We need to talk about expansions...

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  • čas přidán 9. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 665

  • @IdylOnTV
    @IdylOnTV  Před 10 měsíci +10

    Use code IDYL50 to get 50% off your first Factor box at bit.ly/3Q0ghnC!
    What do you guys think of expansions? Love them? Hate them? Do they scare you? Are you a little baby who can't even look an expansion in the eye because you'll pee yourself???
    let me know :)

  • @isJumpy
    @isJumpy Před 10 měsíci +55

    Man this video is really well investigated and informative, and only after 22 years since 9/11.

  • @johnkuhn8718
    @johnkuhn8718 Před 10 měsíci +20

    "CZcams hadn't invented Logan Paul yet."
    I fucking love your brain bro lmao

  • @Direktorhkbergdahl
    @Direktorhkbergdahl Před 10 měsíci +76

    Do you mean that the developers of critically acclaimed Final Fantasy XIV made a mistake when they expanded the story of A Realm Reborn with the award-winning Heavensward expansion up to level 60?

    • @Excendre
      @Excendre Před 10 měsíci +31

      I think the major difference between XIV and other expansion-based titles is that they keep the old content in tact for new players to experience mostly the same as day 1 players. (excluding 1.0 ofc)
      Everyone takes the same journey.

    • @SobaSugoi
      @SobaSugoi Před 10 měsíci +4

      Exactly, and although the grind to catch up can be tedious, it's just as rewarding an experience that you can relate to with both veteran and new players alike.@@Excendre

    • @yuukizaki3163
      @yuukizaki3163 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Apparently our “mmo president” is out of touch.

    • @toxicginger6916
      @toxicginger6916 Před 10 měsíci +2

      ​​​@@Excendre Isn't WoW the only mmo out there with this expac model, the most popular mmos atm are WoW? FFXIV, ESO and like OSRS, I dont really know abt guild wars but i dont think they raise the gear cap every xpac considerinh they dont treat the gear grind like wlw

    • @Excendre
      @Excendre Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@toxicginger6916 FFXIV releases by expansions like WoW does, with the newest one Dawntrail coming next year.
      The major difference is that you are required to play every expansion in the game as a long storyline that unlocks the content as you progress through it.

  • @mategido
    @mategido Před 10 měsíci +73

    Thats why i love so much the way they develop content for OSRS

    • @IdylOnTV
      @IdylOnTV  Před 10 měsíci +2

      It really is impressive how much they put out and the quality of it all

    • @petermartinson5483
      @petermartinson5483 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@IdylOnTVyes but the beauty is, they ASK players if they think their changes will be a good addition, and if a huge majority is against it they don't pass it. Blizzard just says "fuck it, some weirdo will keep buying pets and mogs off the shop who cares if they enjoy the gameplay?"

    • @BenchMatthew
      @BenchMatthew Před 10 měsíci

      THIS^

    • @theodorejenkins6066
      @theodorejenkins6066 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@IdylOnTVthe quality used to be good back in 2007 and the mechanics are still good but compare any quest from 2007 to any quest set in kourend. Their lore department or whatever you want to call it just sucks now. Kourend doesn't feel like a fun real fantasy world it feels like a theme park for them to add new events into. The quests just dont feel the same. And no I'm not wearing rose tinted glasses. There are literally NO interesting cool useful quest rewards from the kourend quests the only reward from any kourend quest that's useful is the arceus spellbook which has some cool ideas but still just isnt good enough and also again its THE ONLY REWARD besides xp or coins for ANY kourend quest. Their quest writers have gone down the drain

    • @weberman173
      @weberman173 Před 7 měsíci

      @@petermartinson5483 the thing is.. asking players first is NOT the be all end all suggestion, sometimes a dev has to put their foot down and say "no, we will do this"
      Players are RARELY a good way to actually gauge if a particular feature is a good or bad addition to a game

  • @JoshIsnt
    @JoshIsnt Před 10 měsíci +76

    I think the most egregious aspect of the expansion model is the way it invalidates old content. Imagine if in an OSRS update they just said "you no longer have any good reason to go to Varrock. Varrock is old and sucky now, don't go there anymore, there's new better stuff." Especially in the case of WoW and the classic zones of the old Azeroth, it's such a shame to have deleted the beautifully crafted, highly intentional leveling journey originally envisioned by the vanilla wow team. Expansions by their nature are selling you on what's new, which in turn deprecates what's old

    • @activefireball8288
      @activefireball8288 Před 10 měsíci +3

      Like Destiny 2.

    • @slimysomething
      @slimysomething Před 8 měsíci

      Isn't that exactly what happened in Runescape 3?

    • @clarksmith494
      @clarksmith494 Před 3 měsíci

      I've been saying this forever. They work so hard on making these dungeons and then there's no reason to do them in like, a patch sometimes let alone expansions. ESO managed to stop this in a way.

  • @snowballandpals
    @snowballandpals Před 10 měsíci +144

    Never thought about it but I agree. The expansion model seems like a product of the times as a means to deliver massive updates via CDs rather than over 56k but that's obviously not an issue anymore and mostly just splits playerbases now. It also forces devs to make sweeping changes to the game to warrant charging extra $$.

    • @tlew360
      @tlew360 Před 10 měsíci +9

      It makes sense, each expansion that is released creates a system where you completely leave the previous expansion, making all prior content irrelevant. It’s basically making a new game.

    • @brandonkruse6412
      @brandonkruse6412 Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@tlew360I mean, that’s how modern MMO’s treat expansions but if you look back at games like Everquest that have something like 30 expansions now, they’re more or less just new content and quests added to the game.

