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All Posts by Samuraisword - 1643 found

9/29/08 2:54 PM
Viewed 717, Replies 25
Originally posted by BlackBeck

i hope they do their best to successfully keep the goldsellers out, the plague of free to play games.

Well if they don't disable chat and the sending of tell abilities on these free accounts then they are clueless because Spellborn though less item centric than other MMOGs, still has "Sigils" to trade and sell that enhance your abilities, so there will be a market to buy/sell/trade for in-game coin and "Sigils".
 

9/29/08 2:44 PM
Viewed 204, Replies 7

I lost interest in this game when the developers flipflopped and decided to go with "lots of instancing", but I don't understand the negativity towards the permanent free trial design. It makes a lot more sense marketing wise than offering buddy passes or free trials later on. Every MMOG should do this from the start. As long as the developers are smart enough to disable chat, and the sending of tell abilities on these free accounts, I don't see the problem. I hope they didn't overlook that obvious necessity.

9/28/08 2:26 AM
Viewed 464, Replies 22

It's another item shop game, I'll pass.

9/27/08 9:39 AM
Viewed 423, Replies 37

Originally posted by Gameloading

I somehow get the feeling that not everybody who replied in this thread has actually watched the video.


 

It's kindly like voting for a candidate who promises change, but when asked about specifics, has nothing specific to offer.

9/27/08 9:35 AM
Viewed 73, Replies 14

What does the mortgage bailout plan have to do with voter registration?!

Why are the Democrats screwing around and thwarting the ability to pass a quality bailout plan in a timely fashion?!

9/27/08 4:46 AM
Viewed 258, Replies 4

Another item $hop game, I'll pass.

9/27/08 4:37 AM
Viewed 204, Replies 13

Well the most significant difference is the manipulation of mechanics to coerce and encourage purchasing stuff from the item shops. That is of course the design of the revenue system, to get players to buy as much as possible, regardless of the impact on the quality of the game, unlike flat subscription games, where the revenue system dictates a focus on game quality, to encourage additional subscriptions and longer retention.

9/27/08 4:31 AM
Viewed 516, Replies 13

bad:

instancing

no significant death penalty

class based system

linear task experience oriented design

small world compared to other MMOGs

no real harvesting/crafting system

raiding endgame

no looting in PvP

9/27/08 4:27 AM
Viewed 924, Replies 31

The Xplay staff likes easy games, they also love WoW. They often whine about games that have supposed grind.

9/26/08 2:20 PM
Viewed 113, Replies 4
Originally posted by Ozmodan

It is not a bad game, except that they introduced stamina factor lately that makes it almost mandatory to buy potions otherwise you can't fight when you are out of stamina.


 

All item shop games constantly adjust the mechanics to influence more purchases. They are designed that way. The goal is to make as much money as possible off each individual player, regardless of the impact on the quality of the game.

With a subscription based game, the developers desire to make more money also but to do so they need to increase the number of players and retain as many as possible for as long as possible. To achieve that goal, they have to focus on making a quality game. It's a completely opposite philosophy in gaming design, which is why I only play games with flat subscription rates.

9/26/08 5:00 AM
Viewed 215, Replies 6

Geez, why don't they just start everyone at max level already. Can it get any easier?

9/26/08 4:52 AM
Viewed 72, Replies 4

I play Civ 4 Warlords on Gametap all the time. I never get bored with it. I did play the original Colonization and it was a fun game. I don't buy too many single box games since I joined Gametap though because there is so much available on Gametap to fill my gaming hours, so I will wait til it comes to Gametap. Gametap picked up Civ 4 fairly soon after it's release.

9/25/08 12:47 PM
Viewed 715, Replies 41

Originally posted by Aragon100

Themepark games invented it.

Games like Everquest.

Boring games with "grinding" as their endgame.


 

I need to correct you on your application of the term "Themepark game".

The term was invented after WoW was released and describes games such as WoW and Warhammer etc. which seek to shorten the leveling process and lessen the " so called grind" of games like Everquest. Themepark games are designed to mimic the short  instant gratification of a thrill ride. The developers of these types of games don't want lengthy real world MMOG application of immersion and "so called grind" . They want players to be able to quickly access the content they have decided is fun, without having to earn their way to get there.

I personally like old school lengthy "grinding" MMOGs where one has to earn their way. It provides a much longer game, time frame wise, and for me it's all about the journey.

9/25/08 12:34 PM
Viewed 56, Replies 3
9/25/08 12:18 PM
Viewed 450, Replies 7

.

9/25/08 12:01 PM
Viewed 258, Replies 11

Lot's of stuff you need to have from item shop you can buy with Mommy's credit card.

