Death Portal

Good Morning Folks! For those of you who are off for it or celebrate it, Happy Martin Luther King Jr. Day. I’m choosing to celebrate it… by stacking up a bunch of appointments and then trying to speed run my way through them. So essentially I will be out and about this morning but I wanted to sit down and do my normal Monday morning summary blog post of the shenanigans that I got up to this weekend. It has become a bit of a tradition for myself, Ace, and Ammo to get together Sunday mornings and run whatever strongholds we have unlocked for the week in Destiny Rising. Sometimes if there is time we run whatever event happens to be going on. For example we knocked out a 5 key run of Morgran’s Hunt which is active currently. I enjoy these little group interludes greatly, and any time I can group with Ace and Ammo it is a joy.

In other Destiny Rising news, I have fully unlocked the Jade Rabbit exotic Scout Rifle on all three accounts. Since there are now several Scout Rifle specific characters in the game, this really goes a long way into making them feel more beneficial. Slapping this puppy on Umeko or Kabr 2.0 immediately makes them feel much more solid for group content. I do wish there was a way to change the element of these weapons, but alas that is not really a thing. Basically there is an event running currently that through doing daily content you can unlock this exotic and a skin for it, and if you have not played Destiny Rising in awhile you probably should pop in to get this while it is available. I am not sure if this is going to end up on the exotic shop or not, but at least on my free to play characters it is a massive pain in the ass to gain enough currency through the black market to buy any of these weapons.

I also spent quite a bit of time this weekend in Path of Exile 1. Essentially I am trying to grind out two more of the league challenges so that I can get the same 34 point totem pole that I have for the last several leagues. Essentially I set the focus on grinding out as many Originator influenced maps as I could because you need to run essentially 200 affixes worth of content divided up in as many different ways as possible. If I were doing this with maximum efficiency, I would have made sure I was running only eight mod maps… but I did not do this thing. So a lot of the maps I ran were somewhere in the five or six mod territory making it take significantly more maps in total to grind this out. Essentially I just put my head down and ground until I came out the other end. I did have to snap up some maps off the market and it seems like the going rate for originator influenced anything is around 5-10 chaos each.

Now that I have completed that difficult grind, I am back to just running maps as fast as I can and have chosen to do so on my Ice Trap of Hollowness Elementalist, The character is a heck of a lot of fun, and does a much better job at dealing with the Breach Fortress maps than Righteous Fire did, because I am blowing up most of the screen at all times and also freezing it. Essentially the grind I am working towards is Quality Quandry and I am sitting at 39886 or 50000. Basically going forward I need to run max quality on my maps, which then combines with 15% from the tree, and 20% from running four sacrifice fragments. Regardless…. it is going to just require grinding out a bunch of maps and is honestly the perfect idle activity while listening to an audiobook, podcast, or youtube video. There is the additional side benefit of throwing levels on my elementalist while doing it.

One of the things that I learned this weekend is that you can right click your world and edit it after having created it. This grants access to a few things, for example you can slow down or speed up the day/night cycle. More importantly you can completely disable falling damage and completely disable the death penalty that causes you to lose items on death. I absolutely did these things because I was dying an awful lot and it was annoying me to lose so much stuff in the process. There is one thing that is extremely overpowered in this game, and that is any kind of monster that can poison you. Your health just plummets almost instantly from the damage over time effect. So I figured by disabling the item penalties I am way more free to roam around and run amok. I don’t play games for the challenge of them, I play games for the fun… and not losing shit on death makes things more enjoyable to me personally.

I’ve started on some semblance of a permanent base. There is a floating rock not too far from my original spawn point and I built a staircase up the side of it and then began flattening the top so that I could build a platform. This is essentially going to be my resource sink for awhile as I keep dragging rock of various sorts up here to start building away at a final creation. Probably the most important aspect is creating an optimized crafting area so that I have a bunch of storage chests that are all accessible by each of the machines. I wish the game had some sort of automated filtering system when it comes to chests, or at least some way of labeling each chest for a specific purpose. There might be mods that do this thing, as there are a staggering number of mods already available. For example I installed one that gives you the name of any item your cursor is pointed at, and another one that creates lucky mining streaks for ore so that it will produce additional ore nodes near the one you are mining when it procs.

