Grinding to Valhalla

Interviewing the gamer with a thousand faces

Archive for the ‘41-50’ Category

Larísa

Posted by Randolph Carter on June 29, 2009

larisaMMO community connection:

The Pink Pigtail Inn

Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

Larísa

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

I run a WoW blog since february 2008: The Pink Pigtail Inn.

Please take a minute and describe what your blog is about.

It’s about World of Warcraft the way I see it. Quite a lot of personal rantings, sharing thoughts and opinions. Not so much of guides, news and useful information, actually non of it.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

I’m from Sweden, where I also live.

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 10-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

Turning 42 this year.

What do you do for a living?

I’m a trained journalist, but been working in PR/Information quite a few years now.

If you could reroll your career, what would you be?

Nah… I’m not the kind of person who walks around in life regretting things.

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

  • That I run a blog of my own.
  • How I WoW, what the gaming is like.
  • That I was a punk rocker when I was young.

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

I’m married since 23 years and got two teenage daughters. Noone else in my family is a gamer, which is a problem, especially since this passion of mine turned up so late in life.

Chapter 2 : Origins

What kind of games (if any) did you play as a child before you got into video gaming? Did you play with family, friends or was it more of a solo activity?

Not much of gaming at all. What is a bit related though is that I’ve been reading science fiction and fantasy since I was a child and that I’ve been active in the so called science fiction fandom, giving out stencilized fanzines, which could be seen as a sort of equivalence to blogging.

What other hobbies and/or activities did you have as a child (sports, music, etc)?

Rock music and reading. I’ve never been much of a social or sporty person. More or less a typical geek I guess.

Were you ever exposed to pen and paper role playing games? What was that experience like?

Not very much to be honest. But know quite a few role players. I could very well have ended up as one, I think I would have enjoyed it.

Did you read much as a child? If so, what did you like to read (books, comic books, etc?) Please list some favorite authors, titles, etc.

Yeah… I’ve lost count how many times I’ve read Tolkien for instance. I still re-read it every three years or so. Asimov, Simak, Bradbury and Clarke were heroes of my childhood.

Would you say that any of these games or books had an effect on your later appreciation of computer gaming and ultimately MMOs? Please explain.

Definitely. I come from the literature fantasy and sf movement and I feel very much at home in gaming now because of this. I find the same mentality among many players.

How were you fist introduced to video games? How old were you? What was the platform?

I had very little experience of video gaming before I started to play WoW in 2007.

I was introduced to it by my younger sister, who told me I should try it since she thought I’d love it. “I don’t have time for such a thing”, I told her. “There’s ALWAYS time for WoW”, she replied. So I bought the game in the Christmas 2006 and installed it a month later. That was a pain – it was basically my first computer game ever if you don’t count a few sessions of Lemmings and a little bit of Civilization. I was very proud when I finally entered the world.

I the beginning the idea was to have it as a project together with my teenage daughter. But she soon lost interest in it, while I got more and more caught. My sister who made me start in the first place stopped playing long ago.

Did you ever play coin-op games at the arcade? What was that experience like?

nope

What was the first video game you can remember playing that really made an impression on you? Please explain.

Civilization. Pretty early I had a gaming session when I completely lost track of time and that scared me a bit tbh. I didn’t touch it after that.

What gaming consoles have you owned in the past?

none

Feel free to share a story related to your gaming experience as a child.

In the beginning of the 1970s my father worked at a laboratory where they had a huge computer, big as a room, with a brain smaller than a counting machine today. I was just 5 or 6 years old, but he made a small program to keep me occupied when he was at work during a weekend. It contained some kind of lottery and a few other things. Everything was printed out on a paper. And I remember how thrilled I was. It was a magic gaming experience, in all its simplicity.

Chapter 3 : Online

Were you ever exposed to MUDs? If so, when was this and what was the experience like?

nope

What was your first MMO experience? Again, when was this (a year please) and what was this like?

World of warcraft in the beginning of 2007. But to tell me about the experience… that’s a bit overwhelming. I’ve been doing that on my blog for about 350 post by now… I was the noobiest of the noobish when I started, didn’t know how to move my character at all, felt slightly sea sick, didn’t know about things as repairs, questing, what the game was about. The learning curve ever since has been huge and is still going on.

If possible, list all the MMOs you’ve played extensively.

Easy question for me! I play World of Warcraft, where my main is a lvl 80 mage. I’ve also got a lvl 80 rogue and an upcoming little druid.

What is your current MMO of choice, or perhaps, what are your current MMOs of choice?

WoW

Which MMO have you spent the most time playing? How long would you say that has been?

WoW

Have you reached level cap in any MMO? If so, which ones?

WoW

Loki taps you on the shoulder one day to inform you that you have fallen victim to one of his elaborate pranks. The world you’ve been inhabiting of countless MMOs to choose from and play has merely been a dream. In reality only one MMO exists. After laughing at you for a bit he decides to take pity on you and allows you to choose which MMO will remain. Which one would you choose and why?

Oh, I guess I’d been happy if WoW could remain for some while longer… J That’s where I have my character and my guild and everything I’ve invested in the game. I actually doubt that I’d bother to start another one.

Are there any MMOs currently in development that you are particularly interested in? Please explain.

Being an old Star Trek fan, I can’t help being a bit curious about what it will be like..

Feel free to share an interesting or amusing anecdote related to your MMO gaming experience.

Read my blog!

Chapter 4: Preferences

At your peak, how much time per week would you say you spent gaming? How about now?

Don’t want to think too much about that question… Too much time I would say. Maybe something like 20 hours a week or a little bit more?

When during the week are your regular play times?

Two out of three nights of tue-thur-sund 7.30 pm-00. Two or three extra nights from 10 pm and a few hours onwards. Sometimes a couple of hours daytime during the weekends, very irregular, depending on what’s up in rl.

Generally speaking, are you more of a social creature in MMOs (grouping to quest, joining guilds, etc.) or something of a lone wolf?

I’m social. If it wasn’t for guild life, raiding etc, I would probably not be playing WoW anymore. The game in itself isn’t that interesting.

Have you made any lasting friendships through your MMO experience? Please explain.

Don’t know yet! I have some friends in game, but if that will last when we’ve all moved on? I don’t know.

Before logging into a game, do you already have a course of action planned out in your head, or do you just sort of do whatever you feel like once in game?

I think I mostly have a pretty clear idea about what to do. Much of my playing, the raiding, is planned. And apart from that I’ve always got some projects I’m working on, such as achievements, levelling an alt etc.

When playing MMOs do you tend to just play one at a time or do you take more of the smorgasbord approach?

Never played anything but WoW.

Do you tend to supplement your MMO gaming with other PC, console or tabletop games?

Nope.

Are you something of an altoholic?

Nope.

Do you find yourself multitasking while gaming (perhaps watching TV, talking on the phone, out of game instant messaging, playing another game, or even listening to a podcast)?

If I’m questing or grinding on my own I sometimes listen to a WoW related podcast. But apart from that I need to keep my focus on the game, I’m not skilled enough to do a lot of other things at the same time.

Do you find yourself having much MMO discussion off-line, perhaps with friends or family?

No, since they don’t like my WoW playing I avoid to bring it up much.

Have you ever felt that you game too much? If so, how did you cope with that?

Well, if you ask my family I play too much. I try to negociate, compromize and make real life work as well as possible side by side with my gaming. But it is a challenge.

Since you started playing MMOs, have you ever taken a break from the genre? If so, please explain.

No.

Chapter 5: Blogging

When did you first start blogging? Please take us up to present with all of your projects.

February 2008.

Why do you blog?

I answered that when I once did an interview with myself.  I’ll cut in a reply from there:

Blogging has given me back the fun of writing. I’ve been writing professionally so long that it had lost some of its lustre. But this is done out of pleasure, without any pressure. It’s free and it’s fun and I can combine writing with my favourite hobby – WoW. But I also appreciate the social side of blogging, as well as I like the social side of the game. I didn’t have any knowledge about the Blogosphere when I started. Now I’ve grown into it and it feels like an extra guild to me. I love how we comment on each others blogs. It’s a wonderful network.

And of course I love my guests. The comments you give me, the support, the link love… It gives me daily inspiration to keep going. Lately I’ve got a few letters from people who say that I’ve inspired them to start blogs of their own. I can’t understand in what way, perhaps it’s that I’m an example of that you can blog even if you’re quite an ordinary player and not an expert in any sense. Anyway, it’s amazing to hear and makes me very happy.

Another great bonus of blogging is that it improves my English. I’m aware of that my readers have to put up with a lot of errors, but I feel that I’m developing. When I began I sort of translated my thoughts from Swedish. Now I switch over to thinking in English while writing right from the beginning. That’s a huge step forward.

Do you have a schedule or some sort of routine you try and follow when blogging?

Not really. But I try to have at least 3-4 posts a week.

Is there some grind involved in blogging? If so, what is it and how do you cope with it?

No grinding. I’ve always said to myself and the readers that this is a day-to-day project. I’m not trying to make a living from it. I write for my pleasure and if I find one day that I’ve got nothing more to say I’ll stop.

By contrast, what do you find pleasurable about blogging?

I enjoy the freedom and I enjoy expressing myself. Doing it in English is a challenge, but it’s still fun. And I love the networking dimension of it.

How many people offline know you blog?

Hardly any at all. My sister knows about it, but that’s about it I think. My family doesn’t know.

What advice would you give someone who wanted to try their hand at blogging?

Be patient. Don’t’ expect that you’ll get any feedback or many readers for long. It will probably take months before someone will find you. Write from your own pleasure and don’t worry about subscribers and such. Comment a lot on other blogs and be sure to take good care about the ones that come to your blog, writing replies to their comments. In this way you’ll slowly build an audience.

What is something you know now that you wish you had known when you first started?

I wish I had started blogging in English, using one of the platforms right from the beginning. As it was now I started in Swedish using a bad, non-standard tool, and it took me a ton of work, actually grind, to translate the posts from the first months to English and move it to Blogger. I could have been without that.

Can you picture a future where you will hang up your keyboard and no longer blog?

Oh yes. When I stop playing I definitely will. Maybe before, it depends on for how long it remains fun.

At your funeral, what song(s) would you have played as your corpse is set alight and cast out to sea on a funeral barge?

Hm… not entirely sure about that, pass.

Posted in 2007, 41-50, Blogger, No thanks, Parent, Public relations, Sweden | 3 Comments »

Hobbit

Posted by Randolph Carter on March 29, 2009

MMO community connection:
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Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

I am an investigative reporter for The Lord of the Rings Online, and as such I can’t reveal my identity for fear of reprisals… The egging of my hobbit hole, being barred from some of The Shire’s more reputable drinking establishments… You get the idea…

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

I operate The Hobbit Herald.

Please take a minute and describe what your blog/podcast is about.

I provide news and views from The Lord of the Rings Online and champion LotRO inspired machinima. Among other things, I’m currently running a series of undercover reports from a roleplaying server, and award monthly accolades for the best LotRO machinima.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

I was born in a small yet serviceable home on the outskirts of Hobbiton, in The Shire.

Where do you live now?

Michel Delving, of course. I need to be near a decent auction house at all times… That’s where all the most salacious gossip can be overheard.

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 10-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

41-50

What do you do for a living?

When I’m not writing my investigative reports for The Hobbit Herald, I make a decent living pulling in fish from the Brandywine river.

If you could reroll your career, what would you be?

I’ve always fancied owning my own inn and entering The Shire’s various beer festivals each year. I’d win them all, naturally…

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

  • I was banned from The Prancing Pony for a year.
  • I’m a close and personal friend of Bilbo Baggins.
  • I’m often complimented on my beautiful feet.
  • I can play three different types of instrument.
  • My Shire Apple Pie can make grown elves weep.

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

I have two sisters and a brother, all of whom are currently in the field, protecting the free peoples of Middle-Earth. I’m very proud of them and refuse to believe the vicious rumours about my brother dancing for tips in The Forsaken Inn…

Posted in 41-50, Blogger, Michel Delving | Leave a Comment »

Sente

Posted by Randolph Carter on March 25, 2009

MMO community connection:
a

Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

For gaming/blog it is Sente, in most other cases it is Erik.

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

I play MMO games and I write a blog at A Ding World. I am also a member of The Older Gamers.

Please take a minute and describe what your blog/podcast is about.

In my blog I write about various things related to MMO games that I get an urge to write about. That may be experiences in games I play, thoughts on game news, game design etc. It has become an essential part of my gaming time – I simply have to make a post from time to time. And if people like to read it as well, that is even better! Expression through writing rather than talking has generally been my preference.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

I was born in the city of Södertälje in Sweden and grew up in a few places in Stockholm in Sweden. Since Södertälje is fairly close to Stockholm I was not a long move.

Where do you live now?

In Stockholm.

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 10-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

I am a 41-50.

What do you do for a living?

I work as an IT architect for an American software company in a consultant role. Which means that I help customers create good IT solutions using the tools that my employer sells. And help them troubleshooting and sorting out issues when things go wrong, or just do some development work for them from time to time (using those tools). My normal work area is the 5 Nordic countries, but from time to time I have to go to different countries and places as well.

If you could reroll your career, what would you be?

