To answer the OP, I'd have to say The Chronicles Of Spellborn.
More so the more you play.
But as soon as you log in....you'll look around and say "what the fuck is going on...?" because you'll be in a world unlike any other you've ever experienced.
Indeed, part of the addictive nature of the game is trying to find out what happened to the world...when it happened....where in time you are...what is the Deadspell storm???
Seriously..give it a try. It's free until level 7, no time limit. It starts off easy, and kind of eases you into the alien nature of your surroundings, the combat system, the political situation, and everything else that is...unique about it.
To answer the OP, I'd have to say The Chronicles Of Spellborn. More so the more you play. But as soon as you log in....you'll look around and say "what the fuck is going on...?" because you'll be in a world unlike any other you've ever experienced. Indeed, part of the addictive nature of the game is trying to find out what happened to the world...when it happened....where in time you are...what is the Deadspell storm??? Seriously..give it a try. It's free until level 7, no time limit. It starts off easy, and kind of eases you into the alien nature of your surroundings, the combat system, the political situation, and everything else that is...unique about it.
I thought this game was still in closed beta? Is it in open beta now or something? I'd been following this one, but have been away from the MMO-scene for many months and am trying to find a new/old game to play. ^_^ Thanks :-)
AoC isn't immersive. It is instanced up the hootza. LotRO and Vanguard's character models all look like they have a stick where it shouldn't be. If you want a truely immersive game, play Fallout 3, otherwise, I think the most immersive in the MMO genre is WoW.
Problem is if you try to rp in wow the horrible community will probable curse you. The community is what pretty much kills it in WOW.
I agree. None of these games can top the immersion of a pen and paper games where everyone imagines the world around them.
You are right on the mark. The Pen and Paper will always be the most dynamic, fluid and interactive.
True, but I'd have to say all those times when I was younger and my D&D group got together in all our self-made padded armor and weapons and took off through the local woods acting out our game instead of on paper was even better.
Then the occasional passerby that kinda-accidentally {more intentionally} got caught up in the action and ran away screaming really blossomed the immersion. {they were like a random NPC...rofl}
...I think I still have ligering bruises from those wonderful days...
Comments
To answer the OP, I'd have to say The Chronicles Of Spellborn.
More so the more you play.
But as soon as you log in....you'll look around and say "what the fuck is going on...?" because you'll be in a world unlike any other you've ever experienced.
Indeed, part of the addictive nature of the game is trying to find out what happened to the world...when it happened....where in time you are...what is the Deadspell storm???
Seriously..give it a try. It's free until level 7, no time limit. It starts off easy, and kind of eases you into the alien nature of your surroundings, the combat system, the political situation, and everything else that is...unique about it.
I thought this game was still in closed beta? Is it in open beta now or something? I'd been following this one, but have been away from the MMO-scene for many months and am trying to find a new/old game to play. ^_^ Thanks :-)
Problem is if you try to rp in wow the horrible community will probable curse you. The community is what pretty much kills it in WOW.
I agree. None of these games can top the immersion of a pen and paper games where everyone imagines the world around them.
You are right on the mark. The Pen and Paper will always be the most dynamic, fluid and interactive.
True, but I'd have to say all those times when I was younger and my D&D group got together in all our self-made padded armor and weapons and took off through the local woods acting out our game instead of on paper was even better.
Then the occasional passerby that kinda-accidentally {more intentionally} got caught up in the action and ran away screaming really blossomed the immersion. {they were like a random NPC...rofl}
...I think I still have ligering bruises from those wonderful days...