Warhammer Online: Age of Reckoning
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Product Description | |||||||||||||||
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Product Details
- Undertake a wide variety of PvE quest types related to an army's war efforts,
- Based on Games Workshop's popular Warhammer fantasy world. Dominated by force of arms and magic, this world provides a rich setting for hundreds of thousands of players to experience the epic nature of war and the glory of battle.
- Join one of six Armies and fight for the Armies of Order (Dwarf, High Elf and Empire) or the Armies of Destruction (Greenskin, Dark Elf, or Chaos). Wage war across three unique battlefronts.
- Next generation Realm vs. Realm game system integrating both PvP combat and PvE quests on the same map in support of the greater war.
- Engage in four levels of RvR combat
Video Reviews
No video reviews found for this product.Customer Reviews
WoW killer- No, but it is better in many respects. |
| Review Date: September 16, 2008 |
| Reviewer: J. J. Marino, Rochester, New York |
| This review is of Beta and of the first 2 days of release, there are some fine reviews further down and I suggest you check them out! ---- Let me start out this review saying I am addicted to MMO's.I was in beta for Ultima Onlina, Everquest, Anarchy Online, SWG and WoW. I then went on to play each MMO for several hundred hours if not days. I played WoW for at least 20-40 hours per week for 4 years. My characters averaged 40 days played. That being said (not to brag but to say I know WoW), here is my review of Warhammer Online: Age of Reckoning. If there were any times that you played an MMO and thought that, something was missing... I am sure that the folks over at Mythic Entertainment thought the very same things. As the torchbearers for RVR or Realm vs Realm battle they understand how to do an MMO right from the beginning. What Mythic did was to build a game where the player vs player was not an afterthought to keep high levels occupied, instead it IS the game. After you are slightly acquainted with the interface you are then thrown head-long into battle. War is all around and they mean it. This game is about fantasy WAR and not about phat lewt, (although there is that sorta, more on this later). Another feature that is built in is the amazing Tome of Knowledge. If you ever downloaded addons for WoW for use as a record keeper then you will know how this feature works. The really cool part is that this tome is utilized as a bragging tool and it also unlocks character titles. It keeps a record of the number of mob x you have slain, the number of sales to merchants and so on. You'll have to see it to completely get the power of this tool. Another great feature is the open group system. Being I am almost 40 years old and have 2 kids of my own, the last thing I want to do is log in and be begging for groups with pre-teen jerks angry at the world because some girl turned them down for a date...etc. How the open group system works is there are areas you may be running through and need to kill "X" monster. Well just run into that area and do a group lookup. You will see who is there what step they are on and bam! you can join them. You don't even need to talk to them "omg roxx0rz!".... As long as you participate in the quest and don't just stand there then you'll get the quest done. Which leads me to the final cool feature; Public Quests (PQ); Public quests are there to help you complete quests that require a group. Basically same as the open group system except that these quests have several stages and you did not have to have this quest before you came to the area. You can join in at any point in the chain and depending on how much you contribute to the final boss section then the better the loot and experience. So you could walk away with a healing potion or the Sword of 10000 truths. Whatever you get it WILL be usable by you! That's a huge difference from WoW. So why all the WoW comparison? Many people will say that this is WoW 2.0. I will have to disagree with that. Let me explain it this way. If you are into playing first person shooters. And say, you are looking over the barrel of your gun. Is Gears of War a Wolfenstein 3D ripoff? Well that viewpoint (looking over the barrel), comes directly from one of the first 3D shooters ever (Wolfenstein 3D). Mythic has the same sort of complaint against it. "It is trying to be like WoW too much". To be honest WoW took alot from Dark Ages of Camelot which was the MMO pre-wow. The look of the orcs comes directly from Games Workshop which is where Warhammer comes from. If you are playing an MMO would you rather the players playing not have an idea how to play or would you rather everyone could play pretty well on their own. Being that mostly everyone coming to Warhammer has played an MMO before it is a benefit to everyone that Warhammer has a "similar feel" to all other MMO's that predate it. The game allows for massive customization of your character. You can customize it internally. Meaning you can get abilities and skills that are more about power on the field of battle and less about the glowing codpiece of doom. The graphics are at this time (just after release) moderate and do use DirectX 10 to some extent. They are scheduling to allow people with ubermachines to ramp the setting up soon. Just realize though when you get 200 people on the field fighting, you may not wish to be able to count the nose hairs on each player, instead blast them first and count nose hairs later. I am beginning to get the feeling this this is a much more mature players game and less for the kids to show off in. It's like that Nivia for Men commercial, " they got to see me, I got to attract them somehow". Being there isn't a huge glowing customizable look it may be off-putting to some that feel they NEED to have a glowing sword. The artwork in this game is amazingly real and very beautiful. Final thoughts, the look of this game is one of realism and is very close to what tabletop Warhammer players would find appealing. You can play greenskins that are crude and really fun to play, or be a serious Von Helsing type character that looks like a swashbuckling hero. Either way you should have no problem finding something you like among the 20 classes. Hope to meet you ingame! |
