TE
科技回声
首页24小时热榜最新最佳问答展示工作
GitHubTwitter
首页

科技回声

基于 Next.js 构建的科技新闻平台,提供全球科技新闻和讨论内容。

GitHubTwitter

首页

首页最新最佳问答展示工作

资源链接

HackerNews API原版 HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 科技回声. 版权所有。

What made World of Warcraft's environments so compelling?

196 点作者 erwald大约 3 年前

51 条评论

jmyeet大约 3 年前
What made WoW environments so compelling is that were very stylized and deliberately not &quot;realistic&quot;. If you look back at the history of games that focus on photorealism they date really quickly as the tech moves on yet WoW&#x27;s aesthetic is much more timeless.<p>Secondly, the game <i>feels good</i>. By this I mean the movement and responsiveness.<p>Third, the game in its original form was particularly immersive as the WoW developers eschewed the loading screens that were an immersion-breaking feature of the big competitor at the time (ie Everquest). Sadly this design principle has fallen by the wayside in recent years.<p>Lastly, WoW came about at a time before social networks when online games were the first proto-social networks for many, many people. Through guilds you found likeminded people.
评论 #30449446 未加载
评论 #30449762 未加载
评论 #30449529 未加载
评论 #30454060 未加载
评论 #30451341 未加载
评论 #30453612 未加载
评论 #30454713 未加载
评论 #30449938 未加载
评论 #30449879 未加载
zdware大约 3 年前
For anyone who loved WoW (especially the early days), I highly recommend checking out the WoW diary, by John Staats.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;whenitsready.com&#x2F;wowdiary&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;whenitsready.com&#x2F;wowdiary&#x2F;</a><p>Not only was he an environment&#x2F;dungeon&#x2F;zone designer, but he recorded so much about the games development in the alpha stages. One of my favorite tidbits was how they worked to optimize the game for 56k back then. They got it to work extremely well with just a couple Kb&#x2F;s!
评论 #30451657 未加载
评论 #30451254 未加载
评论 #30449560 未加载
deckard1大约 3 年前
You can&#x27;t just discuss WoW environments without bringing up sound design and weather effects. Graphics are merely one aspect of why WoW felt like a world.<p>Ever been to the Shimmering Flats in old WoW? How about at night?[1] It&#x27;s an entirely different feel (and then you know why they call it shimmering). It&#x27;s an amazing experience to go from day to night in WoW. Your friends might drop off for the day. You&#x27;re just alone in this vast quiet world. And it rains. Or you enter a tavern and it <i>feels</i> warm thanks to the welcoming music. How about Duskwood during Halloween? This one game can evoke so many different feelings depending on which zone you&#x27;re in, what time of day it is, and what weather effects are going on.<p>[1] <a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=GEM4xVhDAjI" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.youtube.com&#x2F;watch?v=GEM4xVhDAjI</a>
评论 #30453522 未加载
评论 #30451659 未加载
phendrenad2大约 3 年前
When making a game world, there are many parameters you can tweak. One of them is the distance between points of interest. I think WoW struck a good balance between short distances (where the game feels like a casino or theme park, where everywhere you look there&#x27;s some quest or shiny item begging for your attention) and long distances (where the player might get bored pressing the W key to move forward). It actually fell a bit of the &quot;long distance&quot; side, and it did this by keeping the environments grounded in reality.<p>But, like, a caricature of reality. Each zone feels like the WoW devs looked at a location on Earth and said &quot;okay, how do we turn this up to eleven?&quot;. You&#x27;ve got Durotar, which looks like the Kalahari desert in the southern African countries, but with huge stylized rock formations and oversized trees. Then you have Tirisfal Glades, which looks like a generic pine forest in Canada (with gothic elements added, and again, larger trees). Then you have Thousand Needles which looks like Utah&#x27;s Bryce Canyon or the Karst Towers in Yunnan, China (but what if there were rope bridges connecting them?). Winterspring looks like many places in winter (but there are those oversized trees and mountains again!)<p>Another important aspect is, not much was prefabbed. While it was possible to find buildings reused across the game world, they were all decorated differently, and had different NPCs inside and out to give them uniqueness.<p>Also, not everything in the world had purpose. This goes back to the &quot;theme park&quot; idea. There are many, many unique buildings, NPCs, and outdoor areas with absolutely no purpose. No enemies to fight, no quests to do. But someone put effort into making sure that this NPC and this carrot garden looks believable (as much as the stylized world of WoW can look believable).
