Farewell to Massively

As most MMO fans likely know by now, the bell has tolled for the Joystiq network, including the esteemed MMO news and commentary site Massively. Despite being more successful than ever, it has been shut down by its corporate overlords at AOL* and will cease operation tomorrow.

A vision of Azeroth burning during the questline to acquire Dragonwrath, Tarecgosa's Rest*[Pause for inevitable round of, “Wait, AOL still exists?”]

This is a very sad time for the entire MMO community, and me personally.

Obviously, Massively was a great source of news. They offered updates throughout the day, every day, and happily covered older, obscure, and foreign titles almost as much as the bigger name and more mainstream games.

It was one of the few sites still offering regular coverage — and positive coverage at that — to The Secret World, so this is an especially sad day for those of us who are fans of the game. TSW needs all the support it can get.

If you scroll the monster comments section for the post linked above, you will eventually find that even Joel Bylos, TSW’s loveable game director, has offered his condolences for the closure.

On a personal note, the closure of Massively hits me especially hard.

The Dreaming Prison in The Secret WorldAside from being a part of my daily routine, Massively was a huge influence on me as a writer, a blogger, and a journalist. I learned a lot about writing and reporting by reading their articles, and I have a great deal of respect for their writers.

In particular, Eliot Lefebvre and Brianna Royce became idols of mine. I greatly respect their insight, their equitable mindset, and their keen wit, and I was always eager to hear anything they had to say on MMO design or gaming culture. It’s safe to say I want to be Eliot when I grow up.

I had long nursed the dream of one day becoming a writer for Massively. I even applied there once, and while I didn’t make the cut that time, I never quite gave up the hope of one day being good enough to join the Massively team.

Until now, of course, for Massively is no more.

There are some rumblings of them perhaps forging off on their own to create a new and independent site — possibly through crowdfunding — but as of right now, nothing is certain. I hope they do. I might even contribute to such a crowdfunding venture if they were to launch one.

My Charr engineer in Guild Wars 2In the meanwhile, we’ll have to settle for following the blogs of those writers who have them. A list can be found below:

Brianna Royce: http://skycandy.org/

Justin Olivetti: http://biobreak.wordpress.com/

Eliot Lefebvre: http://eliot-lefebvre.com/

MJ Guthrie: http://lookingforshinies.com/

Mike Foster: http://www.mike-foster.com/

Larry Everett: http://www.hyperspacebeacon.com/

Now I’m gonna go save some of my favourite Massively articles from over the years. Because history needs to remember Eliot’s evisceration of Scarlet Blade.

What Happened to Dwarves?

I’m the Elf guy. Everyone who knows me knows this. Elves are my favourite fantasy archetype. I live by the creed, “If it’s not an Elf, leave it on the shelf.”

A shot of Gimli, son of Gloin, in the Lord of the Rings filmsBut you may be surprised to learn that in my earlier years I was also a pretty huge Dwarf fan. When I played Lord of the Rings as a kid, I was always Gimli, and I was damn happy about it.

I admired the courage, the nobility, and the sheer badassery of Dwarves. They were mighty warriors and loyal friends.

As the years went on, my interest in the Dwarf archetype faded and ultimately all but evaporated. Part of this is due to my changing tastes and my love for Elves coming to eclipse all else, but a lot of this also has to do with how the fantasy genre has treated the archetype and — I think — failed it.

Of all the major fantasy archetypes, Dwarves seem to have the least variety in their depictions. I’ve seen amazing variety in the depictions of Elves — good and evil Elves, wild and civilized Elves, fierce and placid Elves, magical and mundane Elves. Dragons, too, have incredibly creativity in their various depictions. They’re usually huge fire-breathing lizards, but their temperaments and their places in a world and its history can vary wildly.

Dwarves are always pretty much the same. I’ve seen a few minor variations on the theme here and there, but they’re generally all just a bunch of bland Gimli clones. Nobody seems to put much effort into their Dwarves.

Art of Magni Bronzebeard from World of WarcraftWhat’s worse is that what little change has come to the archetype has not at all been for the better. The archetype has not expanded, but narrowed. It hasn’t evolved; it’s devolved.

These days, the overwhelming majority of Dwarves you seen in fantasy are crude, hard-drinking brawlers with cartoony accents, and little more. They’re buffoons.

It didn’t use to be this way. If you go back to the beginning, Tolkien’s Dwarves had dignity. Sure, they liked to drink, and they were a bit crude, and they never backed down from a good fight, but there was a lot more to them than that. They were an ancient and noble people with a mysterious and complex culture. They built wondrous marvels, and they accomplished grand deeds.

Look at Thorin Oakenshield. Here is a Dwarf with dignity. He is a regal and terrible figure, brave and bold but also subtle and majestic.

Watching the Hobbit movies and being reminded what a grand leader Thorin is really opened my eyes to how much modern fantasy has failed the Dwarven archetype. They have the potential to be so much more than tipsy thugs that sound like Groundskeeper Willie.

Richard Armitage as Thorin Oakenshield in the Hobbit filmsIt echoes how pop culture belittles ancient Nordic culture, from which the Dwarven archetype draws much of its inspiration. People view the Norse as naught but hard-drinking, brutal raiders, and certainly that was part of their culture, but there was much more to them than that. They were also great poets and scholars with a rich culture and mythology, and they were far more technologically and socially advanced than the other European peoples of the time.

I want Dwarves to take their dignity back. I want them to get a fair shake. They deserve to have all the depth, complexity, and variety of the other great fantasy archetypes. One of my goals for future writing projects is to present a version of Dwarves that is more original and more sophisticated than what has come before, and I would love to see the rest of the fantasy genre do likewise.

Let Dwarves live up to their full potential. Let me be a Dwarf fan again.