Gaming Round-Up: Massively Leftovers

One of my struggles with this blog since I started working at Massively Overpowered, and one of the reasons I don’t post nearly as much as I used to, is the decision of what to put here versus what to put on Massively. My recent Not So Massively column on Redfall, for instance, is something of a sequel to a blog post I made about it a few months ago, and I originally intended it to go on Superior Realities, but ultimately I get paid if I put it on MOP, so that’s what I did.

A gleamite shower in New World's Winter Convergence event.New World is another good example. It’s been my main game for the last two years, but I’ve barely mentioned it on my blog, because nearly everything I have to say about it goes into the Vitae Aeternum column.

That said, I now find myself with some thoughts to share on multiplayer games that are too short and rambly to form a MOP column, so it’s time for another gaming round-up blog.

New World

I’ve settled into a loose pattern of playing New World heavily for a few weeks, then putting it on the back burner for a few weeks (but rarely quitting entirely), rinse and repeat. It’s a good fit for both my own fickle attention span and the game’s seasonal content model.

During December I went through a phase where I took the unusual (for me) step of actually playing it the way you’re “supposed to” play MMOs: doing lots of endgame group content, chasing rare drops, trying to improve my gear.

My main posing with the Abyss artifact (transmogged) in New World.This mainly took the form of elite chest runs, a form of open world zerg that will feel very familiar to anyone who’s ever done a hero point train in Guild Wars 2. In fact, the more I play of it the more I feel the endgame structure of New World is closer to that of GW2 than anything else. Despite its increasingly inaccurate reputation as a hardcore PvP game, New World truly has become a casual PvE paradise.

A particular goal was earning some more artifacts. I grabbed the Boltcaster bow for my Convenant alt (who is now more of a co-main, as usually happens with me) without much difficulty. What took more grinding was the Abyss, a great axe that deals void damage and can scale off intellect, but after a few dozen Corrupted portals, I finally got it on my main.

I like the idea of artifacts, but so far most of their designs have been a little unambitious, not really delivering on the “build-defining” role Amazon intends for them. However, the Abyss is an exception. Being able to use a great axe in a mage build is a fun novelty, and I completely retooled my fire staff skills to support the close combat. I wasn’t sure I’d actually use Abyss much, but I’m actually having a blast with this newfound battle-mage playstyle.

I also took a run through the new dungeon, the Glacial Tarn, to finish upgrading Boltcaster. This was only my third dungeon run in my New World career, and we didn’t have a proper tank, so things got a bit hairy at points, but the story mode introduced with the expansion is indeed pretty easy, so we were able to press through.

The Glacial Tarn expedition in New World.I wouldn’t say the mechanics of the dungeon were anything too exotic in the MMO space, but the environment art was great, the music was amazing, and overall it was a pretty good time, despite my dodgy group. It has me excited to see more of the game’s dungeons once the dungeon finder finally launches.

I also did quite a bit of grinding on the Winter Convergence event. Various circumstances led to me being unable to fully participate in it for the first two years, so I essentially did three years of grinding at once, but I managed to get pretty much all the cosmetics I want on both characters.

Finally, I did some redecorating on my Reekwater home, and I think it’s cozier than ever. All in all, a pretty productive couple of weeks.

Heroes of the Storm

When I wrote about my brief return to Heroes of the Storm on Massively OP a few months ago, I said I’d already uninstalled, and I did… but I reinstalled again not too long after. I’ve been playing off and on since.

The Big Shot Sgt. Hammer skin in Heroes of the Storm.As I always have, I maintain mixed feelings on the game. When you get a good match, it can be an incredibly exciting experience, but you won’t always have good matches, and it is kind of an empty and mindless experience even at the best of times. I can never quite escape the feeling that I’m wasting my life even more than one usually does when playing video games.

It also remains true that nearly every major change to the game since launch has made it worse, at least in my opinion. I hardly play my old favourite heroes, because almost all of them have been altered or nerfed too much. Jaina and Johanna are the only major exceptions.