AdamJMarsh大约 3 年前
Thinking back to the first days of World of Warcraft, the art direction was impeccable. There was great attention to detail that felt immersive.<p>Every area had a specific theme and lore to it, which connected to other areas and the overarching story.<p>What worked best for these environments were the memories of early multiplayer for me.<p>It&#x27;s easy to forget how old school the graphics are yet my memories of Tarren Mill and the first beginnings of PVP are still very vivid.<p>Same with the first server event with Ahn&#x27;Qiraj (which in my opinion had some of the best design in the whole game).
评论 #30454511 未加载
Barrin92大约 3 年前
Glance at the thread has me surprised (I think) nobody has brought it up, but by far one of the strongest aspects of WoW&#x27;s environments is the fact that they tie in with the lore of the game.<p>WoW environments are not just generic, they reflect and take place in stories that people have loved for many years even before WoW came around. the very first place that came to mind reading that article was the entrance to Undercity where you can hear, if you have the audio loud enough, scenes from Arthas Betrayal in WC3.<p>Many places in WoW have genuine weight, they feel like real historical places in a way. This is what makes them memorable. You do not have this attachment at all in any modern MMO were most people just click through the cinematics.
评论 #30453894 未加载
评论 #30451289 未加载
oramit大约 3 年前
Not all of WOW is very compelling and I wish the author had taken his admittedly unscientific ranking and examined different zones to see what would come out on top. Especially in Vanilla there were a lot of grindy areas and depending on which faction you chose you would have a radically different early game experience. The Orc, Tauren, Dwarf, and Undead starting areas I remember being pretty boring and it seemed like a lot more care was put into the Night Elves and Human areas. The best environments were generally in the mid game where the developers seemed to have the most leeway in what they were building theme wise. Once you got to the end game it became very grindy and the environments were not so compelling. Everything became volcanic, lots of generic evil and vistas of browns.<p>Having said all that - I think the real reason it was so compelling was the community. It hit at just the right time where everyone was finally coming online and there weren&#x27;t many other games of the same quality level pulling people away. It was a well designed game and everyone seemed to be playing it. I only spent so much time there because it was where I could reliably chat up friends. The few people I know who are still playing it today only do so because of their guild.
评论 #30449368 未加载
评论 #30449394 未加载
评论 #30449752 未加载
评论 #30449389 未加载
评论 #30450193 未加载
ScarletEmerald大约 3 年前
Graphic design played a large role, I&#x27;d guess. Warcraft imagery had this unique mix of cartoon, fantasy, and realistic in a way that most of its successors (and even later versions of WoW itself couldn&#x27;t match. Plus, the open world aspect of it was the first time many players had ever encountered something like it. There were loading screens only for dungeons and continents. You could walk, run, or ride in Azeroth for hours without anything from outside intruding on the experience.
alexjurkiewicz大约 3 年前
If you spend a lot of time exploring any virtual world in your formative years, that world will stick in your memory.<p>World of Warcraft is only unique in how universal it was.
评论 #30449781 未加载
评论 #30449788 未加载
评论 #30449455 未加载
评论 #30449902 未加载
keithnz大约 3 年前
Are the environments so compelling? before WoW there was MUDs (or MOOs) and they were super compelling and addictive with no gfx, lets call it the &quot;MUD effect&quot;. So do the environments of WoW feeling compelling because of the environment, or because of the &quot;MUD effect&quot;, and hence everything built on that feels more compelling, including the environments?
