![]() |
|
|
|
#1
|
||||
|
Quote:
| |||
|
|
||||
|
#2
|
||||
|
Quote:
__________________
Bob the Broker
| |||
|
|
||||
|
#3
|
||||
|
Quote:
It's just going to end up being another generic MMO that grabbed an audience with the name/setting. I predict F2P in 2 years. | |||
|
|
||||
|
#4
|
||||
|
Quote:
__________________
The Few, The Proud, The Dark Elf Cleric
| |||
|
|
||||
|
#5
|
|||
|
Yeah, I think my WoW main has something like 10k+ quests done. It's ridiculous. But, as you said, most of them are mundane, and don't mean anything overall, just something to disguise the exp grind.
__________________
The Few, The Proud, The Dark Elf Cleric
| ||
|
|
|||
|
#6
|
|||
|
I think there's a dimension people are missing with the whole "EQ was about quests" statement. It's somewhat true if placed in context of where EQ started. For its time, it had a lot of quests. Pretty much anything you played in that same time period hadn't developed the multitude of, nor the depth of specific individual quests and subquests (soulfire, epics, monk robe quests, etc) EQ had - as rudimentary as they seem to us now. At that time, people did rave about how many unique quests and NPC interactions you could complete that would affect your gear/gameplay, etc.
WoW Vanilla basically took what EQ did there and massively multiplied its applications - be it quests for useful trinkets, gear, money, or exp; or even epic-type quests (think Hunter Rhok'delar). They did it really, really well, too - so much so that it outshined the quest aspect of EQ by a long shot. But Quests were the intended focus of EQ (Ever-Quest), it was just the way people thought at the time that pure grinding (i.e. sit in dungeon X and kill as many mobs as quickly as possible) was a necessary evil and was unavoidable to make the game "challenging". WoW and a number of successors changed that thinking. | ||
|
|
|||
|
#7
|
||||
|
Quote:
YES! I mean, sure, I turned in, god knows how many Crushbone belts. But give me my Carrot on a Stick, I must have it! EQ = Dungeon squatting for X amount of hours, while WoW, was just do dungeon once for some gear, and then head back to questing for X amount of hours. Execept vanilla WoW, where grinding was actually the fastest method of leveling.
__________________
The Few, The Proud, The Dark Elf Cleric
| |||
|
|
||||
|
#8
|
|||
|
"...where your decisions will really matter!'
everytime I hear something like that, I die inside a little.
__________________
The Ancient Ranger
Awake again. | ||
|
|
|||
|
#9
|
|||
|
This thread made me curious so I did some research on Allakhazam. Numbers may not be 100% due to changes over the years, but here are the numbers.
EverQuest - 909 Classic Era quests (To obtain this number I did a Quest Search and the only search criteria I selected was "Original" for the Era field. Copied and pasted each page of the search results to Excel to get a number count since the site does not calculate a total number.) World of Warcraft - 770 Classic Era quests (12,348 quests in current Live WoW) (Ran a Quest Search limiting the search criteria to "None" for the Added In Expansion field. 2 of the results were level 80 and were dailys. Those 2 have been omitted in the numbers. Numbers according to WoWhead.com) EverQuest II - 9082 Current Era quests (Unable to search quests by Era here. This number also includes ~500 obsolete quests.) | ||
|
|
|||
|
#10
|
|||
|
A lot of stuff called 'quests' in mmorpg's nowadays shouldn't be, in my opinion. They are mostly just 'tasks'. run here, bring this, find these, kill that, now do it some more. Those aren't quests...quests are supposed to be something that is daunting and takes a long time and research and luck and staunch companions. Yknow, like in the movies. I like to think that the original EQ quests are more quest-like, and the zillions of teeny little 'quests' in WoW and I assume in EQII are more of the task variety.
I think the epics in EQ are still some of the best examples of actual quests worthy of the name you can find in any mmo.
__________________
The Ancient Ranger
Awake again. | ||
|
|
|||
![]() |
|
|