StarCraft: Co-op Appreciation

I’ve starting to feel a little burnt out on the Old Republic lately, so for the last week or so, I’ve been playing a lot of StarCraft II’s co-op missions for a change of pace. I’m once again struck by how fun they are, and I picked a good time for it, as Blizzard has also just released a major patch with a lot of new additions for co-op, including everyone’s favourite gene-splicing slug as a playable commander.

The co-op mission screen in StarCraft IIWe stand unified:

I’ve been trying to think of a good analogue to compare SC2’s co-op missions to, and I’ve realized I don’t have one. That’s not to say they’re wildly unusual, but I’ve not encountered anything exactly like them.

Usually my experience has been that RTS games have their single-player campaign (my favourite part), and competitive matches, and not a whole lot in-between. At best they might have versus AI skirmishes, which are usually meant as training before you step into PvP.

Co-op missions are somewhat unique in that they aim to have all the endless replayability of PvP, while being a purely co-operative, versus AI experience.

And they do a damn good job of it. Co-op missions do play more like the campaign than anything else, but they’re also highly replayable.

They achieve this through having semi-randomized elements, a number of different missions (although admittedly not as many as I’d like) with unique objectives, and even the fact you’re matched with other players, who may not exactly match your skill level.

Victory in StarCraft II's Temple of the Past co-op missionI still very much wish that I had a friend I could play co-op missions with regularly (I do have one friend who plays StarCraft, but she’s usually too busy), but playing with PUGs is still plenty fun.

The very unreliability of other players is in a strange way sort of fun. The other day I had a run of really bad partners, but that added its own special thrill. I came to think of it is just another challenge to overcome, and honestly, I really like carrying people. It feels good to help people achieve victories they might not otherwise be able to, and it appeals to my vanity.

It also helps that the StarCraft II community tends to be a fair bit more pleasant and respectful than most gaming communities (not that it’s a high bar to clear).

The final piece of what makes co-op so replayable is the sheer variety offered by its many commanders.

Take, for example, the three Protoss commanders currently available. Obviously they’re all the same race, but they all play very differently. Artanis is the Protoss of all Protoss, building armies of big, slow, powerful units that streamroll everything in their path. Vorazun is the rogue archetype translated to the RTS genre, leaping from the shadows to assail her enemies with crippling crowd control and units with devastatingly high damage. Karax… well you’re basically playing tower defense with him.

Activating orbital strike as Artanis in a co-op mission in StarCraft IIAnd that’s just the Protoss commanders. Obviously the representatives of the other races provide even more diversity. There’s even decent variety within each commander’s toolkit, with most having at least a couple of different possible builds/strategies.

Vorazun remains my preferred commander. Her units have devastating power, and she has relatively little emphasis on macro, which I like. She also feels very well-rounded, without major drawbacks. Sometimes I wonder if she’s overpowered. Does it even matter if something is OP in co-op?

To revisit the above topic, she’s also a great commander to pick up the slack if your ally is lagging. Nothing makes you feel awesome like bouncing around the map, throwing down black holes and time stops and warping in clutch reinforcements to save your ally’s base and win the objective all at once.

I’ve gotten to level fifteen on Vorazun and started on mastery levels (more on that later), but I’ve also been branching out a bit. I’ve been playing Artanis and Zagara with some regularity, and I’ve started on co-op’s newest commander.

Untenable to oppose:

Yes, Abathur is here. Somewhat interesting because in beta I believe Stukov was hinted to have been the third Zerg commander, but much as I like Stukov, I think Abathur is probably a better choice. Everyone loves Abathur.

Healing an allied army as Abathur in one of StarCraft II's co-op missionsAbathur is a paid DLC, but he only costs $5 US, which is reasonable in my books. I had no problem buying him right off the bat. Partly because I genuinely wanted to play him, but also because I want to support the co-op feature.

Gameplay-wise, he’s a very interesting commander. He’s basically a Protoss in Zerg’s clothing.

Normally, Zerg is all about churning out huge numbers of fast, cheap, disposable units. You just keep the flood coming and win through sheer attrition.

But by Zerg standards, Abathur’s units tend to be big, slow, and expensive. His armies are slow-moving juggernauts, having more in common with those of Artanis than, say, Zagara.

This impression is further reinforced by Abathur’s core mechanic: biomass. All enemy units drop biomass when killed, and Abathur’s combat units can collect it to grow more powerful. If they consume enough biomass, they will eventually evolve into an ultimate form. Ground units become brutalisks, and air units leviathans.

This further encourages Abathur to keep his units alive for as long as possible. Losing a unit costs you not only the resources you spent on creating it, but all the biomass they’ve collected.

Playing as Abathur in StarCraft II's co-op missionsThe good news is that Abathur’s units tend to be pretty tanky, and he has access to a lot of healing. Late-game, his armies are probably the hardiest of any commander.