评论 #30450152 未加载
评论 #30449375 未加载
评论 #30449338 未加载
pram大约 3 年前
For me what made it interesting (in early vanilla at least) was the mystery. More specifically, a lot of the areas just weren’t used for anything, and some were completely empty (Silithus, Deadwind Pass)<p>You actually wanted to explore these places just because. It made the world feel more compelling. Later expansions, the areas compressed and every inch was covered in quest crap.
mLuby大约 3 年前
Subnautica is another example of this with its lush natural underwater environments: shallow beaches, coral reefs, kelp forests, thermal vents, underwater rivers, abyssal cave ecosystems, lava tubes, etc.<p>I&#x27;d give it high marks for Naturalness, Mystery, Openness, Coherence, Beauty, and Colorfulness; it lacks a bit in Legibility and Complexity sometimes. Great game.
评论 #30451439 未加载
评论 #30475355 未加载
cfcf14大约 3 年前
When I read the title, I had a <i>very</i> different idea in mind for what the content of the article would be.<p>I think it&#x27;s interesting to apply a sort of topographical analysis to the virtual regions of WoW to try to understand why they&#x27;re so important to us. Kudos to the author, I enjoyed reading his analysis. However, as other commenters have noted - I believe it&#x27;s impossible to understand the allure of the game independently of the social elements.<p>To me the most important part of what made these environments compelling was the ability to actually quantify my interaction with them, exactly. Almost 20 years ago - god, has it been that long? Going into this virtual world with a counter that exactly captured how &#x27;well&#x27; or &#x27;good&#x27; I did was some kind of revelation. To people who played: these were the first DPS meters or counters. The foundations of quantitative gaming analysis for these kinds of games.<p>Of course, in the real world we have tests and races and everything else. But it wasn&#x27;t the same. In World of Warcraft you could bend your entire intellect against the goal of maximizing some number which summarized your interaction with a virtual agent in a public way. This wasn&#x27;t the first game to do this, but it was the most successful. If you were were good at the task (of interacting with the game environment), this gained you prestige in a highly visible way. For a million faceless and lost teenagers across the world, this mechanism was an indispensable lifeline.
sorenn111大约 3 年前
I wonder about World of Warcraft and can&#x27;t help but think its success and place in our culture can&#x27;t be replicated for a variety of reasons:<p>-It had a very popular RTS game series that built up the lore, graphical template of the world, and did a lot of world&#x2F;character building.<p>-It released in 2004 which was at a time when the internet was becoming more and more accessible such that kids could reasonably get online. (All MMO&#x27;s are related to internet access but I would argue that the rollout of the internet has no two time periods that were the same)<p>-It blended the right amount grind&#x2F;accessibility being more accessible than competitors like everquest but more enthralling and entrapping that successors.<p>-The appetite for MMO&#x27;s may never be the same: revenues for mobile games and their ilk with micrcotransactions vastly outweight the market for MMO&#x27;s. With how gaming has changed, many customers may not give the time to an MMO the way they used to and companies may not see the point.<p>WoW was a truly unique game in its time IMO
评论 #30449232 未加载
评论 #30449555 未加载
评论 #30449264 未加载
crsv大约 3 年前
The environments were compelling enough I guess, but for me the true magic came from giant numbers popping up when I would hit things. Get something with multiple critical strikes in vanilla wow was so singularly satisfying. I couldn’t tell you anything interesting about the map, but I can tell you where I was when I hit my first two handed mace triple crit as a wind fury shaman in pvp. Big numbers and dead opponents. Pure joy.
评论 #30449951 未加载
trynewideas大约 3 年前
Good timing for this; the game just dropped a new patch and new zone yesterday, and the new environments continue this same feeling of very intentional art direction. But with each expansion pack, the assets feel closer to being in-line with modern standards.<p>It&#x27;s not the most graphically intricate game still, for the better IMO in terms of accessibility (it still runs improbably well on my 2013 MBP), but these spaces are still evocative and good to look at. For me, anyway.<p><a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.wowhead.com&#x2F;gallery=2049&#x2F;zereth-mortis-sceenshots" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.wowhead.com&#x2F;gallery=2049&#x2F;zereth-mortis-sceenshot...</a>
jtchang大约 3 年前
I picked a race that didn&#x27;t start in Ironforge. I remember not really knowing what to expect. I may have taken a griffin or just used a boat. But the sheer feeling of awe when you enter. The music changes and truly get a scale of how large the place is. I&#x27;m not sure I&#x27;ll ever get to experience that again.
