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Under The Hood: Running Out Of Time


It's very debatable, but the biggest investment into any MMO is time. It's one thing to just pay to play the game, as there are several per-month services you can pay for, such as cable television, or car insurance, or sometimes simple things like a book club. But no normal service, however, require both the time and monetary investment like an MMO does. They are designed from the ground up to be full of grinding, time-wasting, and slow experience gain. But why is that?


Probably the most effective answer is they want you to keep playing. People who play longer, pay longer, and developers know this. They design games to be full of grind, to have only certain spawns, to have a lack of local content (in order to make the player travel), and sometimes even to have such an abysmal level gain rate that it's frustrating to try and level at all. It's all to get your money.

There's more to it than that, though. If games were lengthened solely through bad methods and only to get the developers more cash, players would definitely notice something wrong. Which means it goes deeper than just that. Developers have to lengthen games for more than just monetary reasons.

Sometimes a story can only be told over multiple games. Instead of making a whole bunch of stand-alone titles, developers will develop an MMO and then put time and effort into continuing the story with expansions. This has both the added benefit of bringing in more revenue to help fund the projects, and also gives the developers a story canvas to write on that is years in length. Some great examples of this are the expansions to EverQuest, and the Issues in City of Heroes/Villains. In any other sort of game, you'd have to make a whole bunch of standalone titles to incorporate such large stories. Not so here.

Another is similar to that. Sometimes developers have a great idea, but don't have time to incorporate it into a normal game. In most PC games, a patch won't unlock any extra game content, or extra features. Not the case in MMOs. Developers are constantly tweaking the balance, sometimes adding or removing items and quests to make the game feel more fluid. What you are paying for with that monthly fee is more than just the exquisite gold lining of executive #56's pocket, but continued update love from the people who made the game. The new crafting professions in World of Warcraft and the new Auction House in Tabula Rasa are good examples of content that really could only be added later, either due to time constraints or other reasons.

Lastly, some games are just too big to be considered normal titles. They take months to complete, and that's not even counting expansions, which, in some games, come out fairly frequently. You are paying monthly for that huge base content and continual added content, and it's not all that bad, all things considered. Just don't lose track of your payments, and manage your time between real-life and the game.

This is, of course, not counting free-to-play MMOs. But that's the topic for another (and by another, I mean next) week.

Each week James Murff writes Under The Hood, a deeper look at MMO game mechanics and how they affect players, games, and the industry