The loss of Tassadar as a support character stings especially. I’ve been playing nearly every remaining healer trying to find a replacement, but none of them quite click so well. Whitemane is very fun, but also very difficult and thus too stressful to play all the time. Anduin is very easy, but a little bland. Tyrande’s not bad, but she still doesn’t feel as good as Tassadar did when he was a support.

I’m painting a very bleak picture of the game, but the core gameplay does remain very fun, and in terms of balance, the game is in a pretty good place. There’s a few overtuned heroes, but this feels like one of the most well-balanced periods of the game’s life.

Getting a win as Anduin Wrynn in Heroes of the Storm.And as always, the chief appeal is simply in nostalgia. Even with all we’ve learned in the last few years, I can’t help but get the warm fuzzies from all those classic Blizzard characters all together.

As is the case for all MOBAs, the sheer variety of heroes also does a lot to keep things fresh. Of the new heroes added since I lasted played, Fenix is probably the biggest hit for me. He’s very simple to play, but that can be a nice change of pace. I’m quite perplexed that I rarely see anyone else playing him; he feels incredibly strong to me, and I’ve had many dominant performances with him.

I’ve had a lot of fun with Imperius, too. Brusier was never my favourite role, but charging into the thick of it to impale people with your spear just never gets old.

Also, while I do tend to complain about the revamps over-complicating heroes, in the case of Raynor adding some depth to him was actually welcome. He’s still pretty simple, but no longer to the point of being boring. This pleases me a lot because he’s always been a favourite character of mine lore-wise, and I was disappointed he wasn’t more fun to play in Heroes.

Earning an MVP award as D.va in Heroes of the Storm.Finally, I’ve been playing a lot of D.va lately, to the point where she feels like potential “new main” material. I barely played her before my long hiatus, so I can’t say if she changed or I did, but she feels far stronger and more fun than I remember. The fact you can almost completely avoid death with her given good play and a little luck is just so nice. Plus she combines my long-time affinity for short, mildly insane women and my natural masculine desire to pilot a big stompy robot.

I don’t know if I’m going to stick with Heroes much longer or not. I do want to at least try every hero, which is proving frustrating since Qhira and Hogger almost never get picked for the free rotation and Mei was never added to it at all for some incomprehensible reason. I’m grinding the gold to buy her just for completionism’s sake, which for now keeps me doing my dailies and trying to find a healer who feels just right.

So, the Worldsoul Saga

I was pretty convinced I was finished with World of Warcraft. I wrote a whole fan fic to say goodbye to the game and everything. I’m not yet ready to say the announcements at BlizzCon have changed my mind, but they’ve brought me closer than I thought possible.

Logos for the three expansions making up World of Warcraft's Worldsoul Saga arc.To be sure, it is an uphill battle for WoW to win me back at this point. I’ve missed three expansions, and the effort of catching up is daunting. The talent system has been overhauled yet again, into a form I strongly dislike at that, and the thought of relearning my characters for the umpteenth time is exhausting.

Nor do I relish returning to the yoke of subscription fees and the constant feeling of needing to rush my way through the game to save money, and one must also consider how very old the game is. Even with all the updates, its core gameplay — which I was always merely lukewarm to — feels downright ancient. Can I go back to tab target after becoming so accustomed to New World’s sublime combat?

Honestly, with the trajectory my life, I’m not sure I’m even going to have the time to reinvest in WoW come next year.

Buuuut…

But the Worldsoul Saga does look really cool.

The view of Azeroth from Argus in World of WarcraftFirstly, we have to admire the sheer ballsiness of announcing three expansions at once. For better or worse, Blizzard has not historically planned this far ahead, nor are they known for their transparency. After three expansions that all felt like the most tired, safe plays to nostalgia possible, this is the kind of ambition they needed to get my attention back.