ftlio大约 3 年前
The later zones (of Vanilla Wow) were pretty boring and ugly, assumedly because they ran out of time to develop them further. They definitely put a lot of iteration into the earlier zones and it paid off.<p>Looking back, there just wasn&#x27;t anything that looked like WoW, but a lot of that included the perspective of running around in a comparatively polished world with a ton of comparatively polished game systems, with friends. The first long flight I took from two major cities across most of a continent (that I was familiar with from experience with the IP) was absolutely nuts to me.
taf2大约 3 年前
For me in 2004 it was all the content that we had played in Warcraft 2 and 3 - that was now open to explore and laugh about with friends… it was a huge leap forward in experience like nothing before it
Daub大约 3 年前
I did some research on the aesthetic properties of WOW. one conclisoon I came to…<p>An aesthetic image such as a painting tends to be either low saturation&#x2F;high lightness contrast or high saturation&#x2F;low lightness contrast. One reason this is true is that nature tends to follow the same rules.<p>WoW was one of the first games to feature regularly high saturation plus high lightness contrast. This combination is difficult to maintain but has a particular appeal.
vbezhenar大约 3 年前
WoW was a genius game. I played Classic recently and it was astonishing. I’m saying that as one who played all the expansions. It’s weird but I enjoy 2004 year game more than 2022. They lost it in Cataclsym and later.
iJohnDoe大约 3 年前
WoW was some of the best years of my life. Not in a depressing way. Truly a ton of fun and good memories. For a while I actually missed certain zones as if they were places I missed visiting in life. I haven’t played WoW since Wrath of the Lich King. It’s been 12-13 years and I still occasionally miss my characters.<p>WoW really hit certain things that appealed to many different people.
评论 #30450635 未加载
mensetmanusman大约 3 年前
It was the fishing tournaments for me.<p>How cool was it to wake up at 6 am before class started and fish by the giants fearing for your life!<p>All for +5 gloves…
评论 #30461489 未加载
k__大约 3 年前
I remember waiting years for the RPG they planned and then for WoW.<p>But I never played it, because of the subscription. I was very poor back then.<p>In the end I was happy that I didn&#x27;t. I saw many people fail their relationships and careers because of it.
评论 #30449608 未加载
jimbob45大约 3 年前
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.warcrafttavern.com&#x2F;community&#x2F;art-resources&#x2F;ultrawide-wallpapers-each-zone-and-city&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;www.warcrafttavern.com&#x2F;community&#x2F;art-resources&#x2F;ultra...</a><p>It’s easier to see when you can compare them all side-by-side. There’s only a few levers the team had available between the sky lighting, skybox, architecture, and foliage but they exaggerate the hell out of each so that you never get a same-y feel from any of the zones.
mkl95大约 3 年前
For me it&#x27;s the amazing soundtrack and the fact the world is telling you a story. This feeling is particularly strong in the early and midgame areas - some of the endgame areas were literally unfinished. Generally if you have had fun and success in some area, associative memory does wonders when you visit it.
Angostura大约 3 年前
No mention of the music. I always think the WoW soundtrack is beautiful - for me it <i>made</i> the story.
incanus77大约 3 年前
I do remember an anecdote from the time that when they were world-building, the sunsets looked so good, they made them last like an hour or two just for that extended twilight feeling. I remember it especially in that southern goblin port city.<p>WoW was the first (relatively) open world game that I played, and the first computer-based game that I got into heavily. I had been a console fan for years, but this running on my first Mac or two (‘04-‘06) made me want to upgrade RAM, tweak rendering settings, and all of that sort of stuff in order to get the fullest experience. It was just so immersive and fun and social. I’d also just play to wander the countryside, in a way I haven’t since other than Zelda BotW. Just a masterful achievement.