I am pretty happy with my archetype and talent build and the xp gained, so I do not think I would reroll. I would not mind rolling some alts though to try different talent builds and some different archetypes also though, still keeping my main character. I am an altoholic.

Many options involving software design and engineering would be just fine and going outside the IT sphere it would probably be some behind-the-scenes role in entertainment business (writer, director etc).

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

  • got a M.Sc. in Computer Science&Engineering from Royal Institute of Technology
  • am an amateur magician
  • studied Russian in high school
  • I cannot stand Coca-cola and almost never drink soft drinks
  • Sente is a Japanese term used in the board game Go, meaning a move which keeps the initiative by forcing the opponent to answer.

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

I am single now.

Chapter 2: Origins

What kind of games (if any) did you play as a child before you got into video gaming? Did you play with family, friends or was it more of a solo activity?

Both board games, card games and other were on the menu. Monopoly, Mastermind, Othello, Chess, Bondespelet (The Farmer game), Cluedo, Risk were a few of the board games. Card games included Canasta, Tölp, Bluffstopp, Svälta Räv (do not know the English names, sorry) for example. It was always with family and friends, never alone.

What other hobbies and/or activities did you have as a child (sports, music, etc)?

I did dabble a bit in a few sports, including karate, sabre fencing, table tennis – but did not really stick with any for any longer times. Same thing with music; tried a few instruments like trumpet,, trombone, horn and balalaika, but never stuck with any for long. In the winter time we usually did some cross-country skiing, since we generally had some good tracks through the woods not far from where we lived.

Around when I was 12 years old I started to perform magic tricks, entertaining (or annoying) family and friends :) That was something that got me hook, line and sinker – at least until those devious computers started to creep in too much ;)

Were you ever exposed to pen and paper role playing games? What was that experience like?

I did play a few of those from time to time during a period of maybe 7-8 years. I was introduced to the concept though a D&D session by an older friend, but never really continued to play D&D or AD&D. Instead a number of other games like RuneQuest, Traveller, Bushido, Call of Cthulhu and Paranoia were the ones a group of friends and I played to various degrees.

Did you read much as a child? If so, what did you like to read (books, comic books, etc?) Please list some favorite authors, titles, etc.

Yes, I read quite a bit – both books and comic books. For the comic books I read Bamse and Rasmus Nalle in the very early years, but also Tintin and Asterix – both of which I had a few books of before I could even read. My comic book experiences in the childhood years and into teens included mainly a number of Franco-Belgian comics; Tintin, Asterix, Lucky Luke, Spirou, Johan & Peewit, Steven Strong, The Smurfs, Blueberry and Valérian & Laureline. In particular Valérian & Laureline was my absolute favourite comic for a long time and I still have everything that was published in Sweden.

Outside that sphere I did read The Phantom and Modesty Blaise also.

In terms of books I read many detective/mystery books aimed at youths not long after I learned to read. A few years later I started to read some of the books my father had, who is interested in SciFi and Fantasy. That introduced me to JRR Tolkien and Isaac Asimov and and I got hooked on those genres. The local libraries had somewhat small sections of SciFi and Fantasy books and I read most of what I could find there. In fantasy I think besides Tolkien that Ursula le Guin, Bertil Mårtensson and C S Lewis might be the ones I remember most. For SciFi there were many authors, but early on I think Isaac Asimov, Brian Aldiss, Robert Silverberg, Robert Heinlein and Harry Harrison were among those most read.

In the late teens I started to read novels from British and American authors in English instead of the Swedish translation and has continued ever since – if possible I prefer to read it in the author’s native language.

Would you say that any of these games or books had an effect on your later appreciation of computer gaming and ultimately MMOs? Please explain.

I do not think it affected appreciation of computer games in general, but perhaps to some extent the choices of games I would play – I knew which genres I liked.

How were you fist introduced to video games? How old were you? What was the platform?

The very first experience was probably some arcade game like Asteroids or Space Invaders, or possibly Pong (an uncle had bought some game console I think). I do not remember which was first or when that was. I never caught the gaming bug at that point.

Did you ever play coin-op games at the arcade? What was that experience like?

That did happen and I think it was probably fairly fun. But it was never something that I spent a lot of time (or money) on.

What was the first video game you can remember playing that really made an impression on you? Please explain.

I got my first home computer when I was 16, a VIC-20. This was 6-7 months after I had started to learn programming (Basic). Initially I learned Basic just reading books, but did not have any computer to actually type in the programs I created. After I got access to a computer at school I started to actually write programs for real. The VIC-20 I bought because it was affordable and had a real keyboard and my main intent was to have something of my own to write programs on. Games were not on my mind initially.

I did pick up some games for it after a while though; Attack of the Mutant Camels was the very first one. The one though that caused me to want to start write games though were Scott Adams’ Adventureland. That game had me hooked on adventure games and I started to write some adventure games of my own (not particularly good though).

What gaming consoles have you owned in the past?

Playstation, PS2, XBox, PSP, PS3. Still own the last two.

Feel free to share a story related to your gaming experience as a child.

Perhaps not so much a child experiences, since this started when I was 17: There was one game that was one of the first ones I got for the Commodore64 that stuck with me and a numberof my friends for many years – M.U.L.E. I think we probably played that at least semi-regularly for 12-13 years. It is such a brilliant game and works very well for a few friends getting together, since you can play 4 persons.

Chapter 3: Online

Were you ever exposed to MUDs?

I had some brief exposure during my university time, but I never got caught up in it. I was using various bulletin-board systems that was my main “multi player” venue at that time, although that was just discussions – no gaming.

What was your first MMO experience?

My first MMO was Anarcy Online, in 2001. I had read an article in a local newspaper about MMOs which caught my interest. Looking at a store what MMOs were available I found Anarchy Online and Everquest. I choose Anarchy Online because it was newer and had just been released, plus that it had a SciFi theme. SciFi was more interesting to me than Fantasy, so it was an easy choice.

I found the whole experience quite fascinating. Anarchy Online had its issue when it was released, but I think I missed the worst part since I did not play directly from release, but a few weeks after. Since I had no previous notion of what an MMO might contain and I did not know what Funcom had promised, I was just eagerly absorbing everything I encountered. I created many different characters, trying out probably most combinations of profession and race possible.

If possible, list all the MMOs you’ve played extensively.

Not sure what extensively would be, but this list should cover MMOs I played at least 3 months.

  • Anarchy Online – Bureaucrat, level 53-54 I think
  • Earth & Beyond – Jenquai Explorer, level 150 (max level)
  • EVE Online – Minmatar character, I think
  • Star Wars Galaxies – human Master Ranger/Master Creature Handler
  • Final Fantasy XI – BeastMaster, level 45-46 I think
  • Everquest 2 – Ratonga Brigand, level 44-45 I think
  • World of Warcraft – Undead mage, level 60 (max at that time)
  • City of Heroes/Villains – Dominator, level 50 (max level). Actually 5 dominators at 50 and 1 at 49 at the time of writing.
  • Lord of the Rings Online – Rune Keeper, level 28-29 I think
  • Tabula Rasa – Engineer, level 47
  • Guild Wars – Necromancer, level 20
  • Age of Conan – Dark Templar, level 31

What is your current MMO of choice, or perhaps, what are your current MMOs of choice?

City of Heroes/Villains, Guild Wars and Age of Conan.

Which MMO have you spent the most time playing? How long would you say that has been?

City of Heroes/Villains, without a doubt. It will be 3 years calendar time in about 1 month.

Have you reached level cap in any MMO? If so, which ones?

Earth & Beyond, Star Wars Galaxies (no levels, but maxed out skills), World of Warcraft, City of Heroes/Villains and Guild Wars.

Loki taps you on the shoulder one day to inform you that you have fallen victim to one of his elaborate pranks. The world you’ve been inhabiting of countless MMOs to choose from and play has merely been a dream. In reality only one MMO exists. After laughing at you for a bit he decides to take pity on you and allows you to choose which MMO will remain. Which one would you choose and why?

I would not make any choice until I hear the developers of various MMOs answer that question – what would they do if their MMO would be the only one left?

Then I would also discuss that with friends about their choices. The current state of a game is not that interesting, since MMOs are constantly evolving anyway. What becomes interesting is how the developers would deal with such a situation.

Are there any MMOs currently in development that you are particularly interested in? Please explain.

Champions Online is definitely one. It is made by Cryptic who made City of Heroes/Villains and it seems to be their next attempt learning the lessons from the earlier game and probably keeping and expanding on what was good in the old game.

Guild Wars 2 is another one. I am very impressed by what ArenaNet did with Guild Wars, so I will happily try out any new game they are making.

Any SciFi, Apocalypse or Steampunk-themed MMO released will be something I will likely try out also.

Feel free to share an interesting or amusing anecdote related to your MMO gaming experience.

Well, I tend to write such things on my blog from time to time, so feel free to read there :)

Chapter 4: Preferences

At your peak, how much time per week would you say you spent gaming? How about now?

I have had the occasional peak where I have played perhaps 30 hours per week for a brief period (1-2 weeks). Normally it can vary quite a bit, probably something between 8 and 25 hours per week. Most play sessions tend to be no longer than 2 hours.

When during the week are your regular play times?

On weekdays it would be in the evening, exact times varies a bit.

Generally speaking, are you more of a social creature in MMOs (grouping to quest, joining guilds, etc.) or something of a lone wolf?

That depends really. If I already know some people that are playing or going to play I will probably join a guild more or less right away. If I do not know any people I will usually not join a guild directly, but may join later.

I like teaming with others because teaming with others can be fun. The actual tasks do not matter so much. Thus whether I play in a team or solo depends on the convenience for it provided by the game and team invites (if I am not inviting myself).

Games that may require a lot of time to set up a team for various reasons (long travel to a certain point, certain combination of archetypes/classes/whatever, certain number of players etc) I will probably team less in. Exception will be with people I know and if it is some planned activity.

Team invites also affect whether I will team or not. I generally turn down blind invites. Depending on the game I may also consider how they phrase the invite; if they can form words or even sentences. Games with long set-up, running and get-out times for teams will have more such considerations.

Have you made any lasting friendships through your MMO experience? Please explain.

Yes, this mainly started when I joined The Older Gamers. The major reason I joined there was to be able to have som continuity across games and not just in games; before that I typically lost contact with most people I played with in a game when either I or them moved on. Also many people I had contact with in the early days were in entirely different time zones, which made in-game contact more difficult. Today with more communication options that a lot of people use, it is easier.

Before logging into a game, do you already have a course of action planned out in your head, or do you just sort of do whatever you feel like once in game?

Yes :)

It really varies; some games lend themselves to be more task oriented than others. But often I just jump in and figure out something to do depending on who is online at that time or start thinking what I may be in the mood for once I have logged in.

When playing MMOs do you tend to just play one at a time or do you take more of the smorgasbord approach?

I pretty much always play multiple MMOs nowadays and I do like smörgåsbord. There may be one MMO that gets more play time than the others at any given time, but I enjoy the variation that multiple MMOs may provide.

Do you tend to supplement your MMO gaming with other PC, console or tabletop games?

The number of PC games I have played this millenia probably can be counted on my fingers, so that would be a no answer.

Console games I play a bit more often, but not often on my own. This may become the choice if there are a few people in the same location who wants to play something. The latter would also fit for tabletop games, depending on the people.

Are you something of an altoholic?

Yes, absolutely. Although when I play more MMOs at the same time I do not create so many alts in each game.

Do you find yourself multitasking while gaming (perhaps watching TV, talking on the phone, out of game instant messaging, playing another game, or even listening to a podcast)?

No, I might be listening to a podcast sometimes on my internet radio at the same time, but in most cases I do not do anything else. If there are long times where I do not need to focus on the game play while playing, I probably just switch to do something else entirely instead.

Do you find yourself having much MMO discussion off-line, perhaps with friends or family?

No, not really.

Have you ever felt that you game too much? If so, how did you cope with that?

Yes, that has happened. I have set up some entirely different task and goal and focused on that. Important real life activities always comes first also.

Since you started playing MMOs, have you ever taken a break from the genre? If so, please explain.

My first break was after almost a year (playing in the weekends) with Anarchy Online. I did not play anything for close to 3 months. After that I have had some other breaks also, but nowadays I do not really get to the point where would need to take any longer break. It tends to get adjusted before that with less play time and perhaps rotate between a few MMOs. It rarely gets to the point where I am sick and tired of the genre as a whole.

Chapter 5: Blogging

When did you first start blogging?

Roughly 15 years ago when travelling abroad on vacation I started to write emails to friends and family back home, sort of a travel diary. A few years ago those emails turned into a blog instead, basically being updated a few times each vacation. I have stopped writing this blog nowadays, but will perhaps reactivate it at some point. My MMO blog, A Ding World, started almost 2 years ago.

Why do you blog?

Because I like writing about various topics, it is quite handy to have it archived in one place also. And if people read it and have comments, it is just great.

Do you have a schedule or some sort of routine you try and follow when blogging?

Not a strict schedule, but it will happen during the same time where I would otherwise play games. So typically it is fairly late in the evenings and instead of playing MMOs.

Sometimes I will start writing directly after a play session, which typically happens when I write a bit about events during that play session.

Is there some grind involved in blogging? If so, what is it and how do you cope with it?