Not having to worry about losing everything on death, has made the entire process of exploring the world so much more enjoyable. Firstly I want to now hop down every hole that I see because I can’t take falling damage, and the worst thing that can happen to me is that I get ported back to my spawn point. Secondly the entire process of pushing myself deeper under the earth in search of resources is just a way more fun way to play the game than trying to be careful all the time. Combat is always a bit of a battle of attrition and in spite of using your abilities to the fullest, you are always going to take some damage which compounds the longer you are exploring. I think for me this is the ideal way to play, but your mileage may vary if you care about challenge. I also really like the fact that I can just kill myself anytime I get bored of exploring an area and go back to base… rather than having to painstakingly make my way back to the surface.

I hope you had a most excellent weekend. What did you get it up? Have you been playing Hytale as well? Drop me a line below.

Voidbent and Other Goals

Good Morning Friends! I hope you had a very excellent Thanksgiving weekend for those in the United States. For those elsewhere, I hope it was just an amazing weekend. Last week I wrapped up a series of gear guides, and over the weekend I spent some time formatting that information and adding it to the New World Tools page so that you can find items for specific gear slots. When I started the project the entire intent was for me to be able to find a 590-named weapon for every weapon type so that I could use those for leveling purposes. It morphed however along the way into me documenting every camp I knew about and making sure the weapons shown on the loot tables were actually dropping. I had no clue it would take anywhere near as long as it did, but at least now I have a good series of guides as a result.

The problem with a series spanning three weeks is that there were a lot of other things that took place while that was going on. For example, I accomplished one of the goals that I set out for myself before re-rolling and that was to max out my armorsmithing and craft a full set of item level 600 Void Bent armor. While this isn’t the best set of armor by any means, it is sort of universally good enough for almost any mod of play in the game. The fact that I crafted it myself means that I get to take advantage of the entire item level without experiencing any drain due to my lower expertise. The benefit of the armor has been very noticeable and I can survive the higher-level areas of the game significantly better than I could before.

Out of all of the Greatswords that I saw dropped, I decided that Bloodsucker’s Sword best fit what I want out of a tanking weapon with lifestealing and leeching crosscut on it. Similarly, I happened to luck into a nice sword drop from Rafflebones called Jupiter’s Favor that has Mortal Lifesteal which will give me back a little life each time a mob that I have damaged has been killed. At some point, I would like to replace it with Deeproot, but that would require some more coordinated group farming to get. The shield I crafted from a pattern that came from the Halloween event. I honestly wish I had started farming those items sooner so that I could have collected an entire set of the item level 600 crafting patterns. Other than that I spent time upgrading my bags and crafting a full set of tier 5 tools. Last night while bulk crafting to level engineering I even lucked into a quad tier 3 fishing pole.

My immediate goal has been to continue pushing up my trade skills. At the moment I have been alternating between working on getting Engineering and Cooking up to level 200. I find Cooking way less enjoyable as it just requires large quantities of materials, but if I ignore it for a while I end up gathering up so many materials in the process of just playing the game. Engineering I can focus grind a bit better because right now I need so much Wyrdwood and Ironwood, but the lower level materials are essentially free. I’ve set up a base for this phase in Everfall and I can get enough low-level leather and cloth in order to keep the fishing pole farm sustainable pending I acquire the rarer Ironwood planks. At some point, I will probably end up focusing on other professions. I got furnishing high enough to make a set of trophies but it seems generally awful to level still.

I finally pushed the Everfall faction up to level 30, which unlocked access to a Tier 4 house. I purchased the one in the main town square across from the Inn and Trading Post. I contemplated where exactly I wanted my first home to be, and since I have had my inn bound at Everfall almost this entire time… I decided that was as good of an option as any. Right now my plan is to build back up my gold and then focus on getting a house in Mourningdale and a house in Cutlass Keys since I also spend a lot of my time in those two zones. At some point, I need to actually make my way over to Brimstone Sands, because for all I know I might fall in love with that zone. I am still chipping away at quests in Shattered Mountain because I am weird and obsess over doing things sequentially… I have yet to start on any of the new content.

In another time and another mindset… I would be preparing for the launch of Dragonflight today. I am not however and there isn’t any big reason why. I played quite a bit of the Alpha and Beta and thought the game was pretty solid, but I am just not drawn to the World of Warcraft style of gameplay anywhere near as much as I used to be. However, for all of my friends who are amped to be playing it, I hope you all have an amazing launch that goes smoothly and that the game reignites those fires of joy inside of you. For now, I am still finding myself enjoying my time in Aeternum. I still have hopes that we end up with a group of people at max level and can roam around and do some of the fun open-world stuff. However for the time being I might have to wade out into the broader community and start making some groups happen on my own.

