Subject: "Shameless Re-Posting of a review I wrote for Dio's long..." Previous topic | Next topic
Printer-friendly copy Email this topic to a friend CF Website
Top General Discussions Marketing CF Topic #700
Show all folders

TFONWed 31-Aug-11 07:05 PM
Member since 04th Mar 2003
23 posts
Click to send email to this author Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list
#700, "Shameless Re-Posting of a review I wrote for Dio's long..."


          

In the world of online gaming, it is the human element that brings complexity and consistent replay value. It's a simple fact. Dress it up however you like- there exists at the core of our gamer's heart a driving quintessence of intellectual competition. Born of our cunning and creativity, we constantly strive to outperform, to outdo, and as always, to outkill the rest of the crowd. In today's gaming universe, however, individual accolade and renown are lost in the thousands of pre-teen spamtoons. An atmosphere of true immersion is a laughable prospect. The bells and whistles, the scenery and the stock lineup of faceless "heroes" are easy to play through, and about as much fun, ultimately, as manipulating a clock radio in a too-bright fluorescent padded cell. The human element, in the end, is actually limited so severely by those bells and whistles, by the multitudes of the legitimately immature. To find a reasonable adventure these days, you'd actually have to sit down with a book.

Maybe.

Then again, maybe there's an adventure out there after all. An adventure that started twenty years ago, for me. With the emergence of the famed Copper Diku, a paradigm shock was seeping into the collective consciousness. At the University of Denver, the smartest, most popular American "MUD" had been born. I still know the IP by heart: 132.194.10.1 port 4000. With such successors as Renegade Outpost and Black Knight Diku, the first online gaming experience had been born. There are many reasons why people still play this particular platform, so to speak, but near the top of the list has to be the richness and depth that the combination of the human mind and the English language produces. It is our collective inspiration that crafts the ENTIRE experience, from top to bottom. It is our imaginative firepower that writes the adventure as we live it, in an atmosphere of mature and enforced roleplaying, constantly evolving gameplay that evokes within us a spirit of adaptation and improvisation- qualities that no other game can boast of encouraging, much less requiring.

Carrion Fields has been active and successful since 1994, and has proved the mightiest and truest of spirit in the line of those descendants. A rich, diverse world, staggeringly large and yet familiar after only a short time, amazingly detailed and prosaic in its construction. An Implementor and Immortal staff the like of which cannot be found in any other MUD in history, much less in the faceless, soulless GM-base of online pay-to-play boredom. A playerbase that challenges and inspires the veteran and newcomer alike, while providing an intriguing and helpful welcome to those in search of that true gaming adventure. Now perhaps most seductive of all to the average gamer- by quality of roleplay and gameplay alike, there exists a massive amount of Immortal involvement. The game-staff is constructed from the playerbase as well as the original creators, and thus encourages individual heroism, achievement, and recognition across the board.

The level of customization and the ease of gameplay speak for themselves. I understand perfectly well the contentment of being force-fed someone else's imaginative vision while gaming. I played SWG, I played WoW, I thankfully was never addicted to Evercrack, but I've been there. LOTRO, DDO, you name it. City of Heroes. It almost makes me sick to look back at the list, and realize that the experience I was really looking for was back in the power and eloquence of my own mind, forged in the perfect atmosphere and bent to the task of active gaming and creativity. Pick any of the alternatives I listed above, and by comparison, I was paying $X.XX per month to button-mash. Call it skill-grinding, call it raiding, call it whatever you like. It's button-mashing. It doesn't stimulate. Maybe the whole creative process I put into characters is just button-mashing writ large, but I think I can call a rational defense in its superiority. Also drawing from the list and two decades in online gaming, I would say I'm somewhat qualified.

Just my thoughts, and a freebie for you. If YOU are corporate, PM me for an address to cut a check. Otherwise, post it as you wish.

The Faithful of Nazmorghul

Cheers, and See you in the Fields.

  

Alert | IP Printer Friendly copy | Reply | Reply with quote | Top

AsthissThu 01-Sep-11 09:35 AM
Member since 26th Oct 2004
191 posts
Click to send email to this author Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list
#701, "Why not post it on the topmud site? (nt)"
In response to Reply #0


          

nt

  

Alert | IP Printer Friendly copy | Reply | Reply with quote | Top

    
TFONThu 01-Sep-11 09:50 AM
Member since 04th Mar 2003
23 posts
Click to send email to this author Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list
#702, "From the TMS site:"
In response to Reply #1


          

The review system is currently offline - pending replacement.

Otherwise I would've done already. Good points though, and I'm going to search out a few forums and do it there. However, copy and paste away if you already know good places to stick it! (If that doesn't sound dirty...)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tm0LnZOf_O0

For how more successfully to NOT be der-tayh.

  

Alert | IP Printer Friendly copy | Reply | Reply with quote | Top

        
DurNominatorFri 02-Sep-11 12:31 AM
Member since 08th Nov 2004
2018 posts
Click to send private message to this author Click to add this author to your buddy list
#703, "There's always the advertising for players forum in TMS..."
In response to Reply #2


          

nt

  

Alert | IP Printer Friendly copy | Reply | Reply with quote | Top

            
TFONFri 09-Sep-11 02:52 PM
Member since 04th Mar 2003
23 posts
Click to send email to this author Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list
#705, " advertising for players forum in TMS"
In response to Reply #3


          

Finally posted, took forever to get my account manually verified by their admin, but done and done!

  

Alert | IP Printer Friendly copy | Reply | Reply with quote | Top

Top General Discussions Marketing CF Topic #700 Previous topic | Next topic