Panic at the Discord

I realize I am extremely late to this party, but for those who have not yet heard the news there is a rumored discussion happening about Microsoft purchasing Discord. This acquisition has a rumored 10 billion dollar price tag associated with it and there are many articles talking about it so I am just going to link this one. This is apparently causing a large amount of discontent among the gamer circles, but I feel like this knee jerk reaction might be a little too fast. There are some things you have to understand before starting this article. My entire working career has been tied to Microsoft products and as such I have seen the ebb and flow of different initiatives. I’ve even been at several Microsoft development conferences over the years and had the benefit of meeting Bill Gates in the flesh during one of those cattle call meet and greet sessions. I feel like I sit comfortably in a camp between the Microsoft fanboys and the Microsoft doomsayers.

Microsoft has been on a bit of an acquisition spree of late snapping up a number of game studios, including the most recent Zenimax acquisition which largely just means Bethesda Softworks to most folks. From what I have seen so far, Microsoft appears to be a good steward of these games properties. For example I have followed Undead Labs pretty closely being a major fan of the State of Decay franchise and from what I can tell… Microsoft money has taken a lot of pressure off the studio to just do the stuff that they do best. Other commentary from folks at Obsidian and Double Fine seem to indicate the same. Not having to worry about how to make the next payroll probably does wonders for creativity in allowing folks to actually just sorta create the games.

However there is a very recent Microsoft failure in the minds of gamers and I think it is coloring their opinions right now. In 2016 Microsoft acquired a plucky little start up streaming platform called Beam and then proceeded to change its name to Mixer and pour copious amounts of resources into trying to make it a viable alternative to Twitch. This was a losing proposition from the moment Microsoft started down this path but it did give folks for awhile an alternative. The problem with this match up however is while you had Mixer backed by Microsoft, you also had Twitch backed by the power of Amazon. Twitch was already the brand leader in streaming, to a degree that not even YouTube has ever really been able to steal much market share away from them.

Having used both as a streamer and as a viewer… I personally believe that Beam/Mixer was the superior product. However I also believe that there was no fighting the purple juggernaut called Twitch. Having streamed on multiple platforms, there are just way more people that interact with Twitch as a whole and it becomes progressively harder and harder to convince your viewers to use anything other than that platform. Much like there will never really be a WoW Killer or a Facebook Killer… it is highly unlikely that anyone will ever top Twitch for streaming. They are just too dug into that niche and while I blame Microsoft for doing a piss poor job of notifying the streamers that they were going to be closing their doors… I don’t blame them for the failure of the platform.

However in the last week I have watched multiple communities attempt a quick migration away from Discord over a fear of something that may never actually come to fruition.  It seems like a number of folks are jumping over to a service called Guilded, but largely it suffers from some of the same questions we have had for awhile.  Like this has been the topic of many discussions among the AggroChat crew trying to glean exactly how Discord or a service like Guilded actually makes their money.  Sure Discord has Nitro and Server boosts, but that cannot pay for anything close to the amount of server processing power, bandwidth and disk space required to keep a service like theirs up and running.  Guilded similarly plans on offering premium access accounts and skins but likewise that cannot come close to paying the infrastructure bills.

In 1973 the artists Richard Serra and Carlota Fay Schoolman produced a short video titled “Television Delivers People” which from what I can tell is the initiation point of the old adage “You’re Not the Customer; You’re the Product”.  I mean we have seen that written a number of different ways over the years but the words largely speak true.  Any time you are not paying for a product, there is something that you are adding to the process that is valuable and are essentially creating the product that is sold.  That product could be usage statistics or in the case of television access to your eyeballs and by reference your wallet and spending habits.  So I have long tried to sort out what exactly is Discord or Guilded for that matter selling about us that makes it worth keeping a service up and running.

In the case of Microsoft reportedly looking at spending 10 Billion dollars to Acquire Discord, that transaction makes a lot of sense.  Discord does a really good job of providing a free alternative to Teamspeak or Ventrilo and also does a pretty solid job of letting folks roll their own communities on the fly.  While I love Teams…  there are without a doubt some aspects of it that could be improved through an infusion of tech resources coming from a company who has likely been trying to keep things running on a relatively slim tech stack.  Additionally Xbox Live chat sucks horrifically and if you could simply gut it and plug discord in its place…  you would have an immediate fix to what feels like a sub par implementation that has not aged well.  Similarly Skype is not a great user experience and could likely be refreshed greatly with an infusion of newer technology as well.

So this one acquisition for Microsoft serves to solve three potential problems in their aging infrastructure.  Those products all make money for the company and it is pretty clear how the benefit works in each of those scenarios.  Truthfully I would feel better about using Discord if I better understood its funding model and also knew that the folks working for the company would benefit from the stability of a massive corporation backing them.  I’ve known several folks that worked at Microsoft over the years and from what I have been able to glean it seems like a relatively good place to work.  It seems like they invest quite a bit of resources in their employees so I can’t see that it would be a bad call for anyone specifically looking to be acquired.  While Mixer is a glaring exception, they do tend to support tech significantly longer than someone like Google that has a large graveyard of promising tech that they have buried.