No grind, if I do not have anything to write I simply do not write. I write when I have an urge to write, however the result may not always be the best. Sometimes I may be sensible enough to delete it before it gets posted, sometimes I post it anyway.

By contrast, what do you find pleasurable about blogging?

Getting good/fun/interesting/thoughtful comments from readers.

The act of writing when the topic gets twisted and turned as part of the writing process and end up something quite different from my original thought.

How many people offline know you blog?

Pretty much everyone I know is online in some sense, so I would say no-one offline knows about it. Very few among family, friends and collegues play online games and hence also very few of them know about my MMO blog.

What advice would you give someone who wanted to try their hand at blogging or podcasting?

Read and comment on other blogs that you are interested in. Do not try to force writing posts if you do not feel you have anything to write. It should be fun, so write when you feel you have something to post and pick something that it fun for you to write about.

What is something you know now that you wish you had known when you first started?

I have learned a number of things, but I do not really wish that I knew them when I started, even though some mistakes could have been avoided. The learning process itself is also a good thing.

Can you picture a future where you will hang up your keyboard and no longer blog?

Of course. But if I stop blogging it just will mean that I will channel my desire to write about stuff to something else.

At your funeral, what song(s) would you have played as your corpse is set alight and cast out to sea on a funeral barge?

Oh boy, difficult one. A few that I might consider would be:

  • Oxygène, part 4 – Jean-Michelle Jarre
  • Om – Niklas Strömstedt
  • Look on the bright side of life – Monty Python
  • Wish I had an angel – Nightwish
  • Also Sprach Zarathustra, opus 30 – Strauss
  • Final Countdown – Europe

Posted in 2001, 41-50, Blogger, Film director, IT Professional, Sweden | Leave a Comment »

Wilhelm2451

Posted by Randolph Carter on March 20, 2009

MMO community connection:

The Ancient Gaming Noob

Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

Wilhelm2451

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

The Ancient Gaming Noob blog as well as being a regular guest on the Shut Up, We’re Talking and Witty Ranter podcasts.

Please take a minute and describe what your blog/podcast is about.

Pretty much focused on the whole MMORPG thing. My blog has some commentary, but is mostly a journal of my MMO experiences and interactions. “I don’t know what I am doing” is a recurring theme on the site.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

Silicon Valley on both counts. Well, it wasn’t called Silicon Valley when I was born. People still referred to it as The Valley of Heart’s Delight back then.

Where do you live now?

Silicon Valley. Everybody else in the world seems to be moving here, why should I leave?

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 10-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

41-50 – it sneaks up on you.

What do you do for a living?

I run a software testing group for a fortune 500 company. It is enterprise software, so you cannot buy it on the shelf at Fry’s (though I started off in commercial shrink-wrapped software), but chances are very high that you have used some piece of software on which I have worked.

If you could reroll your career, what would you be?

Um, if I choose wrong, how much does another respec cost?

I don’t know if I would re-roll, but during the start of the first dotcom bubble I was working at a start up making a hardware device with some really brilliant people. If we had turned that power to evil, we could have really bilked some VCs out of some serious capital. Instead I have a T-shirt and some hardware that doesn’t work with any current OS.

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

  • I spent some time in the Soviet Studies program in college… about the time the Soviet Union went tits up. Bad timing in some ways. Things were changing so fast that it became a current events seminar in many ways.
  • I met my wife through an online dating service, but it turned out we went to high school together and had friends in common.
  • I used to work on Macintosh products, so I get more than a bit uptight about bad or inconsistant UI design.
  • My parents were both, essentially, accountants. When I realized that, it explained much.
  • I spent a lot of my childhood in a library. My grandmother was a librarian and I spent a lot of time with her and got really used to having access to a lot of books. This explains all the book shelves in my office at home.

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

My beautiful wife is amazingly tolerant of my gaming hobby… or she has grown resigned to it at least. It was a point of contention early in our relationship. More recently she mentioned that, as hobbies go, it was at least inexpensive and did not take up, say, the whole garage. However, the “at least I am home” card has been over-played and no longer has much value.

My daughter is very interested in games and virtual worlds. She likes to see what I am playing and wants to try out everything.

My mother plays World of Warcraft with my daughter and I.

Chapter 2: Origins

What kind of games (if any) did you play as a child before you got into video gaming? Did you play with family, friends or was it more of a solo activity?

We played games quite a bit at my grandparents place. They had a farm out in the California Central Valley where TV reception was spotty and there was a general “early to bed/early to rise” rhythm of life. In the late afternoon before dinner, there was a point where pre-dinner drinks were served up (I got to have a soda) and we would sit around and play a game. Dominoes was the popular choice for a long time. Gin or other card games were played at times. At home too, we played games. Monopoly was always popular. When I was older and Trivial Pursuit came along that became a favorite. I suspect it was because, as a family, we have a remarkable knack for trivia. My mother and I were an unbeatable team, with me covering science and history and her on entertainment and sports. With friends I ended up playing war games, usual the Avalon Hill bookshelf variety. While we played all varieties, I grew to like the game Tobruk the most. It was a much more tactical game than some others, like PanzerBlitz or Third Reich. The more strategic, and thus the more abstract, a game got, the less I seemed to enjoy it. At least to a certain level. A game like Risk, warfare abstracted to the extreme, I did enjoy quite a bit.

What other hobbies and/or activities did you have as a child (sports, music, etc)?

I played some sports. I was in little league baseball and ran track through junior high. For hobbies I built models, usually tanks or airplanes to go along with my toy soldiers. I had quite a collection of Airfix 1/72 scale figures.

Were you ever exposed to pen and paper role playing games? What was that experience like?

Not until high school. My family moved before my freshman year and I ended up at a different high school from all of the friends I grew up with. Then, alone and susceptible to the influences of strangers, I fell in with a crowd of role playing gamers. They started by introducing me to the light stuff like Tunnels and Trolls, but I quickly moved on to the hard stuff and had a copy of the AD&D Players Handbook before my parents could intervene. Soon I was reading Tolkien and affecting a bad British accent. Still, I was able to keep my head to a certain extent and never, for example became a Ren Faire regular or an SCA member.

Did you read much as a child? If so, what did you like to read (books, comic books, etc?) Please list some favorite authors, titles, etc.

Honestly, I read very little of my own volition until about 8th grade. I used to mostly flip through books and look at the pictures. MAD Magazine’s “Spy vs. Spy” comic was my level of reading commitment. Then at some point in junior high school I decided I wanted to know more about the pictures than the rather scanty captions in a book I was looking at, so I started reading the thing. This is, of course, all heresy, since my grandmother was a librarian and I spent hours and hours at the library. I was just browsing the pictures most of the time. In high school I read a lot of Science Fiction. Larry Niven and Harry Harrison figured prominently. Oddly, I tended to steer clear of the “classics” from authors like Asimov and Heinlein. “Bil the Galactic Hero” was much more amusing when I re-read it years later after having soaked up more of a foundation in the genre. (I only recommend the original book, not any of the follow-ons.)

Would you say that any of these games or books had an effect on your later appreciation of computer gaming and ultimately MMOs? Please explain.

Certainly. Larry Niven was all about space. There is a direct line somewhere from me reading “Ringworld” to me playing EVE Online. And certainly RPGs and Tolkien mixed in unhealthy doses pre-disposed me towards fantasy. The one thing I disliked about table top games like D&D was all the accounting that needed to be done. While computer games and then MMOs restricted much player initiative, the hid ALL of the accounting that I so loathed. That made me a natural for the genre. I just want to attack, not calculate my THAC0.

How were you fist introduced to video games? How old were you? What was the platform?

I played Pong at The Old Spaghetti Factory in downtown San Jose when I was just a kid. It was amazing.

Did you ever play coin-op games at the arcade? What was that experience like?

Of course, from the point I found Pong to the day I got a personal computer, I spent a lot of time in arcades. It could be a lot of fun, but it was also expensive. For 25 cents back in those days you could get a comic book. This probably explains why I did not do much comic book collecting.

What was the first video game you can remember playing that really made an impression on you? Please explain.

I played Star Trek on an HP system. A friend’s dad brought us into the office one weekend and let us play it while he got some work done. My friend and I loved it and went about creating our own board game version of it since we did not have ready access to any sort of computer.

What gaming consoles have you owned in the past?

I have owned three, an Atari 26000 that I got for Christmas in 1977, a Sega Genesis that I got as a bonus of sorts for a project at work in 1992, and we got a Wii in 2007. That is one console every 15 years like clockwork. I’m not due again until 2022.

Feel free to share a story related to your gaming experience as a child.

A story about gaming? That’s what I have a blog for! Okay. At one point a friend and I were very excited about computer/console games. This was in 1978 or so, and I had an Atari 2600 and he had a Fairchild Channel F. We were both enamored with the technology but somewhat let down by the lack of depth there was to most games. Because of this, we tended to build metagames where you might have to play any given shallow two-minute-thirty-second “shoot the blocky thing with smallers blocks” as part of a single turn of the bigger game. There was a lot of role playing and pretend around it. We were nerds once, and young.

Chapter 3: Online

Were you ever exposed to MUDs?

Yes, I have played a number of MUDs over the years. I think the first that would be recognized as a MUD was Gemstone. I was in the beta for it on GEnie back in 1988 or so. It was a lot of fun. Having played enough text games ala Zork, I was ready for the multi-player environment that MUDs brought to the table. From 1993 through to 2003 or so I played Sojourn/Toril MUD quite regularly. It is a Forgotten Realms based MUD, so had the advantage of being in my favorite D&D setting. I still play online games with people I met in that game.

What was your first MMO experience?

Does Island of Kesmai count? If so, 1986.

If, however, we’re going to stick with what we refer to today as MMOs, then EverQuest. I picked up the box on the afternoon of March 16th, 1999. I still have the receipt.

I had considered Ultima Online when it came out, having played some of the Ultima series. Unfortunately I had also gotten a bit tired of that series so never quite got around to the MMO iteration of the game.

EverQuest though… on day one it was buggy and slow and I got dropped a lot and it have high system requirements (a 3D card?!?) and I immediately felt at home. Part of the reason I felt at home was that many of the people who created EverQuest played Sojour/Toril MUD and sought to bring the fun of that MUD environment into a 3D world. There is an oft told tale that the city of Waterdeep in Sojourn/Toril MUD was the basis for the layout of Freeport in EverQuest.

If possible, list all the MMOs you’ve played extensively. Please start from the beginning and work your way up to the present. For extra bonus fun list your main (class & level) in each game as well.

Limiting myself to games I played for at least a year or more of calendar time, I get the following list:

  • EverQuest (1999)
  • EverQuest II (2004)
  • World of Warcraft (2005)
  • EVE Online (2006)
  • Lord of the Rings Online (2007)

There are other MMOs I have tried, such as:

  • City of Heroes
  • Guild Wars
  • Planetside
  • Runes of Magic
  • Star Wars Galaxies
  • The Matrix Online
  • Tabula Rasa
  • Vanguard
  • Warhammer Online

But I did not spend long enough playing them, for various reasons, to meet my own criteria for having actually really played the game to any great depth. I just played them long enough for me to decide they were not the game for me.

I tried to list my main characters, but that can be difficult. I have a serious pack of alts stored away, so it can be hard to decide who is the real me.

What is your current MMO of choice, or perhaps, what are your current MMOs of choice?

World of Warcraft is probably the one I play the most of late. I have a regular group that plays on Saturday nights. I also play with my daughter and mother on the weekends. And then I have a solo career. EVE Online is the other MMO to which I am currently subscribed, which I think defines it as an “MMO of choice.” It offers a different experience in that I spend at least as much time trying figure out how to do things as I spend actually doing them.

Which MMO have you spent the most time playing? How long would you say that has been?

In terms of total hours played, probably EverQuest II. I couldn’t tell you an exact number, but there were many hours of concentrated daily play for me in post-cataclysm Norrath.

Have you reached level cap in any MMO? If so, which ones?

Because of the alt situation, I have not reached the level cap very often. In fact, I think World of Warcraft may be the only MMO where I have stopped levelling because I hit the then current level cap of 70 during the Burning Crusade expansion.

Loki taps you on the shoulder one day to inform you that you have fallen victim to one of his elaborate pranks. The world you’ve been inhabiting of countless MMOs to choose from and play has merely been a dream. In reality only one MMO exists. After laughing at you for a bit he decides to take pity on you and allows you to choose which MMO will remain. Which one would you choose and why?

Loki is always pulling this sort of crap too. Hrmm, that is tough. I would probably pick World of Warcraft, but then try to convince Loki that EVE is really just a multi-player sandbox and really doesn’t count. But if you had asked me a year ago I might have said EverQuest II. And next year I might say something else. But for the moment I would choose WoW because it is the game where I spend the most time playing with other people.

Are there any MMOs currently in development that you are particularly interested in? Please explain.

I have an odd personality quirk where I try to avoid something I know I will be interested in when released so as to not dilute the experience in advance or get my expectations set to high. So I avoid trailers for movies I know I’ll want to see or reviews for books I know I am going to pick up.

With that in mind, I am diligently ignoring Star Trek Online. Star Trek is deep in my psyche. The first game I ever played on a computer was Star Trek. I spent much of my youth playing Star Fleet Battles. And I have consistently been disappointed by Star Trek games on the computer. The best so far for me has been the Star Fleet Command, which was based off of Star Fleet battles. So I live in hope that maybe Star Trek Online can deliver.