Exactly what I needed |
| Review Date: September 24, 2008 |
| Reviewer: Terry Mesnard, Bellevue, NE |
| Mythic knows how to run a successful MMO. They make the big, hard decisions. When class balancing and fun was at stake, they cut four classes in order to both balance the races, but also because the classes weren't up to snuff. And when all six capital cities were being problematic, they took out four of them and will release them as free content later. Coming from Dark Age of Camelot, a game that unbearably belongs to the first generation of MMOs, Mythic decided to take the Warhammer lore and craft a game that they know best: realm versus realm. Warhammer Online (WAR) takes everything they tested, tried and made work from DAoC and pushed it forward into a new generation. Writing this review is tricky, because on the surface WAR is like most MMOs out there. But it's the details and the small things that make it something completely different. Let's start with the way the game is set up. From the beginning, PvP is important as one of the first quests you receive will be to complete a scenario. In this way, WAR emphasizes its committment to more than PvE. In fact, a PvP'r could spend his or her time entirely PvPing and level all the way to the endgame. It helps that scenarios are constantly running and chances are you'll be in one before you know it. The distinction, though, is that if you don't really care much about PvP, there are other opportunities. Firstly, literally hundreds of quests are out there, each with rewards that are specific to your class, meaning you won't be doing a quest for a nice axe that you, a healer, can never use. The zones begin as approximately 80% PvE content, 20% PvP. As you continue through the zones and into different tiers, that percentage will change, but there will always be PvE content. One complaint I hear all the time is "I don't like PvP," which usually means...I don't like to be ganked by people twenty levels higher than me when doing a quest. Don't blame you, which is why the PvP system in 90% of the WAR servers is perfect. PvP only occurs on your terms, by entering a designated zone. Stay out of those zones and you won't have to worry about that pesky Bright Wizard. What about balancing in the zones? I don't want a level 40 PvP'r heading into a level 1 zone and laying waste to everyone. Don't worry, if someone enters a PvP zone too low for them, they are turned into a chicken. Then there are the dungeons, all made to be completed by a small group and not some bloated raid. And with each dungeon being split into wings that should take 1-2ish hours to complete and having armor sets, there's plenty of fun content to be had. But that's not all. Spread throughout the entire game are approximately 300 (according to developers) Public Quests (PQs). These PQs are areas within each zone that are open to everyone of your side to participate in. No matter whether you're grouping with someone or not, you'll contribute to the various stages of these areas (stages that range from killing a number of things, fighting a boss like a dragon or destroying urns) and, when the PQ is over you roll on a loot bag. What makes this work even better is that each loot bag will have a piece of equpiment that your class can use, guaranteed. Additionally, there's a bar that tracks your story chapter's PQ progress and awards you three different items (usually a potion or talisman, followed by equipment and then a weapon) as you progress through three tiers. Awards abound at every turn, even in PvP as you are tracked separately by your PvP level. At certain levels, or renown ranks as they're called, you'll have access to not only powerful equipment but also renown skills that will help you in both PvP and PvE. But let's not stop here; each of the race pairings have zones that are grouped into tiers, with tier four being the high content. Each zone has PvP areas with towers and, as you progress into tier two and beyond, keeps. Both sides (Destruction and Order) can take over a keep and, if your guild is high enough in rank (more on that later), you can capture a keep in your name. But keeps are also treated like PQ areas, being populated by NPCs and a very strong leader that also supplies equipment. Fighting into a keep can turn into epic encounters, with siege weapons, rams to break down the keep's walls, boiling oil for the defenders to pour onto wouldbe attackers, places for ranged attackers to unleash devastating spells and arrows...it's quite a rush to be involved in one, especially as both sides start to get more aggressive, calling in reinforcements to help. And as the game progresses, these types of battles become more common. Which is a huge difference from the elephant in the room, World of Warcraft. WoW crafts a similar structure, with two side duking it out...but it was never meant to be a truly PvP-centered game in the way WAR is. From the very beginning, you are immersed in this warfare, from the very first level all the way to the end and beyond. And all of this is before you get into how many bars/levels there are to tackle. Sure, the game is