9/25/08 11:49 AM
Viewed 156, Replies 9
Originally posted by patri0tz
Originally posted by RedwoodSap

And if the item is pointless, why is it offered as an enticement to buy the magazine? Hmm

Eh because the publisher of the magazine wants to sell copies?  It's not Mythic doing the enticing... I'm sure they couldn't care less whether or not Beckett sells copies of their magazine. By your logic, GW, HG:L and many other games are also "on the RMT bandwagon" since they've given out promotional codes in PC Gamer for pointless items like display-only in-game pets.


 

You really believe Mythic doesn't care if Beckett doesn't sell any magazines? Is that because Mythic has already received full payment up front for this deal? I don't know the specifics of this arrangement but I assure you that Mythic is profiting somehow. Mythic just didn't decide to let Beckett run this promotion for free while Mythic spends labor on creating and enabling the rewards. You simply don't understand how crossmarketing works if that's what you think.

I personally believe any in-game reward which is given for out-of-game reasons is a form of RMT wether it's considered fluff or not because those fluff items have an in-game monetary value since other players will trade for them. Same applies to preorder and collectors edition orders of a game when developers add in-game rewards or an early start as an enticement. It's all RMT. Items should be earned in-game only period, no exceptions.

9/25/08 11:19 AM
Viewed 50, Replies 4

http://www.progressivehistorians.com/2007/11/bill-clintons-role-in-mortgage-crisis.html

Bill Clinton's Role in the Mortgage Crisis
by Ralph Brauer | 11/27/2007 10:15:00 AM


FDR Signs the Glass-Steagall Act (Carter Glass on Left)

Many Democrats wish Bill Clinton still occupied the White House. However, before you put him in Mt. Rushmore, you might want to investigate his role in the mortgage foreclosure crisis.

The chief aim of what I have termed the Republican Counterrevolution has always been to roll back the New Deal. Anti-gov'ment rhetoric hides this as surely as states' rights hid racist segregation. Of all the New Deal legislation the GOP has sought to overturn, one that has always been at or near the top of the list is the Glass-Steagall Act. Ironically, a Democratic president repealed this for them.

Glass-Steagall

An unreconstructed Southerner from Virginia, Carter Glass shepherded the creation of the Federal Reserve System through Congress, which has caused some to call him the "founding father of the Federal Reserve System." Later Glass would serve as Wilson's Treasury Secretary, recommending aid to Europe after World War I. Just before leaving Treasury to become senator, Glass warned about banks getting involved in stocks.

In his economic history of the Great Depression, John Kenneth Galbraith pointed out one of the causes was:
The large-scale corporate thimblerigging that was going on. This took a variety of forms, of which by far the most common was the organization of corporations to hold stock in yet other corporations, which in turn held stock in yet other corporations.
Galbraith would note:
During 1929 one investment house, Goldman, Sachs & Company, organized and sold nearly a billion dollars’ worth of securities in three interconnected investment trusts—Goldman Sachs Trading Corporation; Shenandoah Corporation; and Blue Ridge Corporation. All eventually depreciated virtually to nothing.
It is hard to imagine today what it felt like to walk through the door of a bank in those days and learn that the dollars you had earned had vanished. Every day spent working and saving had been for nothing. A great many farmers, brick layers, carpenters, factory workers believed the bankers had stolen their lives.

When Franklin Roosevelt took office, both the President and Congress knew the banking crisis demanded immediate action. The result was one of the crown jewels of the New Deal: the Glass-Steagall Act, officially known as the Banking Act of 1933. Glass made sure the bill forbid banks from getting into the investment business. In addition, the bill established the Federal Deposit Insurance Company, which protects our bank deposits.

In 1971, in Investment Company Institute v. Camp, no less than the United States Supreme Court would write what stands as the most cogent summary of the reasons for Glass-Steagall:

Congress was concerned that commercial banks in general and member banks of the Federal Reserve System in particular had both aggravated and been damaged by stock market decline partly because of their direct and indirect involvement in the trading and ownership of speculative securities.

The legislative history of the Glass-Steagall Act shows that Congress also had in mind and repeatedly focused on the more subtle hazards that arise when a commercial bank goes beyond the business of acting as fiduciary or managing agent and enters the investment banking business either directly or by establishing an affiliate to hold and sell particular investments.
Many arguments the Supreme Court advanced in support of Glass-Steagall, would prove prophetic three decades later.

Bill Clinton and the Wall of Me

Billionaire Sanford I. Weill, who according to Louis Uchitelle made "Citigroup into the most powerful financial institution since the House of Morgan a century ago," has what I call the Wall of Me leading to his office, which he has decorated with tributes to him, including a dozen framed magazine covers. A major trophy is the pen Bill Clinton used to sign the repeal of the Glass-Steagall Act, a move which allowed Weill to create Citigroup. Fittingly, Citigroup is a major contributor to guess which current Democratic Presidential candidate?

A Frontline report on the repeal of Glass-Steagall shows how those with money end up with pens from the President of the United States on their walls.