Feel free to share an interesting or amusing anecdote related to your MMO gaming experience.

There is a quest in WoW called “Mudrock Soup and Bugs” that sends you out to collect some “Forked Mudrock Tongues.” I mis-read this as “Forked Murloc Tongues,” an error compounded by the fact that there are Murlocs running around not too far from the turtles that actually drop the tongues. I spent ages slaughtering Murlocs to no avail and eventually just abandoned the quest. Later, I picked it up with an alt, groaned in memory of my futile effort, the decided to read the quest closely as I was obviously killing the wrong Murlocs. And, of course, I figured out what it really said. The odd part is that almost anybody I mention this story to says that they too thought it said “Murlocs.” Not all that amusing or interesting once I wrote it down I suppose. Way to close on a down note Wilhelm!

Posted in 1999, 41-50, Blogger, California, IT Professional, No thanks, Parent, Podcaster | 1 Comment »

Spinks

Posted by Randolph Carter on March 20, 2009

MMO community connection:

Spinksville

Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

Spinks is the name I use for blogging. It’s actually the name I thought up for my WoW character back when the game launched, and before that it was a name I used for a character in a short story about an East End guttersnipe who worked for a vampire crimelord. I like it because it sounds a bit comic and also not pretentious.

I hope that reflects my writing voice!

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

I’m a blogger at the moment. My online hangout is spinksville.wordpress.com. Before that, I wrote bookofgrudges.wordpress.com with my sister (I mean, sister as in blood relation, not sister as in nun) — and *plug* she’s still updating BoG but also writes a blog at nerfthecat.wordpress.com.

The Book of Grudges blog was a riot, and also successful way beyond anything we had imagined. And after that, I was hooked.

Before that, I was involved with MUSHes. As well as playing, I was part of the staffing team on a few games and wrote most of the game bible (ie. the large background document to which staff referred for thematic questions) for Sanguinis Nobilis, which was a MUSH based around White Wolf’s Vampire game and set in modern day London. It was awesome and so were my amazing fellow staffers, and we had the best players ever. If I enjoy MMOs, it’s because sometimes they remind me of SN.

I have also written for RPG companies, in particular:

Steve Jackson Games:

For In Nomine:

Hope and Prophecy

Rogues to Riches

and a scenario: The Rat’s Revenge

For GURPS:

GURPS Screampunk

I also wrote the first draft of GURPS Dragons

Guardians of Order:

Dreaming Cities: Tri-Stat Urban Fantasy Genre

Please take a minute and describe what your blog/podcast is about.

My blog is about MMOs and elements of game design. I’m fascinated by interactive fiction and in particular by emergent player behaviour and in-game cultures. And if that sounds high-faluting, it means I’m often writing about guilds.

I also write about whichever game I am playing most at the moment, and I try to do this in a way that will help people who don’t play better understand player behaviour in that game. At the moment my main MMO character is a protection warrior in WoW, so I’m writing at least one post a week about tanking and raiding and WoW sorts of things.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

I was born in London. I’ve lived in several parts of the UK (including Hull and Leeds), went to University in Newcastle, came back to London as a Post-Graduate and am now living about 50 miles west of London.

Where do you live now?

Reading. It’s fine, as long as you don’t mind swans.

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 10-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

41-50.

What do you do for a living?

At the moment, I’m between careers and doing lots of voluntary work (I volunteer as an adviser at the CAB *plug*). Before that, I acquired a PhD in digital signal processing and spent 20 years or so working as a design engineer, mostly designing mobile phones. The work also drifted to low level software engineering and I have worked on operating systems, my particular speciality was filing systems.

I’m one of the few coders I know who has actually worked on production assembler (ie. programming in assembler for mass market devices). These days even low level coders usually work in a higher level language.

If you could reroll your career, what would you be?

Opera singer, but I’d need to reroll my larynx too!

I am actually working on rerolling my career at the moment, most likely towards social work.

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

  • I chew my nails.
  • I have been hang gliding and it was great.
  • I once ate roast sparrow (on a stick) in Japan.
  • I once played the role of Aouda Fogg (the Indian woman who married Phileas Fogg in Around the World in 80 Days) in a live RP and had to learn how to put on a sari. Fortunately I found the info on a web page.
  • I’m a big REM fan and met my husband via an argument in my sister’s kitchen about which was their best album.

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

I have two awesome sisters. I am also happily married to the most patient man in the universe.

Chapter 2: Origins

What kind of games (if any) did you play as a child before you got into video gaming? Did you play with family, friends or was it more of a solo activity?

We’ve always been playing games as a family. I remember playing card games like Whist and Rummy with my great aunts, I remember playing Monopoly with my cousins, I remember playing Scrabble with my friends and their parents. And I remember playing lots of board games and card games and lets’ pretend games with my sisters.

What other hobbies and/or activities did you have as a child (sports, music, etc)?

Piano, fencing, swimming, reading (lots of reading!)

Were you ever exposed to pen and paper role playing games? What was that experience like?

lol yes, I’ve played, run and written a lot of pen and paper RPGs. I don’t remember the first but it may have been boxed set D&D which I played (kind of) with my sisters. We had an AD&D game going with cousins also.

Pen and Paper RPGs were big at the time.

Did you read much as a child? If so, what did you like to read (books, comic books, etc?) Please list some favorite authors, titles, etc.

Yes. Read lots of everything. I remember loving lots of authors and titles, anything I pick out would be arbitrary.

Would you say that any of these games or books had an effect on your later appreciation of computer gaming and ultimately MMOs? Please explain.

Probably. I enjoyed escapist fiction and games, but I just got into games in general at an early age. And stayed there. A lot of my friends are gamers, we often bust out a card game or board game when we get together. I liked computers a lot anyway, the difference between programming and computer games didn’t come clear to me until later – I just thought they were both fun things to do with computers.

How were you fist introduced to video games? How old were you? What was the platform?

Don’t remember precisely. I know one of my friends had a ZX Spectrum. And a friend of my dad’s had a build-your-own computer (a Sharp I think) and he’d got some really really basic games for it which we adored. First computer we owned was a VIC-20, and I remember spending a fair amount of time typing games into it from computer magazines.

Did you ever play coin-op games at the arcade? What was that experience like?

Not much.

What was the first video game you can remember playing that really made an impression on you? Please explain.

I was blown away by Elite when I first saw a friend play it on her BBC B. It was also the first game I ever actually finished, some years later, when it came out on the Atari ST.
I loved the novella that came with it.
I loved flying my spaceship around, struggling to learn how to dock and being able to trade up to better ships and weapons when I’d earned enough money trading.
I loved that space was just so /big/. It was one of the most immersive games I’d ever played.
I also love that so many gamers and designers of my rough age pick it as one of their favourite ever games — it reassures me that we all have great taste :)

I also don’t remember which was the first roguelike game I played but like so many people, I was hooked immediately.

What gaming consoles have you owned in the past?

gameboy, gameboy advance, DS, PS, PS2. I think that’s it.

Feel free to share a story related to your gaming experience as a child.

OK, the epic tale of WHO KILLED BOB?!

This is not really from my childhood but from when I’d just moved into a flat with my sisters after leaving university. I had a dinky Apple computer which I’d gotten cheap from uni (I was a postgrad) and one of the few games I had that ran on it was Angband. Which is a roguelike.

So my sisters both liked the game too and we took turns playing it. And then … the terrible night when one of them logged on and … her character was gone *dire music*. We never did find out who killed Bob (if you’re reading this, I swear it wasn’t me!!), but I remember lying in bed and listening to her recite Bob’s entire gear list mournfully from her bedroom across the corrridor.

Posted in 41-50, Blogger, England, Game designer, Opera singer, Volunteer | Leave a Comment »

Troy

Posted by Randolph Carter on March 14, 2009

MMO community connection:

Travels With Troy

Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

Troy Christensen, Shalimar (Everquest II), Tuffenuff (Everquest), Troynan (Age of Conan), Dagsabor (Warhammer), Meganaut (City of Heroes)

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

Podcasting:

Voyages of Vanguard

EQual Perspectives

Travels with Troy

Blogging:

Emerald Tablet

Role-Playing Game Systems (Pen and Paper):

Phantasm Adventures

Advanced Phantasm Adventures

Mutliverse

Bloodbath

Bloodchant

Game Modules & Adventures:

Devil’s Domain (Villains & Vigilantes: FGU)

Most Wanted III (V&V: FGU)

Dawn of the Devil (V&V: FGU)

Ice Age (GURPS: Steve Jackson Games)

Castle Guide (AD&D: TSR [Wizards of the Coast])

Arms & Equipment (AD&D: TSR)

Heroes & Rogues (RoleMaster: ICE)

Thieve’s Challenge (AD&D: TSR)

Novel:

Amish Johnson and the Pegasus Chamber (unpublished)

Please take a minute and describe what your blog/podcast is about.

Several years ago, while working in a constrained computer job, I started tapping into Itunes to listen to podcasts of the gaming nature. I started off with the more well known titles such as PC Gamer, but quickly wandered into a whole range of smaller podcasts. This is where I found Virginworlds and Brent.

At the time, I was very excited about a new MMO called Vanguard and I was shocked that no one was really talking about it. So in May of 2007 I created my first podcast called “The Voyages of Vanguard”. I ran with that show for more than a year before moving onto “Equal Perspectives” which tried to cover both the Everquest and Everquest II community.

With most podcasts, soon it became more of a chore than a fun hobby and the show waned. To try and revive my enthusiasm I created “Travels with Troy” a show that was less restrictive and allowed me to talk about all sorts of gaming. Alas, I have fallen victim again to the “Fade” and need to find inspiration again to continue my podcasting.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

I was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The street that my parents lived on was Jupiter and I tell everyone that was my home. It sounds a bit more exotic to have grown up on Jupiter than in Grand Rapids.

I have lived extensibly in the Grand Rapids area my whole life, venturing a bit north to Sparta and to another hamlet called Comstock Park. I did make a foray to Japan for a year and another journey to Washington DC for another year, but each time I was dragged back to my roots.

Where do you live now?

I live now, not more than a stone throw from the farm I grew up in Comstock Park. The rolling cattle pastures now gone and replaced with house after house. The ponds and copses of trees are gone, replaced with manicured lawns and concrete pavement.

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 10-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

41-50 (Can this be true? This must be a mistake I feel like I should be 10-20)

What do you do for a living?

I am an IT Administrator for Spartan Graphics

If you could reroll your career, what would you be?

I would be a coral diver in Fiji. The thought of being surrounded by the aquamarine waves of the Pacific, with the lush golden sun overhead, seems serene. A small eighteen foot boat cresting the waves until I throw my cement filled pale overboard as an anchor, and diving into the warm, sweet waters filled with tropical fish of every kind – with no other worries than finding a few pieces of coral to buy me my dinner. No technology, no people . . . just a white sandy beach, a palm thatched roof over my head, and the lapping waves of the great pacific keeping time.

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

  • I am really not that gifted with working with technology
  • I am an extreme introvert
  • I used to drink too much, just shy of being an alcoholic
  • I like Big Band music, such as Benny Goodman and Glenn Miller
  • I dated my boss’s wife before they were married

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

I have a brother, who is a successful programmer with People Soft.  I have a sister, who is a head nurse in UP (that’s Michiganese for the Upper Peninsula).  My parents are retired, my mom was a nurse and my dad was a truck driver.  I am the youngest of the clan, though married I have no children.

Chapter 2: Origins

What kind of games (if any) did you play as a child before you got into video gaming? Did you play with family, friends or was it more of a solo activity?

When I was growing up we didn’t have any video games. I remember when I was around 14 saving up to buy a console that played pong. My next door neighbor had a small hand held unit that also had tank — I was so jealous of him.

What other hobbies and/or activities did you have as a child (sports, music, etc)?

I really always enjoyed games growing up, and my brother would play Risk and the old Avalon Hill strategy games. My brother is eight years older than me and he soon grew tired of trouncing his little brother. I soon after moved on to RPGs that were just coming out. I made my own Dungeons & Dragons game at 12. To this day I remember with pristine clarity going to the hobby store and buying the AD&D Dungeon Master’s guide.

I was never very active in sports — obtaining the nickname “pockets” for sitting out in left field with my hands in my pockets playing softball.

My parents were too poor for me to ever own a musical instrument and I never really got into it.

Were you ever exposed to pen and paper role playing games? What was that experience like?

I could talk for hours on RPGs. I have so many fond memories playing Villains & Vigilantes, Dungeons & Dragons, RoleMaster, Swords & Glory, Star Wars, Champions, Phantasm Adventures, and Arduin & Grimoire. My best times were the saturdays in the late 90s, before marriage and the world bogged me down, having ten to twelve guys over in my little house and playing games from Noon to Midnight. Simply fun.

Did you read much as a child? If so, what did you like to read (books, comic books, etc?) Please list some favorite authors, titles, etc.

I read allot of stuff, probably not as much as others. My favorite authors had to be Robert Heinlein, Terry Brooks, and Alan Dean Foster.

Would you say that any of these games or books had an effect on your later appreciation of computer gaming and ultimately MMOs? Please explain.