    • @Aeycka
      @Aeycka Před 10 měsíci +1

      I've never thought of this either, but completely agree.
      Also I had an epiphany about WoW.. One of the main reasons why the game has sucked for the past ~8 years is that it has too many Systems. But obviously the hands of the devs are pretty much forced, as they kind of have to make new Systems for each expansion 🤔

    • @throwaway5012
      @throwaway5012 Před 10 měsíci +5

      I'm glad this was the top comment. Came to point out exactly this: Expansions got started because to add a substantial amount of content required an installation. Which was physical media. That had to be shipped to retailers. In a store.
      Runescape didn't have expansions because it required so little local file space.

    • @Ahrimas
      @Ahrimas Před 10 měsíci

      That's actually really smart, I never thought about it that way

  • @navypilot47
    @navypilot47 Před 10 měsíci +22

    I think something you didn't really cover about early expansions was that the internet wasn't nearly as fast back in the late nineties and early 2000s, so if you had a big game you had to buy the disc and install it, there wasn't much in the way of online downloaded games of that scale, because for a ton of people they would be almost impossible to download. I think expansions helped cater to those people as well, because it meant very little data was spent keeping the game up to date, which could severely impact how much you could play the game. RuneScape, being a low poly browser based game, didn't really have that issue.

    • @ritokazoriv
      @ritokazoriv Před 10 měsíci +2

      I sometimes still get nostalgia to play RuneScape in a browser

  • @psyjinx
    @psyjinx Před 10 měsíci +17

    Shoutout to my boy Guild Wars 2 for horizontal progression.

  • @Jethropeth
    @Jethropeth Před 10 měsíci +166

    My favourite OSRS propaganda channel. Love it

    • @ialphasoul2460
      @ialphasoul2460 Před 10 měsíci +10

      He has that J1mmy Vibe

    • @SetariM
      @SetariM Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@ialphasoul2460 Honestly surprised J1mmy hasn't done some sort of video collab with Idyl yet, tbh. Idyl's content about OSRS/MMORPGs in general is always spot on, if a little generic sometimes

    • @ellescer
      @ellescer Před 10 měsíci

      It’s literally the peak of the mmorpg genre

    • @IdylOnTV
      @IdylOnTV  Před 10 měsíci +7

      This video wasn't meant to be OSRS propaganda, but it very quickly turned into that (and i'm not mad about it)

    • @Jethropeth
      @Jethropeth Před 10 měsíci

      @@IdylOnTV I for one embrace the propaganda

  • @osrsonly911
    @osrsonly911 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Your gollum Impression was awesome! It's like you were born to be him!

  • @tronam
    @tronam Před 10 měsíci +6

    Kinda true, hence the phrase “You don’t play the game. You play the expansion.”

  • @yomooma
    @yomooma Před 10 měsíci +15

    One thing I wish he touched on is that expansions, or at least the WoW model of expansions, typically come at the cost of destroying existing systems and progression. Burning Crusade gave a lot of items nonsensical MAXIMUM level caps, where you would reach, say, lvl 63 and an item would no longer benefit you. This was all to ensure that the only endgame content that would ever matter would come from the newest expansion, all for this process to repeat itself every time Blizzard decided they needed 40 dollars

  • @ingydegmar2060
    @ingydegmar2060 Před 10 měsíci +8

    In rs3, before it was rs3, Prifddinas was released. Alongside it was a grand exchange in the centre, with a teleport lodestone. The Max guild was also released, with it's own teleport and grand exchange. All of this resulted in a slow decrease of population at the main grand exchange, it's features and teleports were inferior to the new ones.
    I remember starting a new account and visiting the ge and it felt almost abandoned. Room for a thousand charackters but there were more npcs than actual ppl.
    Of course Prifddinas needed to have something big to keep people there, a new and improved hub.
    But I believe it's important for new players to see an active hub to see max players , high end gear, stuff they can also reach one day, or just to see that the game is thriving.
    Expansions like you mention in the video have a same ring to it though I must say I have no experience with other MMO's.

    • @Sir_Lagg_A_Lot
      @Sir_Lagg_A_Lot Před 10 měsíci +2

      I agree, but one more point to add is that the grand exchange is much bigger than it needed to be. They wanted to make it look impressive when they released it, but now it looks empty.

  • @FoulMouthFishing666
    @FoulMouthFishing666 Před 10 měsíci +10

    Drspite it's flaws, Runescape remains the epitome of what an MMO should be imo. Only game I've played consistently for damn near 20 years.

  • @Deathrydar
    @Deathrydar Před 10 měsíci +7

    There is a reason why WOW classic and EQ classic are so popular- I remember when TBC released, 45 mins into Outland, a green dropped that rivaled my T2 gear. This is the problem- developers have no idea how to scale a game. You don't create an expansion and make the previous content irrelevant. On the contrary, you should expand on the game and move it forward in a progressive manner. Being that Blizzard screwed the game up once, I have little faith that they will not ruin Classic if they do indeed release Classic plus.

    • @AeriFyrein
      @AeriFyrein Před 10 měsíci

      Another reason that basically anyone who plays that clip of Brack saying "you think you wanted, but you don't" tends to forget is just how bad retail WoW was at the time that Classic was finally launched.
      Yes, *some* people wanted Vanilla/Classic servers at the time of that Blizzcon. However, the Classic wouldn't have been *nearly* as big of a success had it been launched at that exact moment in time.
      Classic was finally announced during the Blizzcon just after the launch of Legion. Legion, while arguably one of the better expansions of the game, didn't really have the time needed at this point - only 2-3 months into the expansion - to bring back the playerbase from the massive decline that Warlords of Draenor caused. Classic was then launched in 2019, square in the middle of Battle for Azeroth - one of the *worst* rated expansions in the games' history. Retail was, at that time Classic launched, essentially at an all-time low point for the game.
      Would Classic have been a success had it been launched in 2013? Quite possibly. WoW was still extraordinarily massive at that point, and no doubt a lot of people would have gone to see what the hype was about. But, would it have drawn nearly as much interest when the retail game was still in a decent state? Very doubtful.
      EQ progression servers kind of fall into the same boat. By the time they were eventually launched, the retail game had gone through a couple expansions that were not well liked. WoW had also launched a couple years prior, and a significant portion of the playerbase - like basically every other MMO and MMO-like game at the time - had moved to that game. So, like retail WoW above, the state of retail EQ at the time was not super fantasic.
      So many people miss this absolutely massive fact about these types of classic/vanilla/progression servers when talking about them.