My general experience has been that Abathur is quite weak in the early game, but an unstoppable force once he gets going. He also has fairly weak anti-air and mobility, but I think that’s a worthwhile trade-off for his other strengths.

My recommendation would be to lean heavily on toxic nests for defense early on. Try to focus all your biomass into one unit to begin with so you can get your first brutalisk as soon as possible. Play greedy and fast tech until you’ve got your expansion and swarm hosts with the anti-air upgrade. After that, you’re on easy street.

I’ve been making three vipers to evolve into leviathans, but otherwise I pretty much ignore air units. Abathur actually has a very good air units, but it takes a lot of time and resources to get them, and a ground army works fine.

Finally, I’m intrigued by the implications of Abathur being a Zerg commander without a hero unit. I hope this means we may start to see commanders of other races that do have hero units. I love heroes, but Zerg has always been my least favourite race (although Abathur and Zagara are changing that a little).

Nova in StarCraft II: Heart of the SwarmI could definitely see Nova being a hero unit if they add her as a commander. That would be sweet.

Mutation complete:

Abathur isn’t the only big co-op addition brought by patch 3.3. Blizzard has also expanded the mode with mastery levels and weekly mutations.

Mastery levels are very similar to Diablo III’s paragon levels. Once a commander has reached level fifteen, any XP earned begins to count toward mastery levels, each of which gives you points to spend on various incremental bonuses. Mastery level is also shared between all level fifteen commanders.

Mastery leveling seems surprisingly fast — I’m already level nine after the weekly mutation and one regular match — but it’s certainly an improvement over having no progression at all after level fifteen.

Meanwhile, weekly mutations are similar to the brawl modes of Hearthstone and Overwatch. They spice up the gameplay with new and strange challenges and complications. Though this being StarCraft there’s less of any emphasis on wacky off-the-walls mechanics and more on finding new and creative ways to challenge the players.

A mutator mission in StarCraft II's co-opThe first one has as its main mechanic zombies that spawn randomly across the map as well as when any enemy unit dies.

Fun idea, but it proved a lot less challenging than I expected. To be fair, I did have pretty much the ideal composition for such a scenario: Vorazun and Karax. My ally turned our bases into invincible death fortresses that obliterated anything foolish enough to venture too close, and my dark templars’ Shadow Fury just instantly melted any zombies I encountered.

Completing a mutation grants a huge chunk of bonus experience, but only once per difficulty per week (completely a higher difficulty also awards any bonuses from the lower difficulties). So there’s not much cause to do the mutation more than once a week.

On the whole, mutations are probably the most underwhelming aspect of the patch, but I’d still rather have them than not.

One final small but welcome change is that there is now an XP bonus for your first co-op victory each day. Good way to keep people logging in.

* * *

This also feels like a good time to mention that StarCraft II is actually largely free to play, though this fact is very poorly advertised. As far as co-op goes, the only limitation is that free players can only play as the basic commanders: Raynor, Kerrigan, and Artanis.

They’re not any less powerful than the others, just less mechanically complex. Artanis is my personal recommendation for total newbies. You can win most things just by making a giant army of dragoons and a-moving.

Cheating on WoW: Black Desert Online

Recently I was able to snag a free trial key for Black Desert Online from our good friends over at Massively Overpowered.

Dusk falls over a town in Black DesertI had a different reason for wanting to try the game than most. I wanted to get my hands on that famed character creator in the hopes of recreating my novel characters, as I used to in Aion. I was mostly successful with that (expect a full post with pictures soon), but since I had the game, I figured I might as well try actually playing it, too.

On the character creator:

First, I should address the character creator, since it was what drew me to the game. I had heard much praise sung about Black Desert’s character creation, but I’d also had Bhagpuss over at Inventory Full tell me it was very overrated.

Both perspectives are true, in a sense.

Black Desert’s character creator can be incredibly powerful, but it’s oddly limited in some ways. All classes are race and gender-locked, which seems very backward in this day and age. Some classes have a nearly identical equivalent of the opposite gender, but not all of them.

It’s not possible to entirely escape the preset image of a given class, which can cause problems. For instance, you can’t have a wizard who isn’t a skinny old guy. Options are especially limited for male characters and non-Asian ethnicities. I suppose an argument could be made for turnabout being fair play with the deck being stacked against white dudes, but I’m not sure two wrongs make a right.

My maewha in Black DesertThe creator also seems weighted toward more exotic looks. If you want a character with fluorescent pink hair and lime green eyes with orange hearts for pupils, well, that’s easy. But if you want just ordinary dark brown hair and brown eyes, expect to spend twenty minutes fiddling with different sliders until you come up with something that kind of vaguely looks right.

In general Black Desert seems to have a profound talent for making the simplest things massively over-complicated. This is the only game I’ve ever played where you need to look up a guide to figure out how to take a decent screenshot, and even after that it took a fair bit of practice and tinkering to figure it all out. Some of the extra bells and whistles they’ve added — like the adjustable camera angles — are handy, but those ugly photo filters they try to cram down your throat are awful, and the fact that they’re enabled by default even more so.

