see in a lot of PVP setups. I'm waiting for the day when someone realizes that PVP action needs a different scale of effect then PVE. The level 60 player should have more tools at their disposal, but not more power or he
Re:Eve griefers grief-and-run (Score:2)
Re:Eve griefers grief-and-run (Score:2)
"Newbie usually dies in first onslaught (often while screen is locked up by lag due to the graphics for the new system just jumped into are loading)."
When you enter a system, you are cloaked and utterly untargetable and unseeable for 20 seconds. More than enough time to get a grip on who's waiting there, if they have low security status, and for all the graphics to load.
And there are numerous ways to avoid getting ganked at gates. In a small, fast frigate? Warp away to a target tha
Not the only non-sharded game (Score:1)
Re:Not the only non-sharded game (Score:2)
Re:Not the only non-sharded game (Score:1)
Solution (Score:1)
x = time played
y = x^2
So, maybe it takes 20 hours to get to level 25, but it takes 2000 hours to get to level 80.
Re:Solution (Score:1)
formula becomes y = x^2/16.
that means that in 36 hours you will reach and breach level 80.
O.o
This is why one should choose one's level (Score:1)
1. the size of their world - do you really want to play with 500,000 people or wouldn't 5,000 work better?
2. the level they play at - why not have a test game where it figures out your actual play level, and then suggests you choose that World - for example, if you test out at play level 4, you could choose any level, but it would suggest you choose level 1-5. Then for each level (World), you only see people at that level. Once you have ma
Players ruin it for themselves (Score:5, Insightful)
What exactly is a MMORPG about anyway. A game like tetris is easy. Highscore. Chess is easy. Beat the opponent. Quake is easy, beat the other players.
Well that is what WoW does. The highscore is your level, the opponent is the AI and the other players are the horde or non-horde.
If you look at how most players talk about WoW you get the distinct impression that it is all about loot and levels.
Has anyone ever held a fishing competition in WoW? Or just organized a tour of nice looking spots? A beauty contest? Anything not related to getting loot or XP?
To some players it is this that makes an MMORPG. To have fun. This is to me what made SWG at a time such a nice game. To do stuff that was just fun to do without worrying about how many levels it would give you. IRC with pretty pictures.
An example, SWG, the tour of endor. For all its faults SWG could look pretty nice and it was clear at least some of the artists had spend some time looking at the source material and getting it. Endor was one of those. It was kinda fun to find the stuff from the ewok movies there (yes I liked them, bite me). So with a group of newer players we organized a tour. Just to drive around and see all the spots. It was sorta popular. Plenty of people wanted to join and had fun but we also got some almost violent reactions from players who just couldn't see the point of doing something that did not give XP. There were two ewok villages and visiting just one of them gave you a Point of Intrest badge. So when we set off to visit the other one member became enraged at the waste of time. Never mind that the villages were nicely done, he wanted XP and he wanted it now.
Same with Everquest 2. We were in a small group fighting red conning enemies and not doing to well. Death still carried an XP debt and it even carried over to your party members. Then again our motto was, if you ain't dying you ain't trying. It was simply more fun to defeat an enemy with a sliver off live remaining (and promply get killed by the next spawn) then fighting critters at optimum level wich were from a tactical viewpoint yawnville.
Yet again this led to almost violent confrotations with other players who just couldn't get that we were wasting our time on this. How dare we fight reds when they were having trouble finding people our level for the blue/green areas.
The point is that for us the battles were not a grind. They really required you to think about what you were doing rather then just hit the same special over and over. All those people who complain about repetitive fighting just ain't putting themselves to the challenge.
There is plenty of stuff to do and challenges to be had in EQ2 and SWG (well before both were WoWed anyway) but most people rushed by on the quest to get maximum XP. Just check how few players ever went into the deeper dungeons in EQ2 or how deserted the middle planets were in SWG.
I think I call it the Midnight Club vs Grand Prix Legends Syndrome.
In Midnight Club your enemy is always slighty better then you. If you got a D class car, they have C class, if you have level 1 upgrades, they got level 2. If you got 1 nitrious boost, they got 2. Improving don't matter, you will still be raising enemies slightly better then you. It is an endless grind to the top where your reward is a super car that is no fun to drive because now you still will get knocked out the race by being rear ended by the AI.
Grand Prix Legends on the other hand puts you in a car that is impossible to control but is the same car everyone else drives. If you tune it to just a little bit better performance the other drivers stay the same. So you do gain real benefits by becoming better and better. You don't so much "win" as slowly climb up higher in the rankings, first races you are lucky to finish but there is no price to pay. You can simply advance to the next race and finish a season on 10th place and still have improved. MC you don't improve unless you win.
A game like EQ2 is like Midnight
Lame gameplay (Score:3, Insightful)
Luckily, as soon as it came out many modder
Re:Players ruin it for themselves (Score:1)
Re:Players ruin it for themselves (Score:2)
Why I gave up on WoW (Score:3, Informative)
I have since figured out that I would rather play a multiplayer (4-10 people) game than a MMORPG. The server tends to be more stable, the players more consistent, and the cost a LOT less. Even when I played Wow, I seldom got the feeling of the supposed millions of people who were playing, except when I walked into one of the major towns. Other than in town, I doubt I ever saw more than a dozen people at any one time, anyway, so what's the difference?
Agreed in Part (Score:4, Insightful)
His solution, however, is a tad too drastic. Removing leveling all together, and its associated goals is not necessary. The next step MMORPG wise is adding some dynamism. The internet isn't ready for a fully player driven world, not with current anonimity and maturity. Perhaps when the stigma to adults of playing these games is cleared there will be interesting opportunities for this.
The compromise, something that would provide a lot of self-sustaining play, would be to add structured social aspects. I know these have been done to a certain degree in MUD's and planned in some MMO's currently in development, but this needs to be done completely and well to succeed at all. Add a certain number of factions, not all known as playable to the player. Kingdom A, Kingdom B, OtherFormOfGovt C, MysteriousFactionFromFarAway D, WizardsGroup E, ReligiousOrg F, RebelliousGroup G, etc etc. Allow the player to start in the world, introduce them to it, then allow them to join one, get a 'job', a role in the world, and give it meaning. Governing a town, a city-guard, mercenary, thief, shopkeeper, the possibilities are endless and obvious. These roles would have to have world impact and a possibility for progression. Guards would defend their town from opposing factions, real players come to raid/invade, and possibly get promoted to captain etc.
Players would get known for more than being level 60, but for their choices socially, and their effect on the events. This would have to mean that existing towns, and all manner of similar places would have to be able to be taken over. Not easily, nothing should be easy in that way, but it needs to be possible. Of course these are really fine grained examples that hopefully illustrate the necessary dynamism.
WoW is an example of what makes MMORPG's Suck (Score:1)
If you want a truly revolutionary and amazing game, wait for Darkfall.
Most, if not all MMORPGs suck (Score:1)
Bah (Score:2)