  • @_ikako_
    @_ikako_ Před 3 měsíci +2

    I feel like eso is the Voldemort of mmo since no one ever seems to mention it in discussions about MMOs. I quite like the dlc model that game has, there's the main stories which are all base-game and the dlcs just either have their own story or follow the main story. This way, new players and people without the dlc don't feel like they're in the middle of a story they don't know the start of, while still expanding the lore of the universe.
    Also you get all the dlcs with the monthly subscription so you don't have to buy them all just to play the content

  • @CreativeExcusesGaming
    @CreativeExcusesGaming Před 10 měsíci +6

    An OSRS creator said Rs3 is still Runescape 😮 Beautiful. It really is still runescape, just different than OSRS obviously.
    But the real question is, why no mention of ESO and its fairly rough and expensive update schedule and cadence? Major chapter/expansion every year with 3 other (mostly) paid updates a year.

  • @SwedetasticGames
    @SwedetasticGames Před 10 měsíci +5

    Most expansions now don't feel like they, y'know, EXPAND the game. Instead they are mostly self-contained content zones with some new patches before it all repeats and aaaaaaalllll the years, or in WoW's case, DECADES, of previous content is left to rot and be irrelevant. WoW has gotten to the point where each expansion makes the game feel smaller and smaller.

    • @TheBaldr
      @TheBaldr Před 10 měsíci

      All I do is play old content in retail wow. It is not rotting thanks to the both the scaling system and pure tons and tons of content. I hardly ever get bored. I had to stop myself because I wanted to catch on some current content for patch 10.2

    • @SwedetasticGames
      @SwedetasticGames Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@TheBaldr Running things for transmog and mounts when the bosses pose 0 threat to you and die in 1-10 seconds is not "keeping it relevant". Keeping it relevant, in the way it was designed to be interacted with, would require a very different approach.

  • @The-Lost-Librarian
    @The-Lost-Librarian Před 10 měsíci +22

    There are some that are theorizing that at Blizzcon, they are going to reveal WoW Classic +, which will add small updates to that time era, instead of expansions. Maybe like a split multiverse moment, which is maybe similar to what is done in Runescape and will put the game in a new direction while keeping everyone in the zones and era they enjoyed.

    • @brandonkruse6412
      @brandonkruse6412 Před 10 měsíci +4

      I think we’re still a few years out from Classic+ considering a few months ago Brian Birmingham said that the Classic team didn’t have the staff nor the budget to develop and write new content.

    • @larryw5533
      @larryw5533 Před 10 měsíci

      ​@@brandonkruse6412 they already developed the content with the first expansions 15 years ago😂. It's basically a remake with minor changes.

    • @Rated_Gnar
      @Rated_Gnar Před 10 měsíci

      There were many things already developed from alpha, but were cut before the beta. Some things in beta were also cut before release. A lot of those developments are things people want to see in the game. They'd have to find out where it is, dust it off, clean it up, and add it back to the main client. That is a significant amount of work. To develop everything fresh with their already existing assets would probably be easier and faster at this point.

    • @Rated_Gnar
      @Rated_Gnar Před 10 měsíci +2

      But they could announce it, release the servers, and start to slowly add content. There would be a lot of hype for it and people would be preparing like crazy

  • @0lli324
    @0lli324 Před 10 měsíci +3

    hearing that little "hello" from mod mark sent shivers down my spine xD

  • @farkas266
    @farkas266 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Love the Golem impression. Very professional!! Much love!

  • @lowpinglag
    @lowpinglag Před 10 měsíci +2

    When talking about older MMOs, Ultima Online and EverQuest always comes up, but somehow Asheron's Call is never mentioned. Asheron's Call released the same year as EverQuest, it had 2 expansions over its 18 year lifecycle, and went with monthly updates.

  • @MythrilZenith
    @MythrilZenith Před 10 měsíci +7

    To be fair, in the 90's the expansion pack model was pretty standard for a lot of successful PC games of the era. Spend a lot of time making the engine and want to get more out of it? Design a few new areas, new units, new campaigns etc. and sell it all to the same install base who already bought your game. While it was really big with RTS games, it wasn't unheard of for other games to follow the same model. MMOs being longer form games with a more known install base, it just made sense for them to pick up a then-common model and use it to their advantage.
    In the modern world of DLC, microtransactions and battle passes it makes sense why the expansion model has all but disappeared, which I guess does beg the question as to why it's still the assumed standard for MMOs.

    • @MastaGambit
      @MastaGambit Před 10 měsíci

      The xpack model arguably fits the MMO genre the best out of any other genre. A constantly-playing installbase is literally the perfect format for that model; you outlined it yourself.

    • @jackalo34
      @jackalo34 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@MastaGambitindeed it's good for money making but bad for the game itself.

    • @MastaGambit
      @MastaGambit Před 5 měsíci

      @@jackalo34it's only bad for the game when a game has been going on for a long time with a lot of older xpacks devs don't do anything/enough to compensate pricewise for newcoming players.

    • @jackalo34
      @jackalo34 Před 5 měsíci

      @@MastaGambit I'm talking more about how xpacs tend to render older content obsolete by creating entire new zones where all the action gets moved to as opposed to just refresh/revamp or expand upon existing systems n content then companies are charging for narrower focused gameplay in the form of the said xpac. Also every game will eventually have a plethora of xpacs if they go on long enough thus the new player dilemma always becomes a thing.

    • @MastaGambit
      @MastaGambit Před 5 měsíci

      @@jackalo34That's a phenomenon that newer MMOs have been working hard to address, especially Guild Wars 2. So that's not a problem with xpacks in MMOs, that's a problem with individual games and how they choose to handle progression. It's a game design flaw.