Essentially to the gamers freaking out about this potentially happening…  I would say to chill the fuck out.  Microsoft has done some pretty cool things.  Xbox Game Pass for example is quite possibly the best value in gaming right now and is extremely pro-consumer.  Similarly they have done a pretty great job as the steward of Minecraft with significant development effort poured into that product and still maintaining both the more open ended Java client and the more locked down and regulated C# based Bedrock client.  Again I get that a lot of this reaction is over Mixer, but that product was never going to claw away significant market share from Twitch no matter how many big name celebrities they convinced monetarily to switch platforms.  The streaming market is too stratified and it will take a major paradigm shift for anything to beat team purple.

The evidence I see in front of me though, would tell me that Discord who is already a market leader in the services they provide would be just fine under the umbrella of Microsoft.  Chances are the funding would allow them to grow and expand product offerings and maybe just maybe utilize some of the streaming tech.  I can see a future where the Xbox client is replaced by a modified version of Discord that offers all of the same functionality.  It seems like a pretty good future to me honestly.

Leveling Aftermath

Hey Friends! I did some nonsense this weekend. When we last spoke… and yes I am treating this blog like a two way conversation even though I am the one hogging this discussion… I was talking about leveling using the Jesters Festival buff and Dark Anchor grinding in Alik’r Desert. Since that post I have finished off my Two Hander Warden and decided to set a new target of my Destruction Necromancer. Since that previous goal that I didn’t talk about… I have finished off that character as well and dinged 50 last night during Walking Dead. As a result I am once again setting a new mission to work on Belghast Thornbite aka my Nightblade that will ultimately be bow/dual wield.

So I feel like at this point some perspective is needed. I am doing this because my joy in Elder Scrolls Online is casually working my way through quest content. However I also suffer from this annoyance that as I am leveling alts… I am not also contributing to my account as a whole. Champion Points are an alternate advancement system much like Paragon Points from Diablo 3. The more you play the game the more you get access to additional perks and while leveling through content I would love to know that at least on some level I am advancing the overall ranking of my account. This is ultimately what lead me to power level my alts using this experience buff so that I can return to leveling them slowly but also be improving my account level as well.

So you might be asking yourself… what amount of time did it actually take you to level your Necromancer since it started the lowest level. The problem with this notion is I have no clue how much play time I had actually spent prior to starting this. If I type /played in game it shows that I have 14 hours and 51 minutes on this character and I would say a maximum of 2 hours was spent prior to this grind. So that leaves you with an estimate of around 13 hours to level all the way up using Dark Anchors and overlapping the Jesters Festival buff and Experience Scrolls. Not exactly the fastest thing in the world with the core problem that things slow down significantly once you pass your 20s and again in your 30s and 40s.

It also greatly depends on how good the group is that you are with. If they are active and tagging every single mob then you are going to reap the benefit of a significant amount more experience than just from closing the Dark Anchor. So for example in the above group I can see that two people are now showing up as being in combat meaning that there are two people who are just soaking up experience while semi-afk. Ultimately that harms everyone in the group and I probably should have kicked them out given that I was leading this alphabet party.

Another thing that I talked about in the last post was the AutoInvite addon. If you are looking to do large scale group content, then I would suggest going ahead and downloading this. Ultimately this is what allows folks to auto invite when a phase is typed in chat. There was no Z group and there were no openings in X or Y and as such I decided to fill that role. It is super easy to turn on and all I had to type was “/ai z” to assume the mantle of inviting people off the “z” trigger. To turn it off likewise was just typing “/ai” without an argument. It seems like there is always a struggle to find someone to take a group over when the previous leader needs to leave. When I was nearing 50 I started trying to find a replacement and ultimately did so that the group could continue on after I tagged out. For reference here is the addon and its requirement.

So you might be telling yourself that 13 hours is still a really long time to level in an MMORPG. This is very true but I ended up streaming my original leveling experience in Elder Scrolls Online and it was somewhere between 40 and 50 hours. For reference on my main character that I have spent the majority of my time playing over the years I have 21 days 9 hours and 42 minutes of play time, which sounds like a lot but is on par with the amount of time I have spent in Destiny 2 for example. Essentially for me personally that 13 hour investment per character will let me feel better about leveling them in the long fun given that I am just able to enjoy quest content while knowing my account is improving as a result.

