I can't remember where I first heard of this, or if any MMO has done it yet, but the basic idea is to have a 3-5 hour tutorial set 5-20 years before the time the game is set where you play as a child/teen version of yourself through historical events that would otherwise just exist in lore books. There would be different tutorials for different races and factions, the object being to make you look at the game world through the eyes of your race/faction and feel a deeper connection to the lore of the game world.
For example, you might choose to play an dwarf character, so you play the tutorial as an eight year old dwarf learning to work in mines, forge metals, grow mushrooms, etc, as well as learning about dwarven culture, until the end where your mine gets attacked by a band of orcs and you are the only the survivor because you could fit through a ventilation tube to safety.
Do you think this could work in an MMO?
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Lotro did something somewhat like this, but the past was not about you but some lore figure. Your version would be better for immersion, theirs for story.
Sadly at around HD and the arriving trait trees they've changed the tutorials, but originally the kickoff of the main storyline was the same for everyone (it still is, just shortened), which starts a few hundred years before the game's present, with the defeat of Skorgrím, and where the elf player is present.
The dwarf intro was much closer in time, when Thorin and his merry band (plus Gandalf) is departing the place for the journey to retake Erebor from Smaug. The dwarf player is present when they leave Thorin's Hall's rule, the seat of Steward, at Thorin's good buddy Gormr Doursmith.
Then a few months before the game's present Elrond has his dream and sends Elladan with a small company to the Refuge (the elf player is in the group because he was there when Skorgrím fell, so his/her memories could come useful).
There they meet a dwarven company, since there's no word from Gormr for a while, and Dwalin sends a group to investigate (the dwarf player is in the group, since he was there when Gormr was made the Steward of the Halls). The two parties investigate the matter together, since Elladan feels it must be not a coincidence they were sent here at the same time. (spoiler, it is not. )
The man and hobbit players join in more closer to the game's present, when Frodo and the Ring is already on the move. The hobbit player meets them hobbitses on the road near Woodhall, while the man player meets Strider on his way to Bree. (where he should wait in the Pony for a Mr. Underhill, by Gandalf's request)
Those races only join to the Skorgrím plot later, in the Barrows.
"We all do the best we can based on life experience, point of view, and our ability to believe in ourselves." - Naropa "We don't see things as they are, we see them as we are." SR Covey
If you play with woodden sword you will start as some kind of a fighter when you "grow up", if you wander in the forest you will start as hunter, etc.
They usually started with menial tasks like making tea, carrying logs, etc. for your master. These things would always have a hidden reason. They would be building strength in a certain area and teaching the character without them realizing it.
There were also the ones where the character was poor and just trying to survive by any means. That might mean taking care of the dreaded rat problem for someone even though many people seem to hate this type of quest.
These themes are often part of the coming of age of the character. I think that is supposed to be what is happening in MMORPGs during the leveling process, but it often doesn't feel that way. You start as a hero who is powerful and it's easy to get great equipment throughout the game.
I think this concept works better in single player games, but it can work really well in MMORPGs that don't have a story. This is basically what a sandbox game is if they toss you randomly somewhere in the game with no equipment, money, and idea of what to do. From this point you make your way up in the world by any means you can.
But no doubt your idea is much more in-depth, and, like anything along these lines, it could be great.. it could also tank hard.
I will say.. a 3+ Hour Tutorial.. is not going to go over well.
Some people liked this, others got upset since they couldn't go back to it.
I dunno, I feel that the entire leveling game of most MMOs have turned into a 3 weeks tutorial now.
AoCs had a 5+ hours tutorial (Tortage) and it was the most popular part of the game, if done right you certainly could have a starting area that was set years before your character becomes an adult.
The bad part is the single player thing, putting that much singleplayer time into a MMO from the start is a bad idea indeed. Just have a couple of starting areas you can't return to and set your character as a kid or a teen when they start there, growing up when they hit the real game and things are fine.
But having 3 hours forced singleplayer game at the start of a MMORPG? No way, particularly if you are going for a PvP heavy game.
Sure, it wasn't 3 hours, even if you include the jog from the shipwreck to Tortage too, it was maybe 1 hour total (up to 2-3 hours if you smelled the roses, explored, and did everything at night), but it was "forced". You switched to night when you wanted (for example no friends online, or nobody is willing to do the group quests), but sooner or later you had to do the singleplayer part too, if you wanted to dethrone Strom.
(true, you can leave Tortage while the blockade intact via the Smuggler, but then you can't continue your main story, just leveling up by wandering around)
I was struggling to remember exactly who you played. You seem to have had an avatar for every race.
It was much like the OP suggests then, but his idea would be better for getting you used to mechanics. Lotros is better for introducing you to the story, and that's what they come back to again and again, a hallmark of the MMO. Thanks for bringing back fine memories!
I felt it worked well in LotRO. In fact, I think most MMOs do a good job of introducing you to the story and mechanics. I think they could go a lot further, for example, not many MMOs introduce new players to grouping and roles and so a lot of people miss out on the unique selling point of the genre.
The Fable comparison....not for me. I personally hated the Fable tutorial. But then, I disliked most of the game to be honest, far too linear, far too story based, far too easy.