Terry Brooks basically shaped my idea of what fantasy is with his Sword of Shannarra series. I also think that Alan Dean Foster shaped my ideas on what a future rpg should be like and the fantastic stories that could be developed for such a system. Robert Heinlein proved that you could have great SciFi without getting bogged down into too much technology.

How were you fist introduced to video games? How old were you? What was the platform?

My first video games were at the arcades — I never owned a console until my early twenties and never found much use for them. I believe the first game system I had was a Gensis — Road Rash stick outs in my mind as a game I played allot of.

Did you ever play coin-op games at the arcade? What was that experience like?

In Michigan you could get 10 cents for bottle returns. I used to drive around on my little scooter finding bottles and trading them in for quarters. The quarters then made their way into a slew of cool arcade games including Asteroids, War Wyzzards, and a ton of other games with their names lost in old memories.

What was the first video game you can remember playing that really made an impression on you? Please explain.

Tank — I think that was the name of it. You have your tank in a three dimensional polygonal world and with left and right joysticks you plowed around in the world hunting other ray traced tanks. That was the impetus for three-D worlds.

What gaming consoles have you owned in the past?

Only owned one, the Genisis-64, if I remember right. Never did much of that myself. Road Rash was a favorite of my cousin and I; we would take turns playing the game, jeering and cheering the other on.

Posted in 41-50, Aspiring writer, Blogger, Coral diver, Game designer, IT Professional, Michigan, Podcaster | Leave a Comment »

Tipa

Posted by Randolph Carter on March 6, 2009

MMO community connection:

West Karana

Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

Brenda Holloway, AKA Tipa after a favorite EverQuest character that I have taken from game to game ever since.

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

I blog at West Karana. This has almost nothing to do with the EverQuest zone, The Plains of Western Karana, but through diligence and bribery, typing “West Karana” into Google now puts my blog above any results for the EQ zone. I sometimes wonder how SOE feels about that.

Please take a minute and describe what your blog/podcast is about.

I write about MMOs, especially the ones I am playing or would like to play, at the West Karana blog. I also do only tangentially MMO-related silliness like my board game-inspired Adventures in Monopoly weekly webcomic, something forced upon me by a pewter bear that came with EQ2’s “The Shadow Odyssey” expansion.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

I was born in Renton, Washington, when my dad worked at Boeing. Both parents felt so lonely for their native New England that they moved back to New England, to Massachusetts, where I grew up. We moved once more, to New Hampshire, and that’s where I lived until I got married and moved to California.

Where do you live now?

Back in New England. Like a bad penny, I returned, and now live in Connecticut.

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 10-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

41-50.

What do you do for a living?

I am a web applications developer at a Fortune 50 insurance company.

If you could reroll your career, what would you be?

A writer. Actually, if I were a writer for work, I doubt I’d enjoy it as much. I dunno. I guess I’d like to have a career as the daughter of a wealthy oil executive.

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

I doubt most people know anything at all about me, so that’s easy.

  • I wear glasses.
  • I like Diet Coke.
  • I love falling asleep to old movies.
  • I have owned three different Volkswagen Beetles.
  • The last time I dressed up for a SF convention, I went as a frozen telepath (from Babylon 5).

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

I have a beautiful daughter, handsome son-in-law, and frankly, the cutest grandson in the entire world living in the Riverside area in California. My son has decided to embark on a personal spirit quest in Virginia that may last several years. I have a furry constant companion named Isis, who closely monitors how long I spend on the computer to be sure it doesn’t overlap mandatory cat time.

Chapter 2: Origins

What kind of games (if any) did you play as a child before you got into video gaming? Did you play with family, friends or was it more of a solo activity?

Board and card games were really popular when I was a kid. Monopoly was a favorite, if we had time. At school, sometimes we played Scrabble in home room. Which seems odd, looking back on it. My sister and I played Chutes & Ladders and Candyland to death. When we visited our grandmother, we would play Sorry, Clue and Canasta with our cousins. Mom taught us kids to play Whist, Uno and Mille Bornes.

What other hobbies and/or activities did you have as a child (sports, music, etc)?

I read a lot. I also played trumpet and later color guard for the local Fife & Drum corp.

Were you ever exposed to pen and paper role playing games? What was that experience like?

Yes, I was in the gaming club at the University of New Hampshire. We played AD&D first edition, Traveler, Kingmaker, Diplomacy, and way too much Risk. That’s where I learned to play Hearts, too.

Did you read much as a child? If so, what did you like to read (books, comic books, etc?) Please list some favorite authors, titles, etc.

My mom was a huge reader, so mostly I read whatever books she read. And SHE got her books from a hippie named Norm. While babysitting for Norm and his wife, Gloria, I discovered Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells, which changed my musical life forever.

I graduated from Nancy Drew and the Bobbsey Twins to Madeleine L’Engle’s “A Wrinkle in Time” books, which were — WEIRD. I read the Heinlein juveniles, because they were in the school library (Have Spacesuit — Will Travel, Tunnel in the Sky). During sixth grade science class, the girl sitting next to me was reading Kurt Vonnegut’s “Sirens of Titan”, and after that, nothing was the same. Turns out my father was also a Vonnegut fan. He used to work at GE, briefly, just out of college, and so had Vonnegut (though not at the same time or place). Dad was a HUGE fan of Vonnegut’s barely disguised satire of work at GE, “Player Piano”. And for some reason, he liked “Breakfast of Champions”, too.

My mom was more into the usual science fiction, and it was through her that I first read any Philip K. Dick. I’m not sure which book of his was the first I read, but “The Three Stigmata of Palmer Eldritch” scarred me for life after I read it.

Mom gave me a boxed set of The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings when I was 12 — I still have that, that’s one of the only two things she gave me that I still have. I wore out my copy of Richard Bach’s “Jonathan Livingston Seagull”, and remember saving up my money to buy James Blish’s “Cities in Flight”.

Would you say that any of these games or books had an effect on your later appreciation of computer gaming and ultimately MMOs? Please explain.

No, arcade games and later, computer games were a wholly new experience.

Well, when I was a kid, there really was nobody known as a “gamer” in the way we think of people today — a large subculture of people interested in gaming in general. That sort of generalizing wasn’t really common. So I really can’t answer how computer games or RPGs affected me in the years before either existed, in any public sense.

1980 was when I first realized that there was such a thing as a gamer, and that you could identify as one. Wargaming, the domain of middle-aged men, was being overtaken by the next generation. Even though you specifically said not to talk about computer RPGs or MMORPGs, it was computer games — via “Hunt the Wumpus” and “Hamurabi” and a thousand other games from the dawn of personal computing in the 70s — and then with Colossal Cave Adventure, Dungeon (AKA Zork), DECWars/Megawars, Walter Bright’s Empire and Rogue, all of which I played first in college — that made me a gamer.

How were you fist introduced to video games? How old were you? What was the platform?

The bowling alley in Concord (NH) had a few pinball machines. And one day, they had piinball machines plus Spacewar and that snake game and Bricks. This must have been 1976 or so (so I’d be about 15). After that, video games were everywhere — Sub Hunt in the local pizza place, Space Invaders and Boot Hill and some racing game in the Sheraton’s lobby. When I went to college in 1979, the golden age of arcade gaming was just beginning — Galaxian, that 3D tank game, Asteroids…

Did you ever play coin-op games at the arcade? What was that experience like?

Yes. In fact, on our honeymoon, we went to an arcade in Laconia, on Lake Winnepesauke. Among other things :) New Hampshire is still famous for its Funspot arcade, home of the Classic Videogame and Pinball Tournament.

What was the first video game you can remember playing that really made an impression on you? Please explain.

Space Invaders. I’d won some certificate for a meal at a local restaurant at school. My grandfather brought me, and we were seated at a table with a built in Space Invaders. I had so much fun :)

What gaming consoles have you owned in the past?

Atari 2600, Colecovision, Super Nintendo, Playstation (1,2 & 3), Dreamcast, Sega Saturn, Nintendo 64, Xbox 360.

Feel free to share a story related to your gaming experience as a child.

Not sure I have any. As a kid, games were just how you spent rainy Saturdays.

Chapter 3: Online

Were you ever exposed to MUDs?

Lambda MOO had made a big splash in the social media. Their website says this was around 1993, and that sounds about right. It was very, very crowded, and I had no idea how to not just be another gawker looking at all the freaks… which wasn’t all that wrong, and I didn’t stay long.

What was your first MMO experience?

1998, Nexus: Kingdom of the Wind. I was looking for a free version of a game like Ultima Online, which I couldn’t afford at the time. It was great fun, I played it for several months. Even though it was just a 2D game, it was incredibly deep and had a great backstory. It’s still running, too.

If possible, list all the MMOs you’ve played extensively.

  • Nexus: Kingdom of the Wind – I don’t remember my level. I think I was a mage class.
  • EverQuest – 67 Druid, 70 Rogue, 75 Cleric were my mains, in order.
  • Dark Age of Camelot - 34 Bard was my highest
  • Final Fantasy XI Online – 46 White Mage/Summoner I believe
  • World of Warcraft – 60 Priest
  • EverQuest 2 – 80 Troubadour, 80 Inquisitor
  • Wizard 101 – 50 Theurgist (Life Wizard)
  • City of Heroes – 21 Controller
  • Lord of the Rings Online – 36 Captain

What is your current MMO of choice, or perhaps, what are your current MMOs of choice?

I don’t really have a main game. I wander between EQ2, W101, LotRO, DOMO, etc.

Which MMO have you spent the most time playing? How long would you say that has been?

By far, I’ve spent more time in EverQuest than any other MMO. I was unemployed :/ I’ve spent over 200 days playing EQ on all my characters combined. We used to compare /played times so I know pretty much exactly how much I played.

Have you reached level cap in any MMO? If so, which ones?

Yes, in EverQuest, EQ2, WoW (at the time), and Wizard 101.

Loki taps you on the shoulder one day to inform you that you have fallen victim to one of his elaborate pranks. The world you’ve been inhabiting of countless MMOs to choose from and play has merely been a dream. In reality only one MMO exists. After laughing at you for a bit he decides to take pity on you and allows you to choose which MMO will remain. Which one would you choose and why?

EverQuest, the way it was when it started. But without so much crowding. I’ve never met so many good friends as I did in EverQuest. Never felt that same sense of wonder, mystery and danger. It was an open enough game that players could invent entirely new things, like marketplaces and raiding, which would set the standard in newer games from then on (and even be adopted by the devs themselves).

Are there any MMOs currently in development that you are particularly interested in? Please explain.

Star Trek Online looks good, It looks like an Exploration-based MMO. We haven’t had any of those since EQ went Achiever, but before then, all MMOs were Exploration or Social based. Asheron’s Call, Ultima Online…

Feel free to share an interesting or amusing anecdote related to your MMO gaming experience.

Too many. I couldn’t even start.

Chapter 4: Preferences

At your peak, how much time per week would you say you spent gaming? How about now?

At peak, when I was unemployed, I bet at least 30 hours a week. Now, it’s about 15 in a variety of games.

When during the week are your regular play times?

From about 7 or 8pm until 11 or so.

Generally speaking, are you more of a social creature in MMOs (grouping to quest, joining guilds, etc.) or something of a lone wolf?

I like to do things with friends, or alone. I don’t really group with people I don’t know too much.

Have you made any lasting friendships through your MMO experience? Please explain.

I have made MANY. Some people I met back in 1999, I still talk to today, even though we’ve long since changed games.

Before logging into a game, do you already have a course of action planned out in your head, or do you just sort of do whatever you feel like once in game?

I see what friends are doing (yay, XFire), and if that’s something I want to get in on, I chat with them out of game and then log in. Otherwise, I don’t often sit down to play. More often I just read people’s blogs for awhile, and then if I feel an urge for a specific game, I play it.

When playing MMOs do you tend to just play one at a time or do you take more of the smorgasbord approach?

I used to be a single MMO player, back when I was serious. Now I am completely casual and go where the whim takes me.

Do you tend to supplement your MMO gaming with other PC, console or tabletop games?

I have some DS games and some PS3 games, but I feel I am missing a chance to be with friends if I am playing by myself, so I inevitably find myself on the computer, firing up an MMO or just chatting via XFire or Twitter while I play Flash games.

Are you something of an altoholic?

Not any more. Since i went casual, I stopped really wanting to see newbie content again and again.

Do you find yourself multitasking while gaming (perhaps watching TV, talking on the phone, out of game instant messaging, playing another game, or even listening to a podcast)?

Always. I am either watching a movie, or a TV show on Hulu, or listening to music, or playing a game on my DS at the same time. Wizard 101 fights are so slow that I just play my cards and then tab to a browser until it’s my turn again.

Do you find yourself having much MMO discussion off-line, perhaps with friends or family?

Not really. I don’t know anyone offline who really cares about MMOs, or even really knows what they are.

Have you ever felt that you game too much? If so, how did you cope with that?

I gamed too much when I was unemployed. But now my kids are grown, I have a good job, if I want to play MMOs or do anything else I want to do, why not?

Since you started playing MMOs, have you ever taken a break from the genre? If so, please explain.

No. Since I started playing Nexus: Kingdom of the Wind in 1998, I have been a dedicated MMO gamer. This was the kind of game I’d been looking for up til then.

Chapter 5: Blogging

When did you first start blogging?