AggroChat #339 – Aggressively Helpful Cartels

Hey Folks!  We missed last week because Bel was knocked a little bit down after his second Covid-19 Vaccination, but all is well and we are back this week.  We end up running quite a little bit over on this show.  We start talking about the unrealistic expectations of gamers and the nonsensical $10,000 MMO Kickstarter.  We talk about what the Disney Plus Marvel One Shot series are doing and how we have never quite seen this sort of thing before.  We talk relatively spoiler free about Falcon and Winter Soldier, and then say goodbye to Duck Tales.  From there we talk about Elder Scrolls Online and the semi-spontaneous return to the game and all of the content we have been playing.

Topics Discussed:

  • The $10,000 MMO
    • DreamWorld
    • Discussion about unrealistic expectations in gaming
  • Disney Plus Marvel Shows
    • Television version of a “Event Book”
    • Falcon and the Winter Soldier
    • Expectations for Star Wars Oneshots
  • Goodbye Duck Tales
  • Elder Scrolls
    • Returning to the Game
    • Jesters Festival
    • Extreme Amount of Content
    • Oddities of Guild Traders
    • Dark Anchor Leveling Nonsense

Of Jesters and Dolmen

This mornings blog post is largely going to be common knowledge for anyone who has been around the game for awhile, but given that this is my very first Jesters Festival I thought I would share it with my readers who might be returning to the game. Right now there is an event going that has a bunch of sub components, but the big one is a “Pie” that goes into your tool inventory that when used gives you a 2 hour long buff that effectively doubles your experience gain. There are a number of other activities that happen during this event and you can find the official blog post here. Also if you are so inclined there are numerous video guides going over the various activities and events. Since this only lasts a week I thought I should probably make this my Friday post in case someone else wants to do the thing that I am doing.

When it comes to MMORPGs I tend to be on the digital hoarder spectrum and my bank vault is littered with items that I have acquired but never got around to using. As such I had a number of Grand Gold Coast Experience Scrolls and Crown Experience Scrolls sitting there wasting. I’ve been slowly working on my Warden, given that I want it to be my next max level character. However while questing on him there has been a part of me that wishes I could just leap straight to 50 so that I could start gaining Champion Levels for my account instead of traditional levels. With this event already giving me +100% experience gain I decided to take advantage of this and stack an experience scroll. Technically were I wanting to take this to the extreme… there are a number of other experience bonus sources that I could abuse. Far as I am aware the best of each is as follows:

  • Purple “Training” set gear 7 pieces plus weapon +80%
  • Event Buff +100%
  • ESO Plus Buff +10%
  • Mythic Aetherial Ambrosia +150%
  • Grand Gold Coast Experience Scroll +150%
  • Pledge of Mara +10%

So if my math is correct that leaves you with a possibility of +500% experience gain. The challenge however is that you are going to rapidly outgrow a training set as you move from level to level which gets a little spendy resource wise for my tastes. Similarly Mythic Aetherial Ambrosia is expensive to acquire and currently going for in the neighborhood of 200k to 300k. Since I have a stack of scrolls and already subscribe to ESO Plus, I decided to go with those options for +260% gain. So the question is where do we go to grind? The answer is the same as it always is… Dark Anchors in Alik’r Desert.

For the uninitiated, there are three Dolmen in Alik’r Desert that are extremely close to three Wayshrines. By the time you have done a circuit of Dark Anchors, the very first one is respawning. The important Wayshrines in zone are as follows:

  • Aswala Stables Wayshrine
  • Goat’s Head Oasis Wayshrine
  • Shrike’s Aerie Wayshrine

Folks doing the Dolmen/Dark Anchor grind tend to use an addon called AutoInvite that allows groups to be formed by typing some phrase in Zone chat. If you watch chat for a bit you are likely going to see the phase but so far in my experience it tends to be X, Y, Z, or G. If you are new to the zone, the easiest option is to find someone in guild chat that is also in Alik’r to get your first wayshrine. From there wait until the group ports and then teleport to a player in that group until you have collected all three shrines. From there just follow the pattern and reap a ton of blue jewelry, armor, weapons and a truly shocking amount of treasure maps all while watching the levels fly by. You might check the Fighters guild and see if there is a Dolmen quest for Alik’r because a side benefit is you are going to max out that skill line while doing this nonsense.

For reference I was level 22 around 6 pm and shut down for the evening around 9:30 pm gaining 19 levels. There was a break somewhere in there for food and a few to get up, stretch and hydrate but all in all it was a pretty nice ride. In theory this means I should be able to finish things up tonight and then comes the decision if I take this express elevator up on another character or not. The truth is I play this game differently than most and the enjoyable bit is randomly questing around the world, not rushing to the end game. However since I am already at level cap on one character… it benefits ALL of my characters to be at the level cap while doing that leisurely questing. So I am contemplating taking advantage of this express elevator while I have it.

Side note the current event only lasts until reset next week, but from what I understand the Anniversary event is right around the corner and lasts two weeks granting the same buff.