Rather than a tutorial, single player or otherwise, I would want MMOs to rework the difficult of their entire game. It should be a sliding scale, starting off really easy then steadily introducing more mechanics and more difficulty as you progress through the game. So, you start off solo, and perhaps the first 10 levels (if your game uses levels....) are quite easy and focused around basic rotations, quests, story and an intro to crafting. Then later it introduces grouping, roles, gets you involved in the stats. Then later you have harder group content, pvp, proper player economies etc.
At the moment, it really feels like you get 1 hour of super-easy tutorial, then 2-3 weeks of easy tutorial, then endgame.
Forgot to mention (and the post was already lengthy ) the "growing up" part in OP's idea.
With LotRO that is there too, but only for the dwarves - obviously, elves live much longer than this mere few hundred years could matter, and the other races enter near the game's present time. Dwarven characters however play both at Thorin's departure and near the game's present, and between the two there's more than 60 years, which is quite noticeable in a dwarf's life span.
The game handles it (as far as I remember, long since I rolled a new dwarf character) as the character is a youngster at first, a novice miner on the way to work when bumps into Gandalf and he asks the player to accompany him on his walk. (probably he has a good eye for adventurer types, like Bilbo later ).
60ish years later when the player arrives back to Thorin's Hall he is older, and the spokesperson for the group.
(on a sidenote, when later in Bree the players first meet with Gandalf, there's no separate dialogue for dwarves, and for them it is clearly not the first meeting. You could see it as the dwarf character was a really young lad and Gandalf doesn't recognize him... but I guess it is just simple laziness on Turbine's side )
EQ1, EQ2, SWG, SWTOR, GW, GW2 CoH, CoV, FFXI, WoW, CO, War,TSW and a slew of free trials and beta tests
I also think the tutorial should always be optional.
Some people can just figure things out and don't need one. Some people need one.
I also think one should be able to revisit it any time they want should they find that they have forgotten something. Especially combat tutorials and ESPECIALLY if the combat does things that are different.
Godfred's Tomb Trailer: https://youtu.be/-nsXGddj_4w
Original Skyrim: https://www.nexusmods.com/skyrim/mods/109547
Serph toze kindly has started a walk-through. https://youtu.be/UIelCK-lldo
"We all do the best we can based on life experience, point of view, and our ability to believe in ourselves." - Naropa "We don't see things as they are, we see them as we are." SR Covey
Yes, there was some singleplayer content in it but I still think that was the part AoC handled best. And I certainly didn't spend more then an hour in the solostuff (then again, it was 10 years ago so take or give 25% on any estimate).
In any case, too much forced solocontent is bad. That you can get out of it if you aren't interested in the main story is a good thing.
A starting zone is a place where you should learn the game and meet other new players. Do a basic dungeon to get the group dynamics right and figure out how your class work. Just putting a long solo mission there kinda sets people up for just soloing the entire game without teching them how group combat actually works. And that is a large point of having a starter area, if you just want to teach people how to solo you can let them loose from the start with a few easy soloquests instead and save all the work for adding more endgame content instead.
You can see my sci-fi/WW2 book recommendations.
It was a great move to give singleplayer into the player's hands. There's no "ok, you finished that mission, now you must do this single player part", neither "ok, you've reached level X, now you have to do this single player part to continue" like in many games.
The very basic tutorial to level 5 is solo (from the beach to the gates, tooltips on how to move around, loot, taking quest, the basics of the combat system, the first 2 skills), but after that it is totally optional when you switch to night - if ever, since you can play the whole game without the main story, if that's what you want.
You will miss some great moments that way, but besides a few story dungeons nothing will be gated from you, every zone, every group content, every mechanic and skill and gear is at your disposal even if you skip the main storyline.
And if you don't skip it, you still can play it the way you want, leaving it until you finish all of Tortage and then rushing through the singleplayer story part, or mixing it inside your multiplayer questing when you feel like it, evenly spread out those parts while you level from 5 to 20, it's up to you.
(a correction, there are no "classic" group dungeons in Tortage, everything there is open to all, with lots of ad-hoc grouping on the go. Which is good, because there are plenty of bosses and quests which need a group of people.)
Anyways, we are in agreement.
Tortage has the main zone with the city, and 3 large* (plus a few more smaller) public dungeons around, each with a normal and a hard mode.
*with large I mean White Sands Isle for example is larger than Tortage, so in practice it is a public zone but technically it is a public dungeon, since the whole zone has a hard version too.
Personally I thought they had a certain charm but it could get annoying if you got too many teams in the same dungeon, particularly if it was on the smallish side. I guess Blizz cut them out since they mainly went for smaller dungeons or something.
"It definitely brings back the memories of the original launch 10 years ago, when you see the totally empty White Sands Isle or the Underhall... Seriously, like after locusts, everything is wiped clean, and more players running around than mobs used to be present. And as soon as a poor mob respawns, players jumps on it and kill it right away. It is very hard to questing now, and ranged classes have a clear advantage in tapping mobs."
I can't decide whether it's a pro or a con in the topic of having single player tutorials... probably both.