There does seem to be a bit of a tacit admission that the last few expansions were a misstep, as well. Aside from Anduin’s PTSD, whose source I am only vaguely familiar with, everything we’ve seen so far feels like it could have come immediately after the end of Legion, for my money the last great WoW expansion.

I’m always mixed about these kind of things. Everything has some fans, and whitewashing canon will always be messy. I’m still upset by how Diablo IV ignores the events of III. But selfishly, I don’t mind the idea of the Worldsoul Saga sweeping the last few expansions under the rug to serve as Legion’s direct sequel.

The concept of Azeroth’s worldsoul is one of the coolest things to come out of modern Warcraft lore, both conceptually and as a way to give meaning and purpose behind all the calamity that’s befallen Azeroth. Doubling down on that is one of the few things meaningful enough that it could actually draw me back.

Alleria Windrunner in the trailer for World of Warcraft: The War Within.And we need to talk about the second expansion in the trilogy, Midnight. I’m trying not to be an easy mark for big franchises these days, but an entire expansion set in Quel’thalas, focused on uniting the Elven peoples to defend the Sunwell? JUST INJECT THAT SHIT STRAIGHT INTO MY VEINS, METZEN.

I try not to overly lionize or villainize specific game developers. Game development is a collaborative process, and it’s rarely down to one individual to make or break anything. But the difference between Warcraft with and without Metzen really does feel like night and day. There’s vision again. The passion is back.

This could all still go wrong. The best story concepts can be ruined by poor execution, and I’m concerned by how much this feels like an ending to the franchise, considering business forces will undoubtedly lead to more expansions after the Saga concludes, something that has already been all but confirmed. How can you provide a satisfying conclusion to the Warcraft franchise when you plan to trot out a new villain of the week in the next patch?

But still, it’s tantalizing, and there seems to be a lot of positive movement on the gameplay front, as well. By far the biggest gameplay factor that kept me away from the game was the restrictions on flight, but now flight mechanics and being able to fly from the start are a selling feature for The War Within, the first part of the trilogy. This started in Dragonflight with dragon-riding, but I really didn’t expect it to be a permanent addition. Now they’re giving (nearly) all mounts dragon-riding mechanics and fully embracing flight as part of the game’s identity, as it always should have been.

A preview image of the Nerubian realm of Ahj'kahet from World of Warcraft: The War Within.I haven’t played Dragonflight, mind you, so I don’t know firsthand what dragon-riding is like, but it looks cool, and the reception seems to have been very positive. I’m just glad any form of flight is being embraced.

Delves and warbands are more nice-to-haves than need-to-haves, but they both sound like welcome features all the same. Delves seem like they’re basically just the scenarios from Pandaria with a rebranding and a few tweaks, and warbands are basically WoW’s take on SWTOR’s legacy system. Both solid ideas.

I’m a little more mixed on hero talents. Despite the talent tree layout, they sound more like Mists talents with choosing one option per tier, which is good, and a lot of them at least sound very cool based on the names. Dark Rangers! Frostfire mages!

But I can see a lot of ways for this to go wrong. How do you scale it in future expansions without continuing the endless talent tree redesigns that have dogged WoW forever? How do you balance between those who want them to really shake up their class and those that want to keep playing their characters as they always have? As someone who rarely plays hunters, I know I’d love it if Dark Ranger completely changed the class into something wildly different, but I wouldn’t be so happy to see my rogue suddenly unrecognizable because of her hero talents.

Xal'atah, or Xally, as she liked to be known...If they’re smart, they’ll provide a mix of subtler and more radical hero talent trees, giving people the choice to maintain their current playstyle or go crazy, and they’ll add new hero talent trees with future expansions (say one per class) so as to make them a form of horizontal rather than vertical progression, but I’m not terribly confident in either of those things actually happening.

I still don’t know if I’m ever really going to get back to WoW, but regardless, I do take some comfort in seeing it move in what seems to be a much better direction. It feels like Warcraft again.