I started blogging October 2005, but I had been making blog-like posts on my EQ guild’s message boards for some time prior to that.

Why do you blog?

I can’t play every MMO, and I can’t play even the ones I have as much as I’d like. Blogging lets me experience games in a new way. I’ve always liked the metagaming that surrounds games — of which blogging is a part — as much as the games themselves.

Do you have a schedule or some sort of routine you try and follow when blogging?

I usually like to read my news feeds in the morning, take a show, then blog while my hair is getting dry enough to be manageable, before work.

Is there some grind involved in blogging? If so, what is it and how do you cope with it?

I mix up my blogging just like I mix up the games I play. If I feel like writing an opinion piece, I do it. If I feel like just making a silly comic instead, I do it. If I feel like writing up something that happened to me in game, I do it. Story to tell? I do it. Commercial blogs perhaps have to set a tone and be consistent, but blogging is for fun.

By contrast, what do you find pleasurable about blogging?

I like finding like people through blogging. Blogging is like being at a party where everyone is a friend, the ultimate social gathering. It doesn’t take high end graphics or the latest computer or a fast internet connection to do it, either. It’s just a bunch of friendly people, sharing stories, and everyone has their turn.

How many people offline know you blog?

My family (though mostly they aren’t MMO gamers and thus don’t read it), a couple people at work. Weird question, though. Who is offline these days?

What advice would you give someone who wanted to try their hand at blogging?

Do it on a schedule, do it every day if you can, and do it because it’s something you like to do. People will find you eventually — but you can help things along by commenting on other people’s blogs, or sending in voice mail to podcasts in the hopes it gets played.

What is something you know now that you wish you had known when you first started?

Don’t be a whiner.

Can you picture a future where you will hang up your keyboard and no longer blog?

Only if I find another creative outlet I like more.

At your funeral, what song(s) would you have played as your corpse is set alight and cast out to sea on a funeral barge?

Requiem by Altan Urag.

My ashes swept up on the wind, and borne by the wind, fly over the frozen plains and embrace the earth.

Posted in 1998, 41-50, Aspiring writer, Author, Blogger, Connecticut, IT Professional, Parent | 2 Comments »

Openedge1

Posted by Randolph Carter on March 5, 2009

Whitechapel-FixMMO community connection:

Dichotomy of the Gamers Blogosphere

Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

Openedge1. I also have gone by Amatheon. My saying is “It is as simple and complex as that”.

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

I started blogging about a year ago after being interested in what others had to say. In particular I have enjoyed West Karana, Tobolds Blogspot, and many more. My main connection and how I came to be know is how I am slightly rigid in my belief that if something stinks, I am going to tell people. It started with LOTRO and blossomed to other mistakes like Warhammer Online. Due to the WAR blogging and particularly my commenting on blogs who were in “love” with the game with all of my criticisms, I got reamed by several known bloggers.  Heartless_, Hudson, Keen and Graev and Bildo all took offense to my comments and told me to stop what I was doing. I took this as feeling like I was living within a communist society (only say what others want you to say and be happy). I converted my blog into a Russian speaking blog, and only posted stories from other bloggers about WAR and how excellent it was and referred to these bloggers as “Comrades” in the MMO Communist Bloc. I then was noted on the podcast “Channel Massive” with their own little reward system about my shenanigans. There was a lot of controversy over this. Some understood the reasons I did it, others did not.  Basically, it led to my latest blog after I blew up my previous blog and re birthed as The Dichotomy of the Gamers Blogosphere.

Please take a minute and describe what your blog/podcast is about.

Basically I do cover subjects of what games I am playing. I do discuss the industry to an extent, as I feel the MMO genre has grown stale, and needs a reboot. I discuss 360 games, TV and Movies (in particular Sci-Fi and Horror), and of course some personal stuff. Just like a good bloggie should.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

I was born in Kentucky, but lived most of my life in Michigan. I moved to North Carolina about 9 years ago, and married my current gamer wife (I was slightly odd in that I had never been married, and waited until I was 40 years old and found me a “Southern Belle”.)

Where do you live now?

Western North Carolina, in the area called the “Smoky Mountains”.

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 10-20,
21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

41-50

What do you do for a living?

From Research, Web Development, Computer Systems. I own my own Computer business and do servers and systems. I also work for a Non-profit religious group with Web research, Drupal development under contract.

If you could reroll your career, what would you be?

A musician (again) I played drums for 3 years, but let others ruin my development in that arena, especially as we had one hit that was regional. But, dope heads ruined that course of my life…ah well.

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

  • I went to art school for 1 year before having to leave due to credit concerns (this was when they started to deny loans due to bad credit for schooling)
  • I dated a stripper for a year, who went Psycho, and thought she was another person (she kept swapping her personalities of at home and the stripper, and got messed up. Her family ended up putting her in an institution…)
  • I still write my own music, and I am working on some quick “30 second” commercial style pieces
  • When I go to an amusement park and do the “How old are you”, they always miss it between 15-20 years,.,..(whole family on my fathers side looks young)
  • I hate some technologies, like Blackberries, Twitter, Facebook and Myspace.

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

I have a wife who is 11 years younger than me, the “Southern Belle” who is a great Fantasy gamer herself. I also have a son who is 10 this year! He is also a gamer. I am also working on raising him by being aware of what the real world is like. We discuss today’s issues with him, and other taboo subjects that some parents balk at. He is quite intelligent, and is working on making Halo videos to upload to Youtube!

Chapter 2: Origins

What kind of games (if any) did you play as a child before you got into video gaming? Did you play with family, friends or was it more of a solo activity?

I liked playing as the superhero or war games with my friends from my neighborhood. At a young age though I started to get moved around a bit and started to play more on my own until High School. (More on that later)

What other hobbies and/or activities did you have as a child (sports, music,etc)?

I played only a little sports, like football. I was musically inclined and at around 13 I hit my stride and started out playing drums, this then became a career for a bit from 18 until I was 26.

Were you ever exposed to pen and paper role playing games? What was that experience like?

Indeed. A friend of mine from school (who ended up having the same last name as me…weird) introduced me with the original rules, dungeon crawling, the whole 9 yards. I played all through high school (and sometimes with a little help from my friend mary jane…yea, did that too), and played until my mid 30’s. Experienced many games from D&D to the I.C.E rulesets, Shadowrun and Vampire the masquerade (and variants).

Did you read much as a child? If so, what did you like to read (books, comic books, etc?) Please list some favorite authors, titles, etc.

I liked comics when I was still very young (about 8 or 9)..until high school, and one class had me read the Hobbit. Then it was all over, and I read full blown. A novel a day type of reading. I started with Tolkien, went to Roger Zelazny, Stephen R Donaldson to name a few.

Would you say that any of these games or books had an effect on your later appreciation of computer gaming and ultimately MMOs? Please explain.

110%. I think starting with video games when I was very young helped. From Pong and Nintendo, to an Amiga computer and my first PC being a Windows 95 machine…I was definitely there, and knew it would be an easy progression to MMO’s.

How were you fist introduced to video games? How old were you? What was the platform?

As stated above…Pong, Nintendo…and even before that with arcade titles, bar games (like Pac man, etc…). I would say my first video game was when I was 13. Owned a Commodore 64 when I hit 18.

Did you ever play coin-op games at the arcade? What was that experience like?

Again,stated above. My Mom worked for a short while at a local bar as a Waitress/ Bar-tender, and they had games like Pac man, Dig Dug, Tempest. I really loved pinball machines as well.

What was the first video game you can remember playing that really made an impression on you? Please explain.

The first game was Pools of Radiance, part of the TSR gold series. The group dungeon adventures, with the real time combat was a joy. I even had some friends that we would invite Mary Jane again (hehe) and sit around and each take a character and decide their options, just like a D&D game. I already started to see options for for computers and Pen and Paper RPG’s at that time.

What gaming consoles have you owned in the past?

Pong, Nintendo, Sega Genesis, Playstation 2, Xbox, Gamecube, 360.

Feel free to share a story related to your gaming experience as a child.

I think the most important gaming experience when I was very young were the games of D&D. We went all out heading to far spots in our town in the woods or in the park to camp out, and bringing our books and doing the game. Long sessions, overnight fun, we could play for hours on end. I still have the most fond memories of these times.

Chapter 3: Online

Were you ever exposed to MUDs?

My first ever MuD was Nethack/Rogue. And this was quite brief. I had an Amiga with a 2600 baud modem. I also remember the extremely high phone bills after. I had my phone shut off after that period…lol.

What was your first MMO experience?

I usually call my access to NWN Persistent World my first taste, I played for about an hour or two, and thought I would never do this kind of stuff again. But, then I followed up when Guild Wars was released. This I consider my “true” entry due to the complete package. A huge guild, vent server, the whole nine yards.

If possible, list all the MMOs you’ve played extensively.

WoW. I am to old to have that much of a memory. I can tell you the extensive MMO’s. Guild Wars for around 2 years worth of play, WoW almost a year, LOTRO for almost a year (including Closed Beta 1 and 2) EQ2 was 8 months. Age of Conan is going on 6 months, Lineage 2 was 2 months, and the rest were always under 2 months. I can say I always was a spellcaster or healer…GW was on and off, but WoW was my first true all heal game. Age of Conan is the first game where I have totally loved melee classes, and play them extensively.

What is your current MMO of choice, or perhaps, what are your current MMOs of choice?

There is no doubt that Age of Conan has really shone for me, and made me realize that I may not like the High Fantasy games like WoW, LOTRO, etc. Guild Wars still calls me back once in a while, and Guild Wars 2 would have me totally!

Which MMO have you spent the most time playing? How long would you say that has been?

Guild Wars for sure. The fact it is free really makes it the easiest to return to.

Have you reached level cap in any MMO? If so, which ones?

NEVER. I may be unique in that. Age of Conan is looking to be the game for this to happen though.

Loki taps you on the shoulder one day to inform you that you have fallen victim to one of his elaborate pranks. The world you’ve been inhabiting of countless MMOs to choose from and play has merely been a dream. In reality only one MMO exists. After laughing at you for a bit he decides to take pity on you and allows you to choose which MMO will remain. Which one would you choose and why?

Guild Wars. If I was FORCED to choose. I mean, c’mon…FREE! oh, and way fun.

Are there any MMOs currently in development that you are particularly interested in? Please explain.

One hint….it has a G a W and a 2. ‘Nuff said.

Feel free to share an interesting or amusing anecdote related to your MMO gaming experience.

When my wife and I started in Guild Wars, we had one player who was slightly naive about the situation of the MMO’s. He could not comprehend that one player was maybe NOT a woman. When the woman kept making “guy like” remarks, and this friend kept giving “her” gold, we finally told him. When he confronted this “woman”, she quit the guild, and went on silence mode so we could not whisper… This was our first run in with this special “contingent”.

Chapter 4: Preferences

At your peak, how much time per week would you say you spent gaming? How about now?

Peak times could be 4-6 hours a night. I remember my wife and myself skipping work to play through some quests, and then on the weekends, we could play for 10-12 hours straight with foodie breaks between while we chatted over vent. Now though I cannot play more than 4 hours without needing a break. I have a new routine of 1-2 hours in the mornings and 3-4 hours on the weekends. Good casual play.

When during the week are your regular play times?

Oops…stated above. I have a M-F from 6-8am play schedule, and a little longer on Weekends. I have not played in the evenings for a long time now. Maybe I need to get on an Aussie server?

Generally speaking, are you more of a social creature in MMOs (grouping to quest, joining guilds, etc.) or something of a lone wolf?

Lately a lone wolf due to my weird schedule. Weekends I try to find groups though…but, I am not chatty. I use to be back in my heyday, as it seemed we played more for the friendship than the game itself. But, this friendships created quite a few issues in those relationships, like arguments, control issues, etc.

Have you made any lasting friendships through your MMO experience? Please explain.

My wife an myself have two people we still speak with. One gentleman joined us for every game. But, then we reached a divide when it came to LOTRO. This game broke up our gaming friendship for a year and we all hated LOTRO with a passion. We have started speaking with him again, who btw is playing LOTRO again…but we will not. Thus we just chat.

Before logging into a game, do you already have a course of action planned out in your head, or do you just sort of do whatever you feel like once in game?

Recently I have had a course of action. I have NEVER finished an MMO (even though you really can never finish an MMO)..i.e: I have never max leveled and raided or done any endgame. I am currently on the war path to do this. Otherwise, the only other game that we ever had a plan with was Guild Wars, which is really an entertaining game to focus on their missions and progression. The game really condones that planned gamestyle, and works. MMO’s just do not feel like they have a plan though…so I never had one myself.

When playing MMOs do you tend to just play one at a time or do you take more of the smorgasbord approach?

I have tried to play multiple games, and it never works. One always wins out, and I focus on that one.

Do you tend to supplement your MMO gaming with other PC, console or tabletop games?

Yes. We have an Xbox 360, and I have played several other single player games on my PC (The Witcher was a true winner)

Are you something of an altoholic?

Naw. I like to try some classes out to see if I like them, but I just cannot focus on more than 2 or 3 at most. Usually only 2 win.

Do you find yourself multitasking while gaming (perhaps watching TV, talking on the phone, out of game instant messaging, playing another game, or even listening to a podcast)?