capped at level 40 at launch, but that's not taking into consideration that each chapter of PQs has a bar with loot associated to it or that there's 80 renown ranks that will take a lot of PvPing to hit, or that your guild actually levels up to 40 based not on how many members you have in your guild but on their accomplishments, a system that benefits both small and large guilds. Guild ranks are actually important as they provide you with a ton of abilities, from being able to carry benefit-providing standards to having a guild vault to access to guild auctions, crafting vendors, quick flight paths to the dungeons, the ability to take keeps, etc. There's just so much here, so many shinies to grab your attention. And it's all tied into the Tome of Knowledge, a large compendium that tracks everything you do from quests to accomplishments to titles, etc. It's so indepth that you have to wonder how Mythic pulled it off. And pulled it off, they did. WAR is a monumentous game that feels as relevant and genre-shifting as WoW did when it came. So, there you have it. A very rambling review that didn't even touch on half of what the game has to offer (did you really want to be here for another century?), but will have to remain incomplete. Because, here's the thing. Even when you strip away all the little details, the leveling and all of that junk that I spent forever typing about, what we find is...this game is fun. And diverse. And it's just what I wanted and needed from a MMO. |
A Better Comparision with World of Warcraft WOTLK |
| Review Date: September 17, 2008 |
| Reviewer: G. Recipient, UCLA Alumni |
| Note: You will not understand this review unless you have played World of Warcraft (WOW) and know the game well. Updated: Dec 2, 08 ------------------ Graphics ------------------ Graphics are beautiful, colorful skies and atmosphere, though more realistic earthly colors than WoW. You can color your own gear with dyes. Character creation has many different hairstyles (braids, free flowing, locks, short cut, bald, ponytail, bifurcated) and effects (ie glowing eyes, tattoos, scars). ------------------ Game Mechanics ------------------ PVP: Enter BGs from LV 1-40 anywhere, anytime through a button on your menu. After the BG, you will resume whatever you did before you left for the BG. You gain EXP, $, and titles for PVPing in battlegrounds. You can PVP your way to LV 40 without PVE-ing. Every 10 levels (tier) you will PVP in completely different BGs. So you can't play the same BG again unless you are in that tier (ie WSG only accessible from LV 1-10). If you are low level, WAR will level you up for the BG temporarily (ie from LV 4 to LV 8). If you are 10 levels above a person you're trying to gank, you will be turned into a chicken (ie Unlike WOW, a LV 70 can gank your LV 10 arse forever). Public Quests: Random PQs go on in all zones. Just enter the scene and fight. No raid OR party needed. If you participated enough, you will get extra bonus points on your /random roll and have a higher chance to win loot. Leveling: Built-in Quest Helper mod directs you to quest destinations on minimap. Keyboard mapping, NPC trainers, Buying/selling, AH, and movement is similar to WOW with a low learning curve. However, WAR is laggy, requires polishing, and melee/spell actions are not as instant as WOW. Server types: Open RvR (Realm vs Realm) meaning PVP - very little safe spots like WOW's PVP. RP (Role play) - Serious reputation, do not take lightly. Much more intense RP than WoW's RP servers. Core (normal servers) - Predetermined PVP areas like WOW. ------------------ Story ------------------ Warhammer has 25 years of history, since the 1980s. The history is very well developed and linear. You can read your own history and lore as it develops while you participate in quests (menu option -"Tome"). This is similar to WOW's "Achievements" system. ------------------ Music ------------------ There is very little music. Most sounds are ambient, background noises, yelling. ------------------ Raiding ------------------ I have heard that there are instances, but I don't know enough to comment. ------------------ Social/Guild ------------------ No lack in player base, however there is a dearth of public chatting overall. Most chatting is within the guild. Guilds gain exp points and level up as the players in the guild level. Guild taxes allow you to tax your guild members on all their loot a % amount. ------------------ Opinion ------------------ If you enjoy PVP, buy the game. WAR has many, many opportunities dedicated to PVP in many different BGs. WAR has more PVP opportunities and BGs that are unique and exciting. Also, WAR is fair unlike WOW and its disadvantages to one side, most notably the Horde and AV, and also with the new Strand of the Ancients where Alliance has a slight advantage to the game. |
Welcome change of focus in the MMO genre |
| Review Date: September 18, 2008 |
| Reviewer: Goronmon, Maine, USA |