What You Know about New World is Wrong

New World launched to great acclaim on September 28th of 2021, and then almost immediately took a massive nose dive into infamy. It suffered through economy-breaking gold duplication bugs, combat-breaking bugs that gave players nigh invulnerably, and a wide arrange of PVP siege bugs that caused territories to flip to whoever was cheating the hardest. It suffered from a horrible server design and a lack of a steady hand at the wheel that caused actions to land too little too late and made it nearly impossible to be able to play on the same server as your friends. The overcorrection caused them to suddenly spin up almost three hundred servers… most of which were rapidly empty and incapable of doing any form of group content. The game plummeted from a peak concurrency of just shy of one million players down to an all-time low of just under thirteen thousand players.

This is the New World that players think they know, as outlined in the “New World – Timeline of a Failure” YouTube video by Josh Strife Hayes. In fact, I presented my own string of blog posts lamenting the sorry state of affairs and what I would do to fix them. The game was in exceptionally rough shape and I even thought at several points it was largely unfixable. The thing is… I was wrong and most of the major points that I had have been addressed and vastly improved. However it was while watching a contorted “reactionception” video of Gaming Kinda reacting to ZeplaHQ who was reacting to Ginger Prime’s 5 reasons why he is choosing New World over FFXIV video… that I realized how wrong the community has it. The game that was actively being memed on by Zelpa’s chat just no longer exists.

This is how we land at the somewhat provocative title of this post. If you have been following the game closely, then sure you probably know the score. However, for most of you, I would imagine that you tuned out by this time last year and never looked back. New World however has been experiencing a bit of a renaissance and with it a resurgence of players coming back to the game. This is well earned because over the past year the team has put in the work and made significant changes to the way that the game functions. At the time of posting this, the game has experienced a 24-hour peak of 119,390 players, while also slowly pushing up their average player numbers. Nature is healing itself… or at least the game has been.

It is at this point that I am going to address some of my own complaints made in my 11/15 New World Concerns post. In that post, I made a series of accusations about the game, and most of them have been resolved in some way. So this morning I am going to go point by point and address them. If you would rather just see a list of the major changes, then I highly suggest this video from Demone Kim.

Point 1 – Bad Support Structure for New Players

This one was one of my less cogent points, but largely I felt like it was very difficult for new players to progress through the game. The main story was gated at several points behind dungeons that required you to find a group in order to run them. The scarcity of keys and lack of rewards for higher-level players made it very hard to find anyone willing to do said dungeons.

In New World now dungeons as a whole are far more rewarding to players. I ran through the very first dungeon the other day and was just handed a bag with 1000 gold in it for completing it. In addition to that, I got a number of rare crafting materials that can only be obtained from that dungeon, and weirdly enough even at the higher level I ran it… I found a significant upgrade. Dungeon keys have also been eliminated from the game for normal dungeons, so there is no “cost” real or otherwise to run that dungeon with your friends, and as a result, it seems like they are a bit easier to get going.

On top of that, the New World team has completely revamped the new player experience and not only added better quests and significantly more of them… but also alternate paths that you can take to avoid needing to do any of the dungeons. At any point the game would have normally asked you to do a dungeon, you can get an alternate version of that quest that is open-world and easily completed solo. Previously you were effectively required to do Town Board quests in order to get enough experience, and now… I was level 40 before I even chose my faction. The world gives you so much experience both from questing but also just gathering materials, that you are going to consistently be over level for any of the content allowing you to mostly steamroll it.

Point 2 – High-End Materials Are Worthless

New World suffered from this problem that players were farming the high-end materials at length because the only truly profitable items were extremely rare drops that required you to be wearing a set of luck armor in order to obtain them. The spectrum of resources was flipped on its head meaning all of the Tier 1 resources were extremely expensive and all of the Tier 5 resources were dirt cheap.

This was in part resolved by upending the crafting system and completely replacing it with something that made more sense. Previously the most efficient way to level a crafting profession was to craft 300,000 level 1 items. That is a bit of an exaggeration for impact purposes, but suffice it to say players ground through copious amounts of low-level resources to slowly tick their levels up. This drove up the value of Iron and down the value of Orichalcum, for example. Now the most efficient way to level is to always be crafting the best items that you can make. This gives purpose to all of the tiers of resources and lowers some of the pressure on that first tier. Additionally, they made almost all tiers of resources more plentiful, especially the last two tiers creating way more potential for farming Starmetal and Orichalcum for example, which the crafters now actually need.