lelag大约 3 年前
Unrelated to the world design, but another factor in the success of WoW that I didn&#x27;t see mentioned is the rich add-on ecosystem that would allow you to deeply customize the UI.<p>I believe this programability was an important factor in the popularity in the tech circles. High level play almost required you to use various addons (boss mod, threat meter, dps meter, raid frames etc). Spending hours tweaking and coding to make sure my UI was setup to give me and my guild an edge was a big part of what made WoW fun for me.<p>Also, the fact that you could record and export detailed combat log data was another unique feature of the game that made it appealing to number crunching geeks.
peakaboo大约 3 年前
Great graphics, sound, animations, and maps.<p>First time I played it, I couldn&#x27;t stopped playing it. It was the first game I couldn&#x27;t put down because it was just so exciting to explore the world and upgrade your character.
carwyn大约 3 年前
The best part of early WoW for me was working through the PvE quests with a few friends and especially taking on the 5 person dungeon instances while leveling up to 60. The combination of needing to form a group of mixed tanking, healing, DPS and crowd control to take on the dungeons was amazing.<p>Are there any games out there since that capture this as well? Most I&#x27;ve seen since don&#x27;t seem to capture the need to work with others nearly as well, usually as all classes can do too much.
lnxg33k1大约 3 年前
&quot;I remember back in my days kids were not always at the phone, we were in the fields playing in tazavesh&quot;<p>I&#x27;m not sure I agree with the author anyway, I actually love MMORPG but the feeling of the map of WoW never got me, I think the best one is Ultima Online, in terms of happiness of exploration feeling, but among the modern ones, I think I also prefer the ESO scenarios
Clubber大约 3 年前
I think it was the stylization. Everything looks hand drawn, like the old AD&amp;D books of the 80s. Had they used modern graphics at the time, it would look dated; instead they used art that has more staying power.<p>Also, I think the fun of the game helped endear the zones. If the game was terrible, the game (and therefore the zones) would be much less memorable.
gjadi大约 3 年前
You could jump. :) I&#x27;m only half-serious.
poisonarena大约 3 年前
I always thought WoW looked so overly cartoonish, I always prefered Everquest, which seemed more classically fantastical. I also played Dark Age of Camelot and Anarchy Online, which I also felt had much more &#x27;soul&#x27;, and way better music
评论 #30482522 未加载
nitwit005大约 3 年前
I guess they like strategy game maps from third person then. The early areas all looked a lot like Warcraft 3 maps, and there were even orcs peons chopping trees just like you&#x27;d expect.<p>I always assumed part of the idea was to allow asset reuse.
baud147258大约 3 年前
As much as WoW&#x27;s environment and general art style were (and still mostly are) good, I dislike how that style has been copied in many other fantasy universes, leading to very homogeneous looks
AdamJMarsh大约 3 年前
I wanted to share my memories.<p>My earliest memories of the internet were back in 2005. I still remember the long bus ride and walk to the nearest shopping centre to purchase a phone line cable from Dick Smith Electronics in Northland as my modem didn&#x27;t have the right connector for our units old phone lines.<p>My mum saved every dollar from my early birthdays and when she explained this to 14 year old, I hounded her to purchase a computer for me.<p>Thankfully she did, and I remember going through the arduous process of getting the internet credentials, loading the modems driver, the ISP connector and needing to manually connect to the net, then pulling up my first website playboy.com haha<p>From here, I returned back from the library with a bundle of HTML and web development books (mostly the dummies series) and drafted my first tests into notepad, then opened the saved files into the early Mozilla versions to see it in all its glory.<p>From here, the first mention of World of Warcraft was amongst my high school friends, who were big Warcraft 3 players. We all made a pact to purchase the game and begin playing it together.<p>I played on the Gilneas realm with my school friends, and whilst they rolled Alliance, I somehow decided to go with horde and rolled a Hunter called Rover.<p>Over the months, I leveled up super slowly and fell in with a guild of RL friends who graciously allowed an Aussie teen to come on board. They were my first community I ever fell into and took me into instances, enchanted my armor and weapons, helped me tame rare and exotic pets.<p>My real end game raiding happened on the WoW forums where I was an infamous troll on there and interacted with a lot of server personalities. A lot of people knew me, and it was a love hate relationship most players had with me. I was targeted a ton in PVP and god knows I probably deserved a lot of the griefing thrown my way. Never trust young testosterone fueled teenagers with anonymity.