A Month in Gaming
So much for the New Year. January has now been and gone and 2020 just seems to be barrelling along. As ever, due to my real world commitments, I’ve been pushed for time over the last thirty one days. Therefore, most of my gaming has been targeted “binge” sessions conducted late at night. However, I do find playing through episodic content over several hours to be a very productive means of making progress in MMOs. So overall January has been an enjoyable experience, game wise. Due to my circumstances, I have deferred starting any new single player games and have focused primarily on two titles; The Lord of the Rings Online and Star Trek Online. Sadly, The Elder Scrolls Online has been relegated to being played just once a week, usually on a Wednesday night when I meet up online with friends. My exploration of Vvardenfell will have to wait until later in the year, as I cannot sustain three MMOs to any great degree.
Currently STO is celebrating its 10th Anniversary. To mark this auspicious occasion, Cryptic have released a two-part feature episode starring Seven of Nine (Jeri Ryan) and Michael Burnham (Sonequa Martin-Green). The pair find themselves transported to the planet Excalbia, last seen in the TOS episode “The Savage Curtain” and facing further “tests” as the Excalbians explore the human concepts of good and evil. It is a dynamic and action packed story which revisits many classic scenarios from the game. Seven has some killer quips and Burnham is a welcome addition to the ever growing STO family. The anniversary also offers an opportunity to earn a new hybrid Tier 6 ship, which draws upon Federation, Klingon and Romulan design. Naturally the ongoing event has meant that a lot of lapsed players are returning to the game and as a result, the Reddit Alert Fleet (of which I am a member) is exceedingly busy. However, there has been a degree of controversy over the 10 ship Legendary Bundles that is being released on February 13th. As ever the pricing is quite high (about £200) and Cryptic have decided not to sell these desirable vessels individually. However, this issue notwithstanding, it is nice to see the game thriving at present. Ten years is a laudable milestone for any MMO to reach.
I have completed the Vales of Anduin in LOTRO and have diligently applied myself to the new Minas Morgul expansion. I have already shared my thoughts on the first half of the expansion, set in the Second Age of Middle-earth, which I found to be narratively enjoyable but a little too padded with fetch and slayer quests. The same rings true of the other half of the game set in Imlad Morgul. The central story is sound and each of the secondary quest hubs has an additional tale that feeds into the main Epic Quest. But again when visiting each area the player is given a multitude of arbitrary tasks to do. I cannot help but return to my initial conclusion that Minas Morgul is not a genuine expansion in comparison to its predecessors. It feels like something cobbled together from outstanding material and lacks anything additional or bespoke. However, criticisms aside, my recent re-gearing from loot boxes, along with focus upon virtues and increasing my LI legacies, has certainly made my level cap Lore-master a far more robust and even formidable character. I consider this to have been the best gaming achievement of January.
Putting aside what I’ve actually done in-game over the last month, I would like to briefly mention “gaming news”. As someone who considers video games as a major aspect of my leisure time, I have always liked to know what’s going on in the wider gaming community, along with the industry itself. Hence I’ve always read a broad selection of websites and subreddits etc. Sadly, I am finding these outlets are becoming increasingly partisan. The gaming industry seldom covers itself in glory and often the behaviour and attitude of a large percentage of the gamers is far from edifying. Simply put gaming is increasingly becoming yet another aspect of the ongoing Culture War which blights contemporary politics and national dialogue. Rather than feeling I’m part of an international community based on mutual understanding and a shared, common experience, it seems that I’m habitually told to pick a side in some tedious, bi-partisan argument and then just shout at those in so-called opposition. I find this an intellectually bankrupt proposition and am ill disposed towards doing such things. I do not see any evidence at present that 2020 is going to halt and reverse this process.