| Warhammer Online is all about the RvR (Realm vs. Realm or another way of saying PvP). The game is broken up into Tiers that represent a block of levels for a player (ie. Tier 1 is levels 1 - 10, Tier 2 is 11 - 20) and each Tier is filled with both RvR content and more traditional PvE content. The forces of Order and Destruction are in a constant battle to control each zone, which gives your side bonus in the form of things like reduced prices at Merchants. There are large areas made specifically for RvR with capture points as well as a keep that must be assaulted and controlled in each RvR area. Taking these keeps pushes your side much closer to taking control of the zone, but you also help the WAR effort with almost everything you do, including participating and winning Scenarios (similar to battlegrounds in WoW except more varied and more PvP oriented). My favorite scenario so far is one where a single artifact must be picked up and held on to. Killing enemies while holding the artifact nets your team greater points than without and while you are fighting to protect the artifact carrier, the other side is working to bring him down ASAP. Definitely leads to some intense battles. Outside of the RvR content there are the awesome Public Quests. They are almost like mini-raids, that anyone can join in and at point and participate. They are generally structured into increasingly difficult stages. At the end everyone who participated gets to roll on bags of loot, where those who contributed the most get bonuses to their roll. In addition to the bags, each group of PQs has Influence rewards that are chosen when you get enough Influence, which you gain from participation in the PQ it itself, so you are guaranteed an item eventually. These can be lots of fun and are a nice change of pace from the standard quests. The Tome of Knowledge is a great addition to the game as well. It's basically a quest log on steroids. Just about everything you do in the game is tracked and you receive acheivements from completing various activities. These achievements yield experience and can also yield titles for your character or even items you can wear. There are even achievements for things like fighting in RvR with no armor, or clicking on yourself 100 times. Not only do characters level, but guilds do as well. Everything you do in-game contributes to your guild's rank, which gives you perks like a guild bank, guild auction house, and even a standard that you bring to battlefield where you can unlock stat bonuses for using the standard. In addition, the major cities in the game have levels as well. Completing quests in the city among other things will increase it's rank and allow your guild to use some of the bonuses it's earned, as well as unlocked more city PQs and instances. The launch has been moving along pretty well and considering the starting point, it will be great to see how the game grows in the future. Definitely recommended for any MMO fan that enjoys battling it out alongside their fellow players. Where games like WoW focus more on the PvE content, WAR focuses much more on the RvR and it shows. |
Don't just look at the number of stars |
| Review Date: September 19, 2008 |
| Reviewer: Robert C. Lambertz, |
| To people checking up on the reviews, trying to make their minds up about whether to buy this or not: Please read all of the low-scored reviews. Most of them are poorly written, based on beta experiences, or simply a low rating because Amazon handled the pre-order system poorly. I highly recomend reading all of the reviews, how many people found them helpful, and maybe even some of the comments on them. Having said that, I simply love this game. I've been playing it for a few months (from closed beta through head start and now post-launch) and I've got no real complaints. This game is more polished at launch than most games are a year after release. Set your worries of another Age of Conan type launch aside. This is a complete game, the functions are there, the mechanics are there. They were in beta for an extremely long time, and put that time to good use. Gameplay: 5/5 This game doesn't revolutionize MMO gameplay. It's standard WASD + numbers, point-and-click interface. The interface is admitedly very similar to WoWs. But it's also similar to AoC, EQ 1 and 2, DAoC...the list goes on. If it isn't broken, don't fix it. Most classes have a special mechanic, from the Ironbreakers Grudge, to the Shaman's Waaaugh! to make each class feel different and interesting. Innovations they have made: Morale abilities: powerful 60 sec cooldown abilities that you get access to by staying in combat for long periods of time Tactics: Buffs (7 in total when maxed out) that you gain from leveling, exploring, specs, and Tome of Knowledge (see below) unlocks. These can drastically alter your play style, or subtley boost abilities that you particularly like. Tome of Knowledge: The completists best friend. Thousands of unlocks for doing anything from slaughtering X number of Rats, Skaven, Ghosts, players of a given class, etc, to exploring a new area. Some unlocks give you a background story for an area or character, others give you a new title. All of them give you free experience, and for people like me who love to explore every corner, it's fun to try to find as many of these as possible. Graphics: 4.5/5 People complain that it's the same as WoW. Spend 30 minutes playing this on a decent computer and judge for yourself. Screenshots may look similar, but once you're in game, you see the difference as easily as night and day. I find myself going through areas that seem similar to WoW sometimes, yes, but more often than not I find myself wandering around gazing at the environments liveliness and thinking "no way....there is NOTHING like this in WoW...not even close" The character animations (especially casting animations) are particularly interesting. OH, and the Goblin jumping animation is the best thing ever. Sound: 4/5 Music is a bit sparse, but good when it is playing. Sound effects are very good, I personally turn the music off and play my own through iTunes quietly with the sound effects on in-game. Customer Support: 5/5 I feel sorry for our European counterparts who had such a hard time with Open Beta. Having said that, in the good old USA, it's been one of the smoothest launches of MMO history. Server outtages, lag, downtime, all of the things that you associate with a new MMO? They're gladly missing. |







WoW killer- No, but it is better in many respects.