<p>I famously skipped two weeks of school just to play it. Such was my love and addiction for it.<p>All in all, WoW was my first taste of interacting with adults in a serious and meaningful way. I learned to:<p>- Code in XML<p>- Use Windows in a much more advanced manner by trying to hack<p>- Understanding how to make strategic choices with gear<p>- Learning teamwork in instances and raids<p>- Got my first dollar online by farming gold and selling it<p>- Got my first job online freelancing as a video game reviewer just to pay for my WoW subscription (which led me to a lucrative career in Digital Marketing. 14 years later, I&#x27;m Head of Marketing at startup).<p>I owe so much to this video game. It had given a young child from a poor, single parent household a lot of hours of escapism, plus developed crucial tools and skills that I translated into a professional career which aided in my ability to rise out of my social predicament.<p>I&#x27;ll never forget the magic of opening up the discs, the smell of the packaging and waiting hours for it to download &amp; patch to play.<p>You can never talk about World of Warcraft to me without bringing up the bittersweet pangings of nostalgia for a time that will never be re-created.<p>I have forgotten the names and usernames of so many online friends who I spent an incredible amount of time with, but I will never forget how they made me feel and the overall memories of the game.
tlear大约 3 年前
Interesting I liked WoW but environments never really entranced me like Everquest did. Mostly because of scale. Nothing in WoW compared to running from Freeport to Queynos or the boat journey
评论 #30453677 未加载
jokoon大约 3 年前
I wish there was a game that would dare compete with WoW, but without lore, to make it cheaper. I guess it would be tricky, but the multiplayer aspect made this game so great.
radicaldreamer大约 3 年前
Final Fantasy XI and XIV has some incredible environments as well
_pmf_大约 3 年前
For me, The Witcher 3 and Red Dead Redemption had the most compelling environments. I spent probably half of my play time just walking-riding around.
PartiallyTyped大约 3 年前
The most compelling thing for me was visiting a Silvermoon that was filled to the brim with people, all of them unique individual people.
openfuture大约 3 年前
Let me share as well I guess.<p>I was ten years old when I got WoW, I had had a laptop for a year already because my dad (who I spent every other weekend with) was the type to scream at people an then give them gifts when he felt guilty... anyway, I hadn&#x27;t really known what to do with it until I learned about WoW. My friend had gotten it on the day it was released. However he didn&#x27;t have a laptop so he played on his moms work computer. Similarily some of my other friends had trouble connecting.<p>I did not have this issue since my mom worked two jobs and my dad talked on the phone all day. For two years I played world of warcraft 18 hours a day. I didn&#x27;t go to school or to sleep. I learned English, how to read a map and how to work in a team. I earned peoples respect for the first time in my life it seemed. They would listen to my advice because I wrote with correct grammar and punctuation about the actual patterns the enemies would repeat.. quickly people started to do as I said (something no one ever did in real life; listen to the tiny late-in-puberty kids ideas).<p>I think it&#x27;s safe to say that WoW was my whole life. At the end of vanilla (shortly before burning crusade) I had finally reached level 60 but it was also then that I woke up one day with my neck stuck in a bad position. My mom took my to the countryside and I cried in withdrawal for two weeks like a heroin addict. When I came back the game wasn&#x27;t interesting anymore, it had drifted a part.<p>During the glory days many things were different. First of all, the people didn&#x27;t really know how to play the game. For some it was too intimidating &#x2F; hard to actually grapple with the content and the storylines. Some of them were super immersive while others were difficult to figure out. Many people however were content to sit in the cities and ask for charity from the higher levelled players. This created high status for those players, however, if they were 12 levels higher than you then you could not see their exact level. This meant that you could be a level 25 dude in some shitty gear and still be considered a god by some level 10 dweeb. Being able to tell how strong someone was came down to recognizing the gear and gossiping with others OR being strong yourself.<p>Some of the coolest things about WoW were totally emergent, for example, IF was so laggy (because it had the only auction house) that walking through there was just a slideshow and I had memorized for how long to hold different keys to go where. Somehow it &#x2F;felt&#x2F; like a <i>really</i> crowded place. When the PVP battlegrounds came you had to go to some obscure place and wait a really long time to get to play. It was kind of absurd to see the culture adopt to various things like this. If I had been older at the time I am sure I would have seen a different side to it, however, thanks to me being so young and making friends in the game who had kids my age they often had to go pick up from school around the time when I was supposed to finish school. So instead of them playing with their kids or me learning something useless at school I was playing with them and learning about what they were interested in, as if I was one of their mates at the pub.