  • @brandonkruse6412
    @brandonkruse6412 Před 10 měsíci +10

    OSRS has been the only game that’s continued to add new horizontal content without devaluing the legacy content.
    I’m still doing occasional KBD sessions for the pet.

  • @revleckbendon2745
    @revleckbendon2745 Před 10 měsíci +7

    Thanks for the fantastic content. Awesome video as usual, really appreciated how personal all these videos feel. All your videos, you really feel educated and know what you’re talking about, and I feel represented. Thank you for making these.

  • @Anodic
    @Anodic Před 10 měsíci +8

    Honesty, I never played Runescape as kid (didn't play any World of Warcraft either). My first MMOs were Wizard101 and Elsword. The first time I ever tried OSRS out was during the early months of the pandemic and I quit on tutorial island because it took like 2-3 minutes to kill a rat because I kept rolling 0's for damage. I don't quite get the appeal of the game as a new player.

    • @ultratronger
      @ultratronger Před 10 měsíci

      im like 90% sure they changed the tutorial so that you dont miss on the rats because the last couple times i did it i didnt miss
      i never played runescape until 2017 and i absolutely loved it, no nostalgia, the appeal is that its an amazing game with real quests, fun content, exciting reward system for everything (you do a quest and the reward is more content), updates are polled and players vote, updates are frequent and free, very social game, you never run out of things to do but not in the sense of mindless tasks, in the sense that theres just that much content, so if you get bored of something you have a lot of other fun activities to do, and idk this is pretty long already but there are more reasons
      you should give it a go again, maybe with a friend who plays it, since its so open and sandbox you can feel lost when youre finally thrown into the game after the tutorial

    • @zirtofion5982
      @zirtofion5982 Před 10 měsíci

      @@ultratronger "im like 90% sure they changed the tutorial so that you dont miss on the rats because the last couple times i did it i didnt miss" that's not the point. The point is that if they have to change the tutorial so you don't miss, they should probably change the entire combat system.... fix the root cause instead of the symptoms....

    • @ultratronger
      @ultratronger Před 10 měsíci

      @@zirtofion5982 its not a problem, are you dumb? Its the way the game works, they had to change it not because it doesnt work but to make new players understand it, how would they change the combat? Make you unable to miss? Then health would have to go up by like 50 times, so now health numbers will be in the thousands and thousands, whats next, adding abilities like in wow? Congratulations, you just suggested the exact update that ruined the game (Evolution of Combat) and is the reason why there are 2 different versions of the game (oldschool has 5x the player count)

  • @turek9393
    @turek9393 Před 10 měsíci +15

    Fans: “Paying $60 for a game that also has a $15 monthly subscription AND micro transactions is ridiculous and predatory!”
    Also fans: *Buys every $60 expansion and pays the $15 monthly subscription for 20 years while indulging in the micro transactions for cosmetics happily.*

    • @rpemulis
      @rpemulis Před 10 měsíci +3

      nah no way, that fight was fought 15 years ago. its a lost cause, so people don't talk about it anymore.

    • @boobalooba5786
      @boobalooba5786 Před 10 měsíci

      People are stupid, more news at 10.

  • @erikstrand9876
    @erikstrand9876 Před 10 měsíci +21

    Just gotta say I love your content man. Such a breath of fresh air. You are original and I appreciate that a lot

  • @zetizahara
    @zetizahara Před 10 měsíci +2

    As I former diehard WoW player, I was really hyped for cataclysm back in the day, because I love the idea that they were going to update all the core zones and progress the core storylines of the world. I really hate what they do now just releasing a new expansion pack with a new zone, and you never have a reason to play the core world any more. This the world of Warcraft doesn’t feel like a living world if they had of done something like cataclysm every time they had an expansion pack. It may not of been so bad. The other problem is the one you mention which is kind of like inflation of stakes. After battle for Azeroth, they release Shadowlands, which is set in the afterlife, which is just an insane departure from the level of storytelling that had been done up to that point. It is started to change the way the world feels it doesn’t feel like it sort of normal swords and sorcery, fantasy world any more, but some sort of bizarre cosmic Sci-fi instead. I hope they will do what you said with classic and just make it better instead of ruining it like they did with retail.

    • @V2ULTRAKill
      @V2ULTRAKill Před 10 měsíci +1

      You act like WoWs story wasnt always some bizarre cosmic scifi
      (It was)

    • @zetizahara
      @zetizahara Před 10 měsíci

      @@V2ULTRAKill That's just nonsensical. There's no difference between the storytelling level of vanilla wow compared to Shadowlands? Whatever.

  • @lucasvarela1591
    @lucasvarela1591 Před 10 měsíci +1

    I'm loving those MMORPGs essays. Surely will vote Idyl again for MMORPG President next year

  • @PluckyInc
    @PluckyInc Před 10 měsíci +2

    21:49 this implies that Andrew and Paul knew that Ian is into children. or is aware that christmas of 2020 is a canon event.

  • @TarregorsSrb2Channel
    @TarregorsSrb2Channel Před 10 měsíci +2

    the only good way to do expansion packs in MMORPGs is to have them include additional non-vertical content that doesn't invalidate the progression that players have already made, and among its new features, only include features that weren't even imagined for the original release and wouldn't conflict with existing game design, and if they didn't have time, features that had to be scrapped should be included as well, granted that they also don't conflict with existing game design
    that said, I haven't actually watched the video yet

    • @porkncheese1789
      @porkncheese1789 Před 10 měsíci

      So guild wars 2. Unfortunately most people like the gear treadmill that comes with every expansion. That's why it's so common

  • @TheRetifox
    @TheRetifox Před 10 měsíci +2

    I think Lotro could also give an example of good expansion, like before the shadow, which introduces a new starting arena, and new low-level zones. I don't think many MMOs add new low-level zones, which gives life to the old world.