I was also frustrated by a bug that had all my characters stuck with their class’s default appearance upon zoning into the game. This is apparently a bug that has been known of for weeks and has still not been fixed (or had not been at the time I was playing, anyway). There are some workarounds, but they’re not always reliable. I eventually managed to solve the issue by switching instances several times.

Oh, and I had more trouble picking character names in Black Desert than in any other game I’ve played. I have obscure tastes, and the names I use are almost always free, even in older games, but in Black Desert all of my usual choices were taken, and it took me an incredibly long time to find something I liked that was free. Even very obscure and strange names like Vorazun and Sylith were already claimed.

My maewha in Black DesertThe really funny thing is that I actually ran into the person who had beaten me to “Maigraith.”

It was awkward.

As to the game itself…

Through the desert on a toon with no name:

Wait, why am I referencing a Neil Young song? I don’t like his music.

Whatever.

Black Desert was my first significant experience with the sandbox genre. I made a very concerted effort to keep an open mind, and to not play the game as I would a themepark. Rather than just following the story, I resolved to spend the meat of my time exploring, gathering, tinkering, and generally checking out anything that happened to catch my interest.

Ultimately, this didn’t get me very far.

A corn field in Black DesertIt turns out most of Black Desert’s world is actually pretty empty. In my wanderings, I found lots of pretty sights, but little of actual interest. I encountered a fair few crafting nodes, but my plans to gather extensively were quickly scuppered by how limited energy points are. You run out of them almost immediately, at least early on.

I delved into the game’s simple yet confusing conversation mini-game a fair bit, but it seems you need to spend a great deal of time at it to get anything from it. Or I was talking to the wrong people. Regardless, I gained absolutely nothing from all my conversations, and once again, my limited pool of energy held me back significantly.

The other sandboxy things I attempted were similarly held back by my lack of contribution points. Near as I could tell, the only reliable way to gain them is by following the main story quest.

I suspect I’m missing something. Black Desert isn’t really a game that’s keen on the whole “explaining things” idea, and even if it was, the poor translations would probably make any instructions only a further source of confusion.

Once I finally did buy a house, I couldn’t furnish it because I didn’t have enough money. Also the local furniture vendor only sold benches and tables.

I never even had the opportunity to try crafting.

Fighting critters in Black DesertSo I’m confused. My understanding to date has been that the chief appeal of sandbox games is the level of freedom they offer the player. With no structured content guiding you along, you can do whatever catches your fancy.

But I felt no freer playing Black Desert than I have in the average themepark MMO. Indeed, I’m still putting Guild Wars 2 and Elder Scrolls Online as my most freeing MMO experiences to date. Now those are games that truly let you wander and tinker to your heart’s content.

From what I can see, Black Desert makes you grind to get to the good stuff just as much as the average themepark. It’s just that instead of grinding for the right to fight a big dragon, you’re grinding for the right to decorate a house and pick grapes.

Maybe sandboxes just feel freeing to people who prefer non-combat activities, since themeparks don’t often give a lot of options for that.

I’ve also heard it said sandboxes are more immersive, but I definitely don’t agree with that. I could write up some spiel about how focusing on systems upfront rather than letting me learn the game as I follow the story brings me out of the experience, but instead I’ll just say that this is a game where you get sick if you eat grapes without cooking them first. How’s that work?

Exploring an ancient ruin in Black DesertBut don’t take all this to mean I didn’t enjoy my time with Black Desert. I’m confused, but not especially annoyed or frustrated. I did still enjoy my wanderings on the whole.

It is a very pretty game, albeit not as pretty as the screenshots I’d seen had led me to believe. The view distance in particular is surprisingly short, rendering many vistas just gray blobs. I may be missing something (the motto of Black Desert Online), but as far as I can tell, all my settings were maxed.

But it’s still a gorgeous game in a lot of ways. The lighting and weather effects are lovely, the foliage is thick and realistic, and the towns are charmingly detailed.

The music is also quite soothing, and the game’s light parkour system that lets you climb walls and cliffs adds an extra dimension to exploring — quite literally.

The lore actually seemed fairly interesting, though the poor translations rather sucked the fun out of that.

The combat’s also pretty fun. It is of the “things die if you glance in their general direction” school of thought, which I’m not fond of, but the ability animations are spectacular and viscerally satisfying, and I did enjoy the agile, swordmaster playstyle of the maewha class. Can we please get more classes that use two-handed weapons with speed and agility, rather than being slow, clumsy brutes?

Your guess is as good as mineThat said, it did seem a bit like WildStar’s combat in that what works well solo turns into an incomprehensible rainbow spew in a group context.

I had fun playing Black Desert. But it’s not the sort of thing that can hold my attention long-term. I pretty much stopped logging in other than to make more characters before my trial had even run out.

By the way, do I want to know why the cash shop sells legendary quality underwear?