<p>One time I got invited to a wedding (of real people, held in-game) and a high level character gave me money for alcohol (I had never even seen a gold coin at the time) and my character got drunk in game, I had not been prepared for the &quot;simulation&quot; and it felt extremely realistic, I&#x27;d go so far as to say it was the first time I drank and partied because it honestly gave a similar feeling as later in life when I experienced these things for real. They had a level 60 priest (I think the only on the server) do the ceremony and then we had fireworks when we walked down the street.. Also the onyxia quest was freaking amazing when it first happened and all the NPCs in stormwind started panicking and the queen lady turns into some monster. Idk, all this stuff was freaking amazing. It&#x27;s also why I learned about BF Skinner and FOSS. Basically, I owe WoW my whole outlook on life.
ricardobayes大约 3 年前
I hope we are not the last generation that can explore unspoiled nature within a short car drive from dense urban environments.
yoloyoloyoloa大约 3 年前
Im very sure Blizzard used witchcraft to make this game so attractive and addictive.
评论 #30449562 未加载
bombcar大约 3 年前
WoW was basically a Diablo MMO for me, and it had dwarves (and lots of content).
gdulli大约 3 年前
My first memory of WoW was leaving my starting city, traveling to the closest main city, and seeing the buildings were very conspicuously the same models reused. I found the environments to be the opposite of compelling. Lazy but well polished. Other MMO environments felt more hand-crafted.
skocznymroczny大约 3 年前
WoW was amazing. But I am mostly referring to vanilla WoW. I have no experience with later content and environments.<p>I think there are several factors that made WoW feel extremely cozy and fun to play.<p>First one is the game is very open. From the beginning, outside of monsters, if you stick to the roads you can go to high level zones if you want to. There&#x27;s nothing for you to do, but the game is not blocking you. Also, there are no loading screens between zones, so you can cross between zones wherever you want (if there aren&#x27;t mountains blocking you). In other games you have to go back to the road and go through a portal to load the next zone.<p>I like how in WoW the game didn&#x27;t tell you where to do your quest. It often told you &quot;go south&quot;, but that&#x27;s it. Sure, these days you have wikis that tell you exactly where to go, but I prefer that anyway over the big arrow telling you &quot;GO HERE NOW&quot;. I tried other MMOs, and I lose attention on the tutorial. I feel like the game is on rails and it&#x27;s just telling me which buttons to press and there&#x27;s little feel of exploration.<p>Another factor is that WoW created a world first and then filled it with content. There are many places in WoW that aren&#x27;t connected to a quest at all, they don&#x27;t have a gameplay purpose but they are there. A drawback of this is that some zones didn&#x27;t get finished in time. Famously Azshara, Silithus and Deadwind Pass were mostly devoid of content upon release. These days MMOs design progression and quests first and then create a world around it, which ends up a series of linear paths and quests that feel more forced than the ones in WoW (which do feel often forced).<p>WoW&#x27;s stylized look aged very well. I actually prefer it to modern MMORPGs. Modern MMOs have the same issue Warcraft 3 Reforged has against the original - the new models look pretty, but with higher detail comes more visual noise and they stand out less in a crowd. A group of players in a modern MMORPG looks like a grayish blob, in WoW it&#x27;s much easier to tell the players apart and what equipment they have. Also, simple stylized look allowed WoW to have great view distances and many entities on the screen. Places like Mulgore look amazing in 1440p@144Hz on a modern PC. You can see most of the zone, some is obscured by the fog, but you can see Thunder Bluff in the distance and it all looks amazing. WoW has some good fog and rain effects which are built to create ambiance.<p>The music in WoW is also good. It&#x27;s low key enough to not be distracting, but builds the atmosphere of the zone well. I am getting increasingly tired of epic orchestral music in RPGs these days, so music like in WoW is a relief for me.<p>I disagree with the opinion that WoW&#x27;s attractiveness was unique for being in the right place at the right time. It&#x27;s success perhaps was, but I don&#x27;t think any game managed to copy the look and feel of the zones, that felt just right for the most part.