Point 3 – Unobtainium Problem

Connected to the points above, the high-end materials were farmed not because people needed that much Orichalcum, but instead because they wanted to rare drops that could come from them. In order to combat this, you can now craft rare drops from a given tier of resource… by just pouring raw resources into them. Do you have a pattern that requires Fae Iron? Well, you can now just pour 50 Iron Ore into crafting a single Fae Iron. While it is a significant loss of resources it gives you a deterministic way of getting the resources you need rather than relying on luck alone. This changes the equation on a lot of materials and also serves to make the rare drops from nodes feel like a bonus rather than something you are grinding away for.

Point 4 – One Shot Group Quests

Previously there was an issue where like dungeon quests, there were a number of group quests scattered throughout the game that would require you to find a team in order to survive. The problem was that these areas could only be entered once, meaning that if you did not keep up to the same level quest-wise with your friends, you could find yourself locked out in the cold. Unfortunately, this is still a bit of a problem, in that you have to be on the quest in order to get into these areas. However, none of the bosses contained within these areas require a group and are now easily soloable even if you are using something like Healing Staff.

Point 5 – Item Watermarking

At launch, there was a system in the game called the “High Watermark” system that required you to get drops in order to push up your average drop range. This was an invisible system that mostly required people to keep track of their drops via spreadsheet… or simply keep the highest version of every slot in their inventory. This was sheer madness and honestly… the system still exists. It has been converted over to the Expertise system instead, which gives you a visible readout of where your item level is. Getting upgrades are guaranteed through running the end-game dungeons and there are also a number of ways to collect “gypsum” which can be converted into a guaranteed upgrade every day. These two combined have made the process of watermarking far less egregious and no longer require you to farm the same boss for sixty hours trying to farm incremental upgrades.

I still think the gear score system and watermarking are somewhat dumb processes, but it is more something that just happens on its own now instead of something you have to purposefully grind for.

Point 6 – Crafters Don’t Have Influence

This point was also a little contorted, but the problem being addressed was that crafters and PVE players in general had little control over the “health” of a given territory. This was made important for a lot of reasons that led players to essentially set up camp in a single town and then never leave it, making them entirely reliant upon whoever controls that territory. So a ton of small changes went into effect to chip away at this relationship, the first being that travel is now practically free with a maximum azoth cost of 20 and no longer takes into account your current weight. Next, they made it so you can access your storage in one town from any other town for free, making it way less important for you to focus all of your efforts on a single territory.

In order to lower the negative effects of territory changing hands, the team capped the taxes in a territory and also took a number of steps to make it so that every territory is viable instead of just Everfall and Windsward. When a company gets gold for holding a territory, it is a calculated amount based on how far progressed that territory is, making it beneficial for them to make sure all of the crafting machines are upgraded as far as they can be. Lastly, there is a change that is currently on the PTR that will make it so any “base” crafting items no longer require specific tiers of machines so you will be able to level freely regardless of how progressed a specific town is. You will still need higher tiers for specialty patterns, but since most of what you craft while leveling are base items… you can effectively do that anywhere now.

So while they implemented none of my ideas, the problems that needed addressing are more or less fixed now.

Point 7 – 2000 Player Limit / Fixed Servers

Technically this was the first point in my post, but I reordered them on purpose because I did not want to start on a downer. While most servers have been bumped up to 2500 players… this is very much not a solved problem. We even encountered this issue on our recent re-roll. Given that all of the above changes have been implemented over the last year, it tells me that the server infrastructure is a bit harder to tackle. We tried to make the best choices we could possibly make for choosing a place to re-roll on, and still ran into an issue where the server got locked out against new characters or transfers for a week.

This has now largely resolved itself, but it will always be a challenge guaranteeing that you can play on exactly the server that you want to play on. This is really the remaining Achilles heel of New World and something that I hope they can resolve in the near future. They are adding a cross-server queue for Outpost Rush, and it sounds like they are working on ways to do a cross-server group finder as well. So hopefully bit by bit they will start to chip away at this problem so that you can play with your friends regardless of what server you might end up on.

With this post what I am trying to get across is the concept that the game is not the same game that was openly memed into oblivion a year ago. I was one of the game’s harshest critics, and you can go back through my blog and read a number of posts where I was terribly disappointed and frustrated. However, I hung in there because there were certain aspects of the game that I enjoyed and just were not being replicated anywhere else. If you already own the game, you owe it to yourself to start a new character and see the game with fresh eyes. I am so happy I did precisely this because I am honestly having more fun now than I did even in the best of times at launch.

I am spending my time over on the Themiscyra server in US-East and playing a character named Belglaive. Character names are unique for the game as a whole, and as a result, Belghast is already over on Valhalla because I could not bring myself to delete my original character. if you happen to check it out ping me in-game.