    • @TheBaldr
      @TheBaldr Před 10 měsíci

      Wow totally replaced it's whole leveling system. Starting with the first 10 levels in a new zone(or given the choice for old starting zone), then let players(even new players now) choose which expansion to level up to current expansion.

  • @XionicAihara
    @XionicAihara Před 10 měsíci +19

    I tried WoW retail a few months ago and couldn't get into it like I could back in 2010. It's too massive now and it is way too overwhelming and the story feels too disjointed since I'm mainly a story player

    • @schoo9256
      @schoo9256 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Same, it sucks :(

    • @laurensitter5250
      @laurensitter5250 Před 10 měsíci +2

      Play Classic or Classic HC! HC brought me back and has been a blast so far.

    • @Guigasdm
      @Guigasdm Před 10 měsíci +1

      I played WoW since classic up to the big exodus to FFXIV. Take your time and do the story, pretty good... FFXIV I mean, you know the one with catgirls...

    • @TheBaldr
      @TheBaldr Před 10 měsíci

      I disagree. I think wow's leveling overhaul did a great job, though it can be overwhelming because they don't explain it very well. The first 10 levels should be done in the new player zone. Then you can visit Chromie in Stormwind or Orgrimmar and choose which expansion to level in. If your not sure, do one you have not played or Battle for Azeroth as it is the recommended one. This should give you some story. You can do this(~5-10 hours) until the current expansion, which is level 60 at this time. Then you fully get the story of the current expansion.

    • @schoo9256
      @schoo9256 Před 10 měsíci

      @@TheBaldr as someone who started playing in BFA, didnt do shadowlands, then came back for Dragonflight, BFA really shouldn't be the recommended thing, because you're already a major champion by that point, on first name basis with the king etc. If you're a new player you earned none of it. It pulls in all this stuff with the Titans etc and all these characters you're not familiar with and have no connection to. It was confusing af and it sucked not being able to follow the storyline from the very beginning and get to know the characters in their own right, because the instant you hit the level cap for old content you kind of have to go to the new content. Not only for levelling rewards but also social pressure if you're playing with friends.
      The current method of managing expansions via Chromie is *serviceable*, but it's definitely not GOOD. I doubt it can be, purely because Blizzard have the incentive to only let you level to current level in the latest expansion.

  • @Fade2GrayOG
    @Fade2GrayOG Před 10 měsíci +2

    I sure do love looking at the moon since I can still do that because it's only 2023.

  • @matte5705
    @matte5705 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Closed my eyes at the beginning like you said idk if it worked... In retrospect probably shouldn't have put this on while driving :p

  • @ruadeil_zabelin
    @ruadeil_zabelin Před 10 měsíci +15

    If expansions are done the way Blizzard has done them then yes. It absolutely wrecked wow. In case of FF14; they are absolutely required and have only made the game better. Sure there are issues, but overall it has become better every time.

  • @elliejohnson2786
    @elliejohnson2786 Před 10 měsíci +2

    ESO has expansions, but they're distinct for a few reasons:
    1. They DO NOT impact the main story, at all. There is literally zero impact on the main story, so the stakes never really raise, they remain the same across all regions.
    2. They very rarely change the underlying game itself, they're just adding a new region with more of the content people want. Sometimes they add mechanics and sometimes those mechanics are locked behind the expansions, but not always.
    3. They're meant to be played in any order, so you never have this disconnect of "Oh, I was supposed to complete Morrowind before Vvardenfell? No one told me!!" You can just play it in any order you want.

  • @spartendeath
    @spartendeath Před 10 měsíci +17

    One thing I will always praise Jagex for, is how they keep almost all the low level gear worth farming in OSRS. Whether its used in pvp as a low cost option so when you die you don't lose much, being dump with High Alchemy to train mage or being made via skill training So even at end game, you still see people buying and farming low - mid level gear. which intern keeps old content relevant indefinitely. That doesn't mean that every old content in OSRS is utilized but the majority of old content is still relevant. My take may be a bit bias because I used to play OSRS during the Golden Era of 2004 - 2006. I also played WoW during its Golden Ear of BC - Wrath Then I quit when Mop came out.

    • @adawg3032
      @adawg3032 Před 10 měsíci +7

      Yes the high alch value of items has basically ensured that even a mithril scimitar is worth picking up and alching. Because you can hold 2.1 billion coins, but can only hold 28 mithril scimitars. OSRS IMO is one of the best MMOs that you can play currently.

    • @BirnieMac1
      @BirnieMac1 Před 10 měsíci +2

      I honestly love that about how high alch acts as a floor for item prices
      It’s remarkable how well the OSRS economy models IRL economies; there’ve been a few studies over the year comparing it to IRL models

  • @m.b.7560
    @m.b.7560 Před 2 měsíci

    I wonder how people that say 'everyone prefers old mmorpgs' reacted to learning that indeed... 'you think you do, but you don't' was right

  • @TimWBerland
    @TimWBerland Před 10 měsíci

    weo weo gotta stay for the end for the extremely insane Idyl content

  • @pancake7183
    @pancake7183 Před 10 měsíci +5

    Wee Woo Wee Woo

  • @gorrvaskr5963
    @gorrvaskr5963 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Guild Wars 2 is the only MMO I've played where expansions actually felt like expansions.

  • @HenriquePhilippi
    @HenriquePhilippi Před 10 měsíci +1

    I always had this opinion about expansions. Thus the only form of monetization that makes sense in an MMORPG is a subscription fee with no expansions.
    The most recent case now with new world: I always invited friends to play new world, some tried. Those who tried just needed to buy the game and that was it, not so expensive.
    Now, with the new expansion, it's obvious that no one will be interested in testing the game anymore, after all, every MMORPG player knows that just buying the base game doesn't get you anywhere - you need the expansion. Buying a game + expansions without knowing if you will continue playing is simply not worth it, no one will even test the game and it will slowly die because players like me that won't buy an expansion for a MMO to play alone will quit too. If it just had a sub fee it would be a lot easier to get into for a month and try the game before commiting to it.