Big time. I always like to break after some quests, and will scan some sites, do some Twittering or Facebook action. I even paused a game once or twice to watch a show on Hulu.

Do you find yourself having much MMO discussion off-line, perhaps with friends or family?

Just on my blog. I use to chat with the one friend 3-4 times a week on games over cell or vent. I will troll forums sometimes, or visit other blogs to talk about games..but not really too much lately…too busy.

Have you ever felt that you game too much? If so, how did you cope with that?

Not anymore. I really have a good schedule. I always worried about it in the past, but life is real good, thus no reason to involve myself too deeply in games when I have other things to do.

Since you started playing MMOs, have you ever taken a break from the genre? If so, please explain.

I had a major break after the launch of Age of Conan, No other game interested me. The game really broke down the parameters I associated with the MMO genre, and when I tried to play older games, they failed to me. I was able to play Guild Wars for a couple of months with my wife, and we had a blast. But, we finally left that genre for over 6 months. AoC’s failure to perform well was disappointing… But, when the game was taken over by Craig Morrison, I got an itch, and went back, and was quite pleased, and learned how to enjoy this MMO again. But, I am still leery of other slow style global cooldown MMO’s, and may never play those again… stay tuned!!

Chapter 5: Blogging

When did you first start blogging?

Originally I started just lurking on forums and other bloggers blogs, commenting away. I noted about a little over a year ago that my comments became quite stream of consciousness, and of course took up too much space in their comment sections.  I then took it to the blogs.

When I first started, it was a little about my guilds in the games I enjoyed, then it became commentary on the MMO industry. But, at one point, the commentary became a war of words with other select bloggers. A disagreement became a battle of the blogs.  My commentary ruffled some feathers, and I got a little ticked at the comments taking place. Felt like a forum troll war.

I took my blog, and converted it into a Russian Bloc, complete with paraphernalia, imagery and Russian alphabet being combined with Communist like news stories. All other bloggers who “kissed the butts” of the games and developers they enjoyed were taken to task as “Comrades” of the Blog Regime…hiding how bad some games were behind a Russian like rhetoric. Especially after the Age of Conan, WAR releases, there became quite a continuity in the blogosphere.  Dousing their game with love even though the game was not that great. It was the shiny new smell that still had them enthralled. From Keen and Graevs praise of WAR, Heartless_ meanderings on how it will be THE game and Bildo’s personal attacks all because of WAR love, this really got me fed up with this group of bloggers. I wrote articles about their blog posts, having fun, and making them look like Communists.  But, after this brief stint, I destroyed my blog…i.e: Russia finally nuked itself!

I recreated what my blog is today, and I am more focused on the games I am playing and discussing those games in particular, and avoiding the blogosphere itself as my posting regimen.

Quite a story. Head to Channel Massive’s podcasts, and find their archives there of how this played out.

Why do you blog?

It is a good outlet to me to tell a story of what is happening in my game of choice, and a way for me to write my thoughts. I am not an overly social person outside of my blog (yet, I play social games)…and that is a personal preference. I will not get into that story. But, by blogging (and Twitter now) I can communicate with a world who may wish to read what these games are doing…or not. It is up to them. I am not in it for the money…that’s for sure…lol

Do you have a schedule or some sort of routine you try and follow when blogging?

I am trying to stick to a post a day. But, it can be random. No set day of “this is what I will write”. Like I said, I wanted a stream of consciousness way of discussing whats going on. And it is a way to share with anyone who has an interest in my game of choice to see what is happening in that title, and if it may be right for them. Maybe it is a “rants for free” service if anything.

Is there some grind involved in blogging? If so, what is it and how do you cope with it?

If I want to write a big article, I have to feel it. Like sharing a post on a major quest I completed or something…but, it is not grindy to me (it was before the Bloc exploded though…and maybe that is why that happened..I needed an outlet to destroy this need of my own to force blog each day)

By contrast, what do you find pleasurable about blogging?

That stream I discussed. I want to write what I am thinking and sometimes it may have typos, or be confusing to some people. But, it is an outlet for me, not meant to be news..I also think that is what the Bloc meant to expose. Some of the bloggers think they are news, paparazzi, and they are just another person with an opinion…I have even noted some of those bloggers who blew up with me seem to not write anymore. Maybe realized their words were falling on deaf ears?

But, the blog is a personal outlet to discuss what I am feeling…It truly is my own diary of gaming and stuff.

How many people offline know you blog?

A few…not a lot. Wife who has discussed stuff with me in the past.  Several gaming friends…that is about it.

What advice would you give someone who wanted to try their hand at blogging?

Don’t…unless you know that you are doing it for yourself. A lot of the bloggers from last year all died in their blogging and blew up themselves. Due to the fact the game they chose maybe died, or they felt they were reporting something important. Just know that the blog is for you…not anyone else. If you wish others to read it…share it…but don’t expect a major audience…and who knows..

What is something you know now that you wish you had known when you first started?

Be careful of how you discuss things with others. Some do not understand how to take the written word and disconnect. Some still have “feelings” hurt when words are used. Even though those words may not be harmful. I guess you just need to learn to control some language and I am trying my best to deal with that.

Can you picture a future where you will hang up your keyboard and no longer blog?

Yup…but, as Conan says “In the year 3000…..”

At your funeral, what song(s) would you have played as your corpse is set alight and cast out to sea on a funeral barge?

Sorry…burning taking place here. We do not need to be ruining our oceans with strange objects like myself. But, hey, if some bagpipers wanna play something as my body turns to smoke…cool!

Posted in 2005, 41-50, Blogger, Entrepreneur, IT Professional, Musician, Musician(2), North Carolina, Parent | 3 Comments »

Saylah

Posted by Randolph Carter on March 4, 2009

MMO community connection:

Mystic Worlds

Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

I’m more commonly known as Saylah which is the first name I donned in an MMORPG. As time went by and I created alts I added Illinah and Alysianah too. Over the years, I’ve found it harder to secure Saylah in games and have switched over to Alysianah.

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

Outside of the game’s actual community, I’m most known for my blog Mystic Worlds. MW is actually my second gaming journal/blog. Unfortunately, I was a bit short-sighted with the first blog after Asheron’s 2 closed down. The day I left AC2 I deleted the blog. I was heart sore from watching the wonderful people I played with leave the game one by one. I didn’t think I’d invest in another game enough to warrant a blog. It was a crazy sensitive time in my life. I’d stumbled into MMOs while recovering from cancer. AC2 had become a place I could go when I needed a break from the pain and reality of that situation.
Once I was in recovery and back to work, I still played and kept in close touch with guild mates in and outside of the game. A month or so later the guild reformed in World of Warcraft. I was skeptical but went along for the ride. When I fell in love with WOW, I kicked off Mystic Worlds and it has been live ever since.

Please take a minute and describe what your blog/podcast is about.

Mystic Worlds is about my gaming adventures and gaming commentary. It’s very much about the journey my characters take in the games I play. There’s more gaming commentary in this blog that the original which contained a lot more fiction vs. commentary and opinion. I’m big on taking screenshots even though everyone that’s playing the game sees much the same thing for themselves. For me however, the screenshots are like taking pictures for a family album, they’re cookie crumbs to stir happy memories.
The blog is not all sunshine and smiles. I’ve been known to break into a rant when something I’ve read, seen or experienced in a game or the internet, really pisses me off. I welcome dialog and opposing ideas as long as we treat each other with respect.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

I was born and raised in Queens NY

Where do you live now?

When we were ready to start a family, my ex-husband and I moved to GA near where my parents and siblings had moved. Twelve years later, I was divorced and took a career opportunity in Chicago where I lived for 11 years. I’m not back in GA and have been for the past 3 years.

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 11-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

41 to 50

What do you do for a living?

Business Intelligence and Strategy in the Telecomm industry

If you could re-roll your career, what would you be?

That’s a really hard question. The ultimate dream is published fiction author. However, I’d settle for something less stressful that would at least allow me the mental downtime I need to focus more on writing fiction more. The essay style of blogging is something I can do even when stressed whereas I find it hard to write fiction under those circumstances. I’m hoping to leave Corporate America within the next five years to start a bakery or tea shoppe where I can find more equilibrium during the day and sneak in writing time.

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

  • Mother of 3, 2 of which I turned into gaming lovers too.
  • Thrice published author of technical books.
  • Studied to be a dancer and attend the high school immortalized in the movie Fame. I studied and danced with several of the dancers from the movie, who attended the High School of Performing Arts in NYC.
  • Excellent cook and co-owned a bistro with ex-husband.
  • Dream vacation is to see the pyramids of Egypt.

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

My kids, nephews and I are avid board gamers. With the exception of my oldest daughter, I’ve converted them all to playing MMOs too. Together we’ve had some amazing good fun playing AC2 and WOW. We’ve drifted off to different games since WOW but still connect via the mutual appreciation of RPG gaming. My sister isn’t always happy that I corrupted her son in our gaming shenanigans. With the exception of my nephew, everyone’s grown up and gone. Often there are few things more fun than when we are all online from different locations, running around a virtual world together.

Chapter 2: Origins

What kind of games (if any) did you play as a child before you got into video gaming? Did you play with family, friends or was it more of a solo activity?

As children, we played mostly board games. It was one of my favorite group pastimes. I had a standing request for a new game for my birthday. I think we would have loved role-playing games had there been anyone to show them to us. We wrote a lot of skits and plays that we performed for family and friends.

Our first video game was the original Atari. In college, friends introduced me to arcade games, which I played on a regular basis. Tempest and Galaxian were my games of choice for a long time. Years later, I purchased my first Nintendo and was the queen of Street Fighter.

What other hobbies and/or activities did you have as a child (sports, music, etc)?

Beyond games, I danced for most of my childhood. I studied ballet for 16 years. Dancing was my one true passion up until college. Friends and my parents probably thought it was more of an obsession. I studied dance seven days a week.

I attended the High School of Performing Arts which is the school showcased in the movie, Fame. I danced with many of the principle dancers featured in the movie. Moreover, while some of the impromptu dancing in the streets and on cars is an exaggeration, I have danced in the street and on the sidewalks of New York City. I’ve danced on the subway platforms and in train cars. Anywhere that found a few of us from school standing together for any length of time could instantly turn into an impromptu rehearsal. Looking back, we must have seemed insane – or not, given that we were NYers.

Were you ever exposed to pen and paper role-playing games? What was that experience like?

No.

Did you read much as a child?

I didn’t fall in love with reading until High School. I was writing a lot of poetry at the time. An assignment to read Hamlet showed me how poetic prose could be in the hands of a master. Shortly after Hamlet, I read my first Judy Blume book, Forever. That was it. I was hooked on the power of words as an expressive art form.

My favorite authors are Stephen R. Donaldson, Roger Zelanzy, J.K. Rowling, Sharon Kay Penman, Dan Simmons and Jane Austen for penning my favorite books The Mirror of Her Dreams, The Great Book of Amber, Harry Potter series, Here Be Dragons, Illium, Pride and Prejudice and Persuasion.

Would you say that any of these games or books had an effect on your later appreciation of computer gaming and ultimately MMOs?

None of the authors listed did but Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings did for sure. It wasn’t until the massively title Middle Earth Online was announced that I made a connection between fantasy and gaming.

How were you fist introduced to video games? How old were you? What was the platform?

Parents bought an Atari. I think I was in my early teens. It didn’t have a lasting impression on me. I thought it was a fun little pastime back then but nothing more than that.

Did you ever play coin-op games at the arcade? What was that experience like?

In college, I hung out with friends at a local pub that had video machines and cheap pizza. Put those two together and there was always a crowd. I still wasn’t into gaming. I played Pacman, Donkey Kong and such but it wasn’t anything more than something to do while waiting for pizza.

What was the first video game you can remember playing that really made an impression on you?

Asheron’s Call 2. It was my first MMO and I was completely blown away by the fact that I could actually walk around and interact in a fantasy world. The idea and reality of it really rocked my world. I was a diehard fantasy lover by then consuming books and movies like candy and chips. As a ardent The Sims player most of the settings I created for my characters were all fantasy using the game mods and hacks being produced by other skilled players in the TS community.

Just getting into a fantasy setting that was already devised without all the painstaking setup required of me doing the same thing in The Sims was amazing. Walking among characters controlled by other players was very surreal. I’d tried Ultima Online and Horizons briefly just before purchasing AC2. I didn’t like either of them and quickly bailed. There was something about the mood and tone in AC2 that instantly captured me. That feeling remained me until the last day I played – when the servers were shutdown.

What gaming consoles have you owned in the past?

I’m not a console gamer. The only title I bought explicitly for myself was Harvest Moon.

Posted in 41-50, Aspiring writer, Author, Blogger, Georgia, Parent | Leave a Comment »

RC

Posted by Randolph Carter on February 20, 2009

MMO community connection:

Grinding to Valhalla

Chapter 1: Introduction

What is your name (your online persona/alter-ego, what have you)?

Randolph Carter

What is your connection to the gaming/blogging/podcasting community (your chance to plug yourself here)?

I’ve just recently started this Valhalla project, and beyond that I don’t think anyone here would know me from Adam.

Please take a minute and describe what your blog/podcast is about.

I’ve done my best to try and explain what this project is here.

Where were you born? Where did you grow up?

I was born in Tyler, Texas.  I grew up in Richardson, Texas…a suburb in north Dallas.