Sandy Weill calls President Clinton in the evening to try to break the deadlock after Senator Phil Gramm, chairman of the Banking Committee, warned Citigroup lobbyist Roger Levy that Weill has to get White House moving on the bill or he would shut down the House-Senate conference. Serious negotiations resume, and a deal is announced at 2:45 a.m. on Oct. 22. Whether Weill made any difference in precipitating a deal is unclear.

Just days after the administration (including the Treasury Department) agrees to support the repeal, Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin, the former co-chairman of a major Wall Street investment bank, Goldman Sachs, raises eyebrows by accepting a top job at Citigroup as Weill's chief lieutenant. The previous year, Weill had called Secretary Rubin to give him advance notice of the upcoming merger announcement. When Weill told Rubin he had some important news, the secretary reportedly quipped, "You're buying the government?"
When Bill Clinton gave that pen to Sanford Weill, it symbolized the ending of the twentieth century Democratic Party that had created the New Deal. Although the 1999 law did not repeal all of the banking Act of 1933, retaining the FDIC, it did once again allow banks to enter the securities business, becoming what some term "whole banks."

The repeal of one of the most important pieces of legislation in this nation's history came about as a result of another Clinton "triangulation," the wobbling attempt to find the middle of the road that has somehow managed to pass for a philosophy with many Democrats for over two decades. As former Clinton former campaign Richard Morris once described it, you move a little to the left, a little to the right. I'd love to hear Clinton give that explanation to a foreclosed home owner today.

With the stroke of a pen, Bill Clinton ended an era that stretched back to William Jennings Bryan and Woodrow Wilson and reached fruition with FDR and Harry Truman. As he signed his name, in the whorls and dots of his pen strokes William Jefferson Clinton was also symbolically signing the death warrant of Liberal America and its core belief in the level playing field that had guided the Democratic Party. But it was the gift of the pen to Sanford Weill and its assuming an honored place on the Wall of Me that rubbed salt in the wound.

In his famous First Inaugural Roosevelt asserted:


Practices of the unscrupulous money changers stand indicted in the court of public opinion, rejected by the hearts and minds of men.
Clinton not only repealed the act Roosevelt had put in place to curb those practices, but presented one of the pens used to sign it to one of those "money changers."

What Hath Clinton Wrought?

What can be said in Clinton's favor is that in 1999 few people anticipated the out-of-control growth of the hedge fund industry and the subprime mortgage market. The New York Times described the new financial world created by the repeal of Glass-Steagall in a June 2007 profile of Goldman Sachs:
While Wall Street still mints money advising companies on mergers and taking them public, real money — staggering money — is made trading and investing capital through a global array of mind-bending products and strategies unimaginable a decade ago.
Curiously, Goldman Sachs head Lloyd Blankfein paints the perfect big picture of what has happened:
We’ve come full circle, because this is exactly what the Rothschilds or J. P. Morgan, the banker were doing in their heyday. What caused an aberration was the Glass Steagall Act.
Blankfein's analysis testifies to the full impact of Bill Clinton's actions, for like many members of the Counterrevolution he sees the New Deal as an aberration and longs for a return to the days J. P. Morgan and other tycoons gave the Gilded Age its nickname. His "aberration" was eliminated not because of the actions of some radical Republican, but because of Bill Clinton. No wonder Goldman Sachs is also a prime contributor to you-know-who.

As is often the case, the story of the repeal of Glass-Steagall and the growth of the subprime mortgage market that is now crumbling around us like a financial house of cards can be best be told by a graph:

 

 

If you think of this graph as the level playing field, notice how flat it was before Bill Clinton repealed Glass-Steagall, then notice how steep it has become. Those subprime loans amount to nothing more than an organized ripoff of millions of innocent Americans, with the steepness of the graph illustrating the how far the playing field has tilted.

The result is that all of a sudden people are thinking Glass-Steagall wasn't such a bad idea after all. Robert Kuttner testified before Barney Frank's Committee on Banking and Financial Services in October, evoking the dreaded specter of the Great Depression:
Since repeal of Glass Steagall in 1999, after more than a decade of de facto inroads, super-banks have been able to re-enact the same kinds of structural conflicts of interest that were endemic in the 1920s – lending to speculators, packaging and securitizing credits and then selling them off, wholesale or retail, and extracting fees at every step along the way. And, much of this paper is even more opaque to bank examiners than its counterparts were in the 1920s. Much of it isn’t paper at all, and the whole process is supercharged by computers and automated formulas.
Then there is Dow Jones MarketWatch's Kostigen:
I'm not saying that Glass-Steagall would have made a difference to the evolution of the collateralized debt obligations. But it might have helped identify and isolated the damage.
As Congress continues to investigate the mortgage crisis, more people are wondering whether the repeal of Glass-Steagall was a mistake.

The Future of Your Mortgage

In testimony before Congress on November 8, Federal Reserve Chair Ben Bernanke painted a grim picture of the current crisis and even grimmer picture of the future:

On average from now until