  • @kylepayton1036
    @kylepayton1036 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Your example is just like fast and furious trying to one up each movie. From heists and racing to doing whatever in space saving the planet

  • @TheAngelRaven
    @TheAngelRaven Před 7 měsíci

    As someone who played WoW from Cata to mid-Legion, picking it up for some of Dragonflight then dropping it all; The CORE issue will forever be the 'We must up the ante' mentality.
    No, you DON'T need to go from nation-wide threat to world-ending threat to galaxy-ending threat. You can make logical issues that are the end-all. Garrosh was an example of something that wasn't a world-ending threat, BUT he was a threat on such a large scale that the Alliance knew they had to step in and help the rebellion. Garrosh in power of a ruthless army that would die on his word are far greater of an issue than a Horde that could negotiate.

  • @kynikostashasch2218
    @kynikostashasch2218 Před 10 měsíci +6

    Final fantasy XI had expansions but they existed alongside the previous ones and base game, so the available content that was "Current" kept expanding. I feel this is the best model.

    • @coolyeh1017
      @coolyeh1017 Před 10 měsíci +3

      FFXIV is also similar to FFXI in that old content is evergreen due to the existence of DF and for new players with the trust system. Even older raids can be synced to as close to the levels the devs intended (well as close as they can due to potency changes, mechanic changes, design philosophy, etc but the fact is you can do content from the first base game even if you are at EW due to the level sync and item sync system).
      Also though some things have been removed (usually because they were outright bad or revped into something more well received) most content that originally released are still present and still have players doing such content.

    • @theremix54
      @theremix54 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@coolyeh1017this is a straight up bad comparison. Nobody would use a button to “skip an expansion” in ffxi. People in Xiv do this all the time

  • @Michael-hw3vj
    @Michael-hw3vj Před 10 měsíci

    Idk what I liked more the Golem impressions or the fact that the cataclysm part sounded like a spoken word metal song (9:58 for start).

  • @deejus.
    @deejus. Před 10 měsíci +3

    Oh no not the cops

  • @Justacheese
    @Justacheese Před 10 měsíci

    The golem skit was golden. I wanna see more stuff like it.

  • @wayv2638
    @wayv2638 Před 10 měsíci

    my boy idyl out here stretching that snapback to its limit

  • @RockR277
    @RockR277 Před 3 měsíci

    Ya know I'd never thought of this before. My long running mmo obsession is pretty good at not completely invalidating old content, but I do certainly feel the game changer type issue. I'll probly never get a fun DoT job again and I still haven't gotten over it completely.

  • @tonygoff7994
    @tonygoff7994 Před 10 měsíci +1

    Banger of a video, man! I think you're really getting the hang of the youtuber thing 😀

  • @thehaj5249
    @thehaj5249 Před 10 měsíci

    I thoroughly enjoyed that Golum impression

  • @LunarcomplexMain
    @LunarcomplexMain Před 10 měsíci +3

    And this is why I chose rs since back in 05 lmao, sure the 19k hours in rs3 were "wasted" in terms that I couldn't bring them to osrs, but man was it fun, could go back anytime, and did help me learn the game anyway. Never understood how the "WoW" model was so popular with it's fetch quests or kill x amount of mobs quests...

  • @rorykeefe8954
    @rorykeefe8954 Před 10 měsíci +15

    Call me an MMO(RPG) Boomer, but I always enjoy playing the exact update/version of the game that got me hooked to it in the first place

    • @biggrayalien4791
      @biggrayalien4791 Před 10 měsíci +1

      Pre-BB Maplestory does that for me, I can't do the grind but everything else about the game at the time just made the world that much better. Private Servers really saved old Maple

  • @EJB93
    @EJB93 Před 10 měsíci +1

    been enjoying your new content style lately. Keep it up buddy

  • @258thHiGuy
    @258thHiGuy Před 7 měsíci

    I also want to say that expansions made a lot more sense back when you had to actually go to a store and buy a physical game

  • @Nukizuka
    @Nukizuka Před 10 měsíci +1

    i feel the gameplay model for a game like runescape having 100k people just cant be the same as one trying to please millions.

  • @vinceb8123
    @vinceb8123 Před 10 měsíci

    WEEWOOOWEEWOOO
    Also i thought your gollum impression was spot on man

  • @theavocadoguitarist.1823
    @theavocadoguitarist.1823 Před 6 měsíci

    16:15 THIS IS THE FIRST TIME IGE EVER SEEN A HORDE VERSION OF THE VANILLA WOW BOX

  • @matus19971
    @matus19971 Před 10 měsíci

    Can't believe you actually got the Gollum VA to help you out with this video!
    Edit: WEEEWOOO WEEEWOO

  • @danielturner1891
    @danielturner1891 Před 10 měsíci

    as a DougDoug watcher, I'm quite familiar with the "WEE WOO, WEE WOO!!!"

  • @darrendazcox
    @darrendazcox Před 10 měsíci +1

    wow, who knew this video would be a contender for best video of the year - well done and well said Idyl!!!!

  • @TemporaryTony
    @TemporaryTony Před 10 měsíci +1

    is that a mic duct taped to another mic? If so, awesome.

  • @MusPuiDiTe
    @MusPuiDiTe Před 10 měsíci +1

    Yeah, the payed expansions on top subscriptions are a little bit much, but there are also games which have no sub, only payed expansions, and that's an approach I can get behind to! ...that's how I discovered and fell in love with Guild Wars 2, which had free updates too, but didn't provide the push to the player base that expansions do...

  • @jax775
    @jax775 Před 6 měsíci

    I've not watched LoK, but the trope of a bad guy stealing powers sucks so much that it confirms my suspicions about it.