ChuckMcM大约 3 年前
I share the author&#x27;s feeling that World of Warcraft (WoW) developed a strong sense of &quot;place&quot; in my psyche. I also think his methods quite unscientific :-) but share the curiosity of the question.<p>One of the things that gave WoW its appeal was that there was a lot going on in the environment. Animals scurry, there are houses with belongings in them, ruins, and various natural formations. Basically a lot of &quot;cool&quot; stuff to look at while you were looking for your target monster or next quest giver.<p>Of course WoW had different servers with the same environment but different play styles. The big separator was &quot;Play vs. Environment&quot; and &quot;Player vs. Player.&quot;<p>In the former, none of the other players could attack you unless you &quot;enabled&quot; player vs player, or &quot;flagged&quot; (entered a zone that automatically enabled it like a capitol city, or manually set it and then hit someone who had also set it.) The effect of that choice was that the environment was fairly consistent with the story line that was being enacted. (yes sometimes opposing factions killed of quest givers and that was annoying but the mount of &quot;grief&quot; they could cause had limits).<p>Contrast that to player vs. player servers where entire zones were &quot;owned&quot; by one faction or another and characters were always vulnerable to attack (although not from players in your own faction outside the nominal &#x27;dueling&#x27; capability). These servers could be much more difficult to play on, especially when the populations of the two factions were unbalanced in favor of one faction or the other.<p>Out of necessity, the quest giving non-player characters (NPCs) were typically either stationary or covered a very fixed path. As a result when repeating zones on different characters it could feel both &#x27;boring&#x27; and somehow &#x27;reassuring&#x27; when you went from one quest to the next.<p>The ease of setting up groups to quest together (co-operative play) and the social aspects of that gave the time spent a lot of &quot;memorable&quot; qualities. The relative challenge (especially in the first or &#x27;vanilla&#x27; version) of the quests gave a sense of accomplishment when multiplayer quests were completed.<p>There was a fixed &quot;script&quot; in terms of how the mobs would behave, but players could be quite creative when it came to how to overcome those scripts. That also made play more memorable.<p>Finally, and the author touches on this, the large number of choices and NPC factions give individual players many choices on how they gained experience to get to the maximum level. For people like me, the &quot;mini&quot; games, like crafting, the auction house market dynamics, cooking and fishing made the world seem so much more &quot;real&quot; than in other games.<p>Having things to do in game that were not &quot;required&quot; for advancing, but could change how the game felt (like eating something you cooked which would change your player stats in some beneficial way) contributed to this as well.<p>Finally, the openness, and sheer <i>size</i> of the environment really encouraged exploration. The difference between running&#x2F;walking, riding a mount (slow or fast), and flying (faster, and faster still) was really well done. While it could feel bleak at times Blizzard did an excellent job of providing story and nuance around the bleakness.<p>I&#x27;ve said in the past but Microsoft could probably pretty easily &quot;dominate&quot; the whole metaverse thing by pushing out the WoW vanilla engine as a community environment. One of my old guilds would have meetings in a building in Ironforge (a capital city), we could all come together and sit on benches and talk about the news of the day and make plans for things. Normalize the in game economy, create things that wear out to insure turnover etc and you could easily have an endless world of friends hanging out doing interesting things.
rabbitonrails大约 3 年前
what made them compelling is most of them were copied from everquest