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ColonelColt

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  1. Just a question, how do you know it's not stealth? Given your angle of fire, it's exceptionally possible on the first attempt for the guy to slip in from the right side and ninja the chest, since they don't have to be on the chest to loot it. On the second attempt you were busy fighting the boss. So how do you know it wasn't some stealthed guy running in and ninjaing it?
  2. You don't have to play something to recognize why people play it. It's called observational skills, something you might be lacking given your posts. I can look at WoW and see why it would appeal to people, I can look at TOR and see why it wouldn't appeal to people. I wouldn't have to play either to come to this realization, I'd simply need to do my research and some critical thinking. But of course, drones like you wont accept any critical thinking. It's either "love my game or you're a wow-fanboy who needs to leave", there's no middle ground for people like you. You simply can not fathom the idea that people can enjoy a game while accepting it's flaws. Your loss, I suppose. P.S. It's people like you who will be the death of this game. I'm enjoying this game with my bros and am even thinking about re-subbing. But then people like you come in "hurr you don't accept that this game is pure perfection, go back to wow" despite me flat out saying I don't play wow. YOU are the ones driving people away from TOR. One day you'll get your wish, one day all those people WILL leave just like you want them to, and then you'll realize "oh, wait, we needed those subs to prove our game's successful". Sigh.
  3. The problem is, it's not JUST the starting zones. Servers on TOR are simply barren, this is just an indisputable fact that fanboys ignore by shoving their head in the sand. MMO stands for MASSIVELY multiplayer online. There's a reason there's countless threads on the forums about this being a singleplayer game. The server pop caps are absolutely atrociously tiny for an MMO (again, the numbers for every planet on both sides add up to around 5k on a full server) and when you combine that with the heavy instancing, you're just alone. People don't play MMOs to be alone, so there's problems. It can also give the illusion that the game is dying because you never bloody see anybody.
  4. REALLY? You went there? Sigh, not even sure I should dignify your post with a response. But I will, not like I have anything better to do at the moment. Lightsabers, space missions, in depth story missions, companions that play parts of the game for you. These are hardly game changing things. Lightsabers are just glowing swords. Space missions are just minigames. Companions are just pets with added functionality. The only part here that's actually different from WoW is the story-based quests, which don't even make up a large percentage of the game. WoW also has guild halls. TOR doesn't have player housing and never will, and guild ships = guild halls just with a scifi twist. WoW also has operations (they're called raids) and flashpoints (they're called dungeons) TOR is nothing new or unique, just because you paint a SW skin on it doesn't make it different. It has most of the same stuff and what's different is the fact that it LACKS basic features of WoW. It doesn't innovate in any meaningful way, the only innovation being a gimmick that will get old in a few months. I'm not saying WoW is grand, but there's a reason is has 10million subs, and it's not because it leeches off established IPs and fancy names.
  5. If you wanna pay 15 bucks a month of a singleplayer game, that's on you. But not everyone likes flushing their money down the toilet, hence all the complaining.
  6. It might be active on your server, but on mine it's deader then the 'tor sucks' horse. NOBODY uses the NS GTN on my server, probably because it's out of the way and a stupid design.
  7. Numbers are numbers, unless Bioware is intentionally lying to us. Simply do the math. Go onto a full server, go to fleet, go to nar shadda, go to coruscant, and count. In the top left of your screen, where it lists players, it lists ALL players on the planet. Doesn't matter if they're in the same instance or not, it lists every single player on that planet. So if it says '100', that's not 100 people in your instance, that's 100 people on that planet, period. Now go through each planet and count, on both factions. Notice how those numbers will add up to around 5k? Funny that, huh? We don't need Bioware to come up and tell us something to figure it out ourselves. Just do a little investigation and it's painfully obvious that what I'm saying is true, and you can go and count for yourself. P.S. For the record, because the defense force always likes jumping down peoples throats. I'm not saying the game is dying, in fact I flat out said to wait and see. I'm just saying the exceptionally low server populations is why people think the game is dying. They get on a 'full' server with an hour queue and see a hundred people. Obviously that would make anyone think the game is dying.
  8. Lmao, hate drones like you. I flat out say I didn't play wow and the only insult you can come up with is 'enjoy wow lololol!~!1!xd' Pathetic. The newest expansion may not have the content of a full game, but then, it's not a full game. The entire WoW experience has five times the content TOR does, it's also the original, it's also polished, and it also has way more players. Any reasonably intelligent person can see why people would rather play wow over a cheap knockoff with less features.
  9. Empirical evidence that it's not? It's simple deductive reasoning and a little math. They had nearly 1mil pre-orders. They set up 210 servers. Why would they need over 200 servers if each server had a large pop cap? They wouldn't. It's not easier or cheaper to support 200 large servers instead of a few large ones. So if each and every server has a pop cap of say, 100k? 500k? Then why do they have 210 *********** servers? P.S. Also if each server has a large pop cap, why do you never see anyone? Even on 'full' servers you'll at best see 200 people at the fleet at peak hours. 50 on another planet, maybe 100 on coruscant or something. These numbers certainly do not add up to 500k, now do they? They DO add up to around 5k, though.
  10. If this was the case, why not just give us armor for free? Just make one big shop with all the best stuff in the game that we can go and pick up. That way it's not about gear, it's about skill. See the flaw in your logic?
  11. Because it's wow. It's simple logic. You have the original which has had 7 or 8 years of polish, tons of content, and tons of people. Or you have a cheap knock off with less features, less polish, and less players. This is why wow-clones always fail, there's just no reason to player a lesser version of the same thing. Not that I play wow anyways, I'm too cheap to play MMOs longterm since they bore me in a month or two. At least wow-clone MMOs anyways.
  12. Maybe that's why they want it to go F2P? Because it's an entertaining wow-clone, but it's not worth 15 bucks a month. So if it was F2P they'd actually play it.
  13. An hour queue doesn't mean much when the server pop cap is 5 thousand players.
  14. It's a misconception that going F2P means an MMO has failed. There are plenty of F2P MMOs that make a profit and are financially successful. They may not be some giant juggernaught, but then, not even P2P mmos are. The second larges AAA MMO out there uses a hybrid P2p and F2P model and it's doing just fine. If TOR was F2P it'd prolly see an even larger playerbase since there are a lot of people who don't wanna fork money on another wow clone, but would be willing to play it if it was free. And from there, if they enjoy the game, they buy things for it. Companies are only ever worried about going F2P if they know their game isn't good. With a P2P model players are essentially blackmailed into playing. They've paid for it and they want to feel justified, they don't want buyers remorse so they keep playing. Then they've spent the time building up their char and would feel bad for just leaving and letting all that money and time go to waste, so they keep subbing. With a F2P model that fear isn't there, so if the game's bad, people will just up and leave without a care in the world. Only good games can survive with a F2P model. So going F2P only marks the death of an MMO if that MMO was a ****** wow-clone to begin with.
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