  • @thenerdbeast7375
    @thenerdbeast7375 Před 10 měsíci +1

    No mention of GW2, arguably the game that got expansions right? Horizontal progression that doesn't invalidate past content!

  • @cowboyclip
    @cowboyclip Před 10 měsíci

    10/10 golem impression

  • @OfficiallyLost
    @OfficiallyLost Před 5 měsíci

    Devs of games with large player bases need to realize before they release a new expansion, that everyone is still playing the OLD game they are speaking to radically change. They are playing the game, as is, with its current mechanics.
    This push to revamp a successful game in an effort to make it even better is driven by gread. That is why OSRS hit its peak player count a decade after its release. It’s not constantly bleeding players with new content sending people away. And constantly adds new players, or draws old players back. People play OSRS and Will always get the OSRS experience, plus with new content. Can’t go wrong with that.
    OSRS has the largest player base in proportion to its overall subscriber count compared to any other MMO. WoW has 3 times more subscribers then Rs, yet has only slightly higher daily player counts. Thus MOST subscribers to WoW are not actively playing the game.

  • @_tryze_1914
    @_tryze_1914 Před 10 měsíci +1

    the biggest problem with no sequels and never-ending expansions is in game bloat

  • @NavinLuke
    @NavinLuke Před 10 měsíci

    If you're familiar with the software development cycle at all it seems very similar to the Waterfall method, with big documented updates happening infrequently (which is the older method) compared to Agile method, with smaller updates happening at a much higher frequency

  • @Beastbrush
    @Beastbrush Před 10 měsíci +1

    I don’t think expansions are bad, it’s the way it introduced itself to the game, mostly what happens is that people get excited for the expansion but the moment the next expansion comes your work and time on the previous expansion becomes reset or completely irrelevant to go back to, I myself are in fault when I got excited with the expansions but when I put my time to get in even numbers with other players, my work doesn’t matter for it will become irrelevant when I’m loosing most or even all of my power in the next expansions.

  • @dka0314
    @dka0314 Před 10 měsíci

    Wee woo! Wee woo!
    The bit about Taylor was great btw lol

  • @Phuzzi
    @Phuzzi Před 10 měsíci +3

    You are easily my favorite person to watch atm. You've been putting out some great content. Also, "WEE-WOO-WEE-WOO, THE COPS ARE COMING"

  • @mikey1gb
    @mikey1gb Před 10 měsíci +3

    I think the arguments posited here against expansions in MMOs are weak. There are good arguments against the widespread practice of MMO expansions, but Idyl's arguments here are incomplete, don't address all of the issues, & are full of hard-and-fast assumptions that are so poorly thought out or incomplete.
    1) Regarding Runescape as an example of a successful MMO without expansion: Runescape is just a bad example of a 'modern MMO . Straight up. It's such an obviously bad example that I don't think I should even have to explain why it's a bad example of a "modern MMO," but here's one reason: Old School Runescape (OSRS) is not a modern MMO. OSRS's success clearly stems from the fact it is NOT a modern MMO. There is actually so much less overlap between Runescape players & modern MMO players than Idyl's argument seems to be assuming. Runescape is arguably not even in the same genre as modern MMOs like World of Warcraft.
    2) There is little discussion of the benefits of MMO expansions. In fact, Idyl appears to realize one benefit while describing the hype behind WOTLK's release in 2008; MMOs are social games, and having a ton of players picking up the game all at once (whether joining or re-joining) can be a GOOD thing. Sure, the nature of expansions involves peaks & valleys in player count. But some people really enjoy that hyped environment with tons of people around. It's an MMO, as in "MASSIVELY MULTIPLAYER." These online worlds feel better when there's more people in them! It's one of the things that made WoW Classic so special. He even comes close to fully addressing the fact there is more to this issue when he talks about how popular Wrath of the Lich King was as an expansion. The fact he fails to address any potential benefits of expansions in MMOs suggests the possibility confirmation bias affected his view from the start. At best, his arguments are made weaker from the fact he never addresses the benefits. At worst, he appears to assume there are no benefits of expansions over rolling releases.
    3) Idyl never attempts to argue why expansions are objectively worse than rolling releases in MMOs in terms of fun or player experience (as far as I can tell). He relies on highly sujective anecdotes from former WoW players to do the job (and these user reports can often be summarized as "lulz Cataclysm bad"), as if these short subjective reports can detail an issue like this in all its nuance. For one thing, these subjective user reports are comparing expansions to previous expansions - not expansions in general to anything else. Besides, these anecdotes can be dismissed with simple logic: why would you condemn expansions in general based on just the bad ones?
    4) No thought or discussion seems to be given to the capitalistic or productivity reasons behind MMO expansions as a business decision. I'm not saying I agree with the expansion-based business model for MMOs or the reasoning of corporate game studios in this regard, but not bringing them up feels like Idyl is shrugging at the idea of expansions, like there's an unwritten message behind the video unironically saying, "Why would these powerhouse MMO developers make expansions instead of rolling releases? Are they stupid?"
    I feel like there's way more I could bring up, and my own arguments could be bolstered with more examples & details, but honestly this is a CZcams comment, and I already feel like I wasted my time being in a CZcams comment section. If we wanted discourse, we wouldn't be here lol. I think just pointing these things out is probably enough for most of the people here to realize there is more to the story here with expansions in MMOs.

  • @baryony
    @baryony Před 10 měsíci +39

    Only white dudes? Dude, you have no idea how successful WoW was in my Middle Eastern country, and many Asian countries. I was a college student when I've started (2006, right before tbc hit), but my cousin was at highschool, and literally all the dudes and many girls in his class were playing this game. They've had a guild with somewhere around 200-250 people, and 99% of the people in the guild were from his school. After all these years, I still see a lot of people having character names in my native language while playing, and many of my fellow countrymen I know irl still play in EU realms. So, I don't know about the demographics of US servers, but EU servers had, and still have a lot of variety.