Where do you live now?

Sachse, Texas.  Let’s hear you pronounce that one.

Your level (age) is somewhere in the range of (pick one): 10-20, 21-30, 31-40, 41-50, 51-60, 61-70, 71-80, 81-90

41-50

What do you do for a living?

I am a cataloger at a public library.  Interesting job that.   I also order the science fiction and fantasy titles for our collection.

If you could reroll, what would you be?

I’ve always thought it would be interesting to work as a game developer, maybe for a company like Bioware or Bethesda.  However, I’m not one who works very well under pressure or with deadlines.  I’m sure I’d get fired.  Then I’d probably be a cataloger.

List five random things most people don’t know about you.

  • I’ve lived in Texas all my life and have never owned a cowboy hat or boots and have never really enjoyed country music.  I just don’t go that way.  I do chew tobacco on occasion when I’m running an instance.  No I don’t.  I just lied there.
  • Although I’ve spent time in six different MMOs, I don’t have a max level character in any of them.  Shame on me.  Thanks WotLK!
  • I met my wife online.  No, not playing an MMO.  What kind of a person do you think I am?
  • I have a man crush on Captain Feathersword.  So does my son.
  • I was around 10 years old when Star Wars came out.  I went to see it at the theater even.  I was not blown away.  I’ve seen all the subsequent releases and have felt the same about each and every one.  In fact, I think the latter ones have gotten progressively worse.  Obviously there is something broken in me.

Feel free to discuss any family you have here.

I’m married to a wonderful, very patient lady and we have one 18-month-old son.  I also have an older mother and brother and two big dogs.

Chapter 2: Origins

What kind of games (if any) did you play as a child before you got into video gaming? Did you play with family, friends or was it more of a solo activity?

I seem to recall playing quite a bit of Monopoly and Yahtzee when I was younger. I also played a lot outdoors and games like kick the can, hide and seek, tackle the man, come to mind. My family was also big into card games (spades, hearts, even a little bridge), but I think where I really started to get into gaming was with Risk. I would play with several of my friends and we’d go for hours on end. I remember really getting worked up when someone was attacking me. I’d get nervous. My heart rate would go up and I’d start sweating. Fast forward 30 years and you’ll see me experiencing the very same sensations when I engage in PvP. It’s not exactly a pleasant sensation in my autumn years though.

What other hobbies and/or activities did you have as a child (sports, music, etc)?

I played my share of organized soccer, basketball, and about 9 seasons of baseball. I took a year’s worth of classical guitar lessons and learned enough to strum a melody all these years later.

Were you ever exposed to pen and paper role playing games? What was that experience like?

Indeed. I think it must have been the summer of my seventh grade year (we read “The Hobbit” in class earlier that year, so I was hungry for fantasy) when one of my friend’s older brothers introduced us to D&D. The two older boys would let us watch them play but refused to let us in on the action saying that we were too young and immature. We finally broke them down and were soon playing away the rest of the summer. I think I played pretty steady for about 3 years. Then girls came along and too many of us didn’t make their saving throw.

Did you read much as a child? If so, what did you like to read (books, comic books, etc?) Please list some favorite authors, titles, etc.

I really don’t think I got into reading until my 7th grade year. We read “The Hobbit” in class and that, as so many people have mentioned, was a life changing experience. From there I went on the Piers Anthony Xanth books and Stephen R. Donaldson’s Thomas Covenant series. I’ve never heard of H. P. Lovecraft though.

Would you say that any of these games or books had an effect on your later appreciation of computer gaming and ultimately MMOs? Please explain.

D&D had a huge impact on me. I started reading nothing but fantasy from that point forward. I switched from collecting Iron Man comics to Conan. Pretty much anything game related has involved fantasy in some shape or form ever since.  I don’t think I’ve ever really ventured outside the fantasy based MMO either.

How were you fist introduced to video games? How old were you? What was the platform?

I won a contest at school for selling the most spice racks. Well, my dad did actually. He took my order sheet to work with him and got a ton of people to place orders. The grand prize was a glorified Pong system with bonus rifle pack. I must have been in 4th grade at the time. So, somewhere in the neighborhood of 9 or 10. I seem to recall being able to point the rifle at the wall and still hit the moving target on screen. Impressive.

Did you ever play coin-op games at the arcade? What was that experience like?

I was pretty self conscious as a kid and having people watching over my shoulder while I was gaming wasn’t my idea of fun. If I could have had the arcade to myself I would have been in heaven. I think that’s why the console worked so well for me over the years. I could screw up to my heart’s content and no one else would be the wiser.

What was the first video game you can remember playing that really made an impression on you? Please explain.

I remember a friend of mine had an Odyssey 2 and he had a Lord of the Rings inspired game called “Quest for the Ring.” I remember getting very excited when I went over to his house. Just the idea of playing a fantasy based video game was enough for me. I seem to recall the game was something of a hybrid between a board game and video game, for it came with a game board and some playing pieces. Sweet, eh? Looking back I can see how rudimentary the game play and graphics were, but at the time it was like mana from heaven. Unfortunately my friend had played the game to death before showing it off to me, and I could hardly ever pry him away from his impressive collection of nudy magazines to play the game with me.

What gaming consoles have you owned in the past?

Atari 2600, NES, Super Nintendo, Playstation, Playstation 2, Xbox, and Xbox 360.

Feel free to share a story related to your gaming experience as a child.

We had our own D&D group with a very lax DM who would let us get away with all sorts of things-murder just being one of them. Eventually we became ridiculously powerful and about the only thing left for us to do was start challenging gods and demigods out of the D&D pantheon. And that’s what we did. Well, there was this other group of D&D players who lived further down the street from us and one time we managed to get together for a gaming session. Their DM was ultra strict. One of their players was wielding a plain digging shovel as a weapon. Another was wearing a barrel for armor. No joke. Suffice it to say we had trouble finding a suitable adventure for our two groups to go through together. Their players simply couldn’t believe how decked-out our party was. I don’t think this sat very well with their DM either. Funny the things you remember…

Chapter 3: Online

Were you ever exposed to MUDs?

I remember watching over one of my roommate’s shoulders in college playing some MUD. His character was represented by an ampersand and the dungeon walls were pound signs. Eventually he came across a creature (I think it was the dragon) which was a dollar sign. At the time it was awesome. He never would let me play it though as he thought I might break his computer. Being the spineless person that I still am today, I was happy just to watch him run around slaying keyboard symbols for hours on end.

What was your first MMO experience?

That would have been Wow back in March of 2005. I had been looking for a copy of the game soon after launch and wasn’t having luck finding a copy anywhere. Eventually I found myself in a Game Stop looking for a game me and my buddy could play and I noticed a huge display of WoW boxes behind the counter. I asked the lady working that day, “Those are empty display boxes, right?” When she told me no and then asked if I would like to purchase one, I almost danced a jig right then and there in the store.

Oddly enough, however, I don’t think I was mentally prepared for what an MMO experience was going to be like. I think the first month or so of playing I pretty much stuck to a single player game mindset–never chatting with anyone or ever setting foot in the auction house. It took two of my closest friends to start playing to get me to start opening up more to the experience.

I sometimes regret not getting into MMOs back in the days of Ultima Online and Everquest, but I happened to be in a rather unhealthy marriage at the time which took 8 years to self destruct. I simply didn’t have the stamina or emotional well being to play video games at the time.  I think my second wife would say I’m making up for lost time now though.

If possible, list all the MMOs you’ve played extensively.

  • World of Warcraft – Level 73 priest, level 72 druid.
  • Everquest 2 – Level 36 necromancer.
  • Vanguard – Level 27 hunter
  • Lord of the Rings Online – Level 40 hunter, level 30 minstrel

What is your current MMO of choice, or perhaps, what are your current MMOs of choice?

Lord of the Rings Online

Which MMO have you spent the most time playing? How long would you say that has been?

That would have to be WoW. I’m thinking somewhere in the neighborhood of 3 years.

Have you reached level cap in any MMO? If so, which ones?

At one point I had reached the cap in WoW, but then RotLK changed that.

Loki taps you on the shoulder one day to inform you that you have fallen victim to one of his elaborate pranks. The world you’ve been inhabiting of countless MMOs to choose from and play has merely been a dream. In reality only one MMO exists. After laughing at you for a bit he decides to take pity on you and allows you to choose which MMO will remain. Which one would you choose and why?

Although I can’t seem to bring myself back to playing WoW again, I’d have to say WoW. All of my real life friends are still playing there and I’m thinking if this were the only game around, I could find ways of keeping my enthusiasm up for the game.

Are there any MMOs currently in development that you are particularly interested in? Please explain.

I can’t say that there are. Although I’ve been hearing some nice things about Earth Rise. The only MMOs I’ve played have been in the high fantasy genre. I think I might enjoy a change of pace.

Feel free to share an interesting or amusing anecdote related to your MMO gaming experience.

The Story of plucky Patpen

by

Randolph Carter

I’m not much of a PvPer, yet at one point in my illustrious WoW career I found myself playing on a PvP server. All of my friends were there as well, and we were playing on the horde side. Anyway, one evening a group of five of us was questing over in Arathi Highlands at Stormgarde Keep and we ran across a lone hapless night elf hunter named Patpen. Seeing how he was of a similar level to our party, we made short work of him and then went about our business. Within a few minutes Patpen was back and began expertly exploiting his surroundings (remember, a good portion of Stormgarde is filled with alliance NPCs) and was able to take us all down rather painfully one at a time. We were shocked. This must have been a fluke and we all agreed to go back and teach Patpen a lesson. What should have been a 20 minute diversion ended up becoming a 2 hour marathon exercise in futility. 5 corpse runs later, licking our wounds we decided to call it a night.

By the way, adding insult to injury, his pet cat was aptly named HordeRaper.

Chapter 4: Preferences

At your peak, how much time per week would you say you spent gaming?

I’d say between 25-30 hours a week during my in-between marriage phase.

How about now?

Probably between 15-20.

When during the week are your regular play times?

I play pretty much every night, but during the week it’s usually only for an hour or two after my son goes to bed. Friday and Saturday nights I usually have an extended gaming session lasting until the witching hour or so.

Generally speaking, are you more of a social creature in MMOs (grouping to quest, joining guilds, etc.) or something of a lone wolf?

If I’m playing with friends I know in real life I will be more sociable. That means that in WoW I am in a guild and tend to group up with friends regularly. When I dabble outside of WoW, I generally go the lone wolf route. I have joined several guilds but never seem to do much grouping or other socializing.

Have you made any lasting friendships through your MMO experience? Please explain.

Not a one. And I’m not sure why that is, really. I’ve met a lot of friendly, helpful people online, but I just can’t seem to get past the initial acquaintance phase. I think I still have something of a single-player RPG mentality when I play my MMOs and don’t open up much beyond that.

Before logging into a game, do you already have a course of action planned out in your head, or do you just sort of do whatever you feel like once in game?

I usually don’t and I think that’s become more and more of a problem for me. More times than not, I tend to find myself staring at the screen once I log in wondering what to do next. There have been times when I’ve done a bit of planning before logging in and things tend to go smoother then. You’d think I’d learn.

When playing MMOs do you tend to just play one at a time or do you take more of the smorgasbord approach?

Generally just one, but I have juggled two on the rare occasion. It didn’t end up very well. I found myself spread too thin and with the limited play time I now have, it just doesn’t make any sense. That’s not to say that I wouldn’t like to play more than one. I just don’t have the time or the mental stamina.

Do you tend to supplement your MMO gaming with other PC, console or tabletop games?

I have an Xbox 360 I fire up now and then, but for some strange reason I tend to fall asleep when gaming on the couch. PC gaming seems to be the only thing that can keep me awake later at night.

Are you something of an altoholic?

I am and I wish I wasn’t. Invariably the first class I pick is the one I eventually end up leveling to any extent, but I always piddle around with alts at first to make sure I’m not picking the wrong character. I also start experimenting with alts just before I get to burnout phase in the game I’m playing.

Do you find yourself multitasking while gaming (perhaps watching TV, talking on the phone, out of game instant messaging, playing another game, or even listening to a podcast)?

I don’t. I even listen to in-game sound. On the rare occasion I will tab out of a game to look something up on the internet, but generally I like to have my gaming experience as immersive as possible.

Do you find yourself having much MMO discussion off-line, perhaps with friends or family?

I bet my wife wishes I’d shut up about my gaming exploits. She used to play WoW and we would go for long walks discussing strategy and the pros and cons of the game. Those were fun walks. Now, I pretty much just spew forth and she rather patiently listens. I always start off with, “Would you mind if I talked about such-and-such game for just a minute?” It’s never just a minute though.

Have you ever felt that you game too much? If so, how did you cope with that?

What kind of a question is that? Who comes up with this stuff?

Yes, I think I go through periods of feeling guilty about my gaming, but having read through others’ responses here who seem to be at peace with their gaming hobby, I think I’m feeling pretty good about my gaming again.

Since you started playing MMOs, have you ever taken a break from the genre? If so, please explain.

When I got married again I took a 6 month hiatus from MMOs only to return to the genre with wife in tow. I haven’t taken a break since.

Posted in 2005, 41-50, Blogger, Game designer(2), Librarian, Parent, Texas | Leave a Comment »