    • @patrickhenry1249
      @patrickhenry1249 Před 10 měsíci +18

      But don’t you know, only America exists and matters in the entire universe?

    • @Yltimate_
      @Yltimate_ Před 10 měsíci +3

      ​@@patrickhenry1249exactly

    • @rosamy2017
      @rosamy2017 Před 10 měsíci +6

      @@patrickhenry1249 and don’t ya know, all Americans are white!

    • @mcfarvo
      @mcfarvo Před 10 měsíci +3

      Idyl was making a joke there, so no need to get all "muh IDpol" ITT

    • @baryony
      @baryony Před 10 měsíci +5

      @@mcfarvo nah, he was talking about his own experience, and I was talking about mine. No need to act juvenile.

  • @atlasalexander7790
    @atlasalexander7790 Před 12 dny

    @0:52 I feel actually attacked.

  • @NerevarineKing
    @NerevarineKing Před 10 měsíci

    SW Galaxy's NGE is the perfect example of a game-killing major change

  • @aaallen23
    @aaallen23 Před 10 měsíci

    1.) No Man's Sky - Buy once get new updates forever for free
    2.) FFXIV -
    > A. Base game and 2 expansions For Free with no sub.
    > B. Monthly sub you get constant updates with new content on a fixed schedule but you also do get a new expansion with a whole new mountain of content (that does cost money). With amazing stories and fun things to do.

  • @NotTheWheel
    @NotTheWheel Před 10 měsíci +1

    Expansions as they existed.
    Before MMOs.
    Were supposed to be like sequels to the same game you were playing but for new shit to do with your maxed out character. Hence expanding the game. The problem with MMO expansions is they often expand nothing and then take things away to make room for the new thing. Also have a bad habit of making all past content pointless because new thing.

  • @TimmyTheNerd
    @TimmyTheNerd Před 6 měsíci

    I've always preferred MMOs where the updates/expanions were free.
    Like City of Heroes, which always released new zones, story archs, classes, and so on as updates called Issues (Like comic book issues), and their only expansion being the stand-alone expansion of City of Villains, which didn't need City of Heroes to play and in 2008 owning either CoH or CoV gave you access to the other game's content for free anyways.

  • @tahamohyuddin8793
    @tahamohyuddin8793 Před 10 měsíci

    I've gotta say, I've been loving your recent vids so far man, genuinely might be the most excited I get on CZcams when I see you upload a new vid. Those back in time skits and especially that ian nonce joke destroyed me destroyed me! Keep it up

  • @arcuscotangens
    @arcuscotangens Před 10 měsíci +1

    The worst thing about MMORPG expansions is how they dictate the story telling.

  • @cuminthesink
    @cuminthesink Před měsícem

    we need to talk about you breaking it down on stream, just a full stream of you break dancing

  • @TheMcCannic1
    @TheMcCannic1 Před 10 měsíci

    Always jazzed to see another Idyl greenscreen video. You nail this content, gj

  • @ItsSmurff
    @ItsSmurff Před 10 měsíci +3

    Idyl about to single handedly ruin OSRS with all these expansion ideas he's putting in Jagex's head lmao

  • @soupypunk-pk5ys
    @soupypunk-pk5ys Před 10 měsíci

    The RuneScape section was hilarious

  • @pierrefernandez1749
    @pierrefernandez1749 Před 10 měsíci +1

    With Season of Discovery coming to Wow Classic, seems like blizzard devs might have heard you :)

  • @BirnieMac1
    @BirnieMac1 Před 10 měsíci

    But if everyone jumped off the cliff first, you’ve at least got something soft to land on (sorta)

  • @d0onut
    @d0onut Před 10 měsíci

    Idyl is doing this whole CZcams career thing so he can write off wigs as a business expense

  • @gonwyte8534
    @gonwyte8534 Před 10 měsíci

    Ot's about damn time someone pointed it out other than me after eight damn years.

  • @fazeprogeralt3143
    @fazeprogeralt3143 Před 10 měsíci

    "One thread that ties these bad expansions together, is the devs trying to do too much".. Well, as a wow player since 06, that's not really true at all. The devs didn't do ENOUGH, like at all. Warlords of Draenor had ONE major content update. You heard me correctly, ONE. One major content update for 2 years. The 6.1 patch had like 1 raid (That was supposed to be released with the launch of the expac) that you can do weekly and a selfie cam, and they tried to pass it off as a major patch. Twas a sad time

  • @Jeszon
    @Jeszon Před 10 měsíci

    0:12 prediction of Captain America: Civil War, already in 2008?

  • @frostdracohardstyle
    @frostdracohardstyle Před 10 měsíci +1

    GW2 tried to do this and it almost killed the games. Expansions may be killing MMOs, but players will kill any MMO that doesnt do the traditional expansion.

  • @itsbluntygaming
    @itsbluntygaming Před 10 měsíci +1

    Something to cover in this topic if you do another part to this.
    Players are actively leaving expansions on purpose. Consider WoW Classic and Everquest TLp/Project 1999/Project Quarm.

  • @finchlongfield4670
    @finchlongfield4670 Před 10 měsíci

    During the whole video I already saw Asmon in my mind stopping it after each argument to comment on it for 5 minutes

  • @KrahyzHD
    @KrahyzHD Před 10 měsíci

    I like to think in your sponsor segment you're in your own earphones telling yourself what to do, like you wrote a script for it and now you're live acting it out. so when you nod like huh cool you're actually nodding to the instructions. I dont know why

  • @LoIazors
    @LoIazors Před 10 měsíci +1

    I was literally thinking the same as you said in the end, why don't they make the best version of WoW that everyone loved, and instead of just re-running expansions people are frankly tired of, do the OSRS model of adding content to "that" era, content that doesnt or didnt exist back then, make it fresh and community driven, I think they could benefit alot from it :)
    FF14 for me still does expansion based things with patches here and there well for me, since the story, music and all is so incredibly good, I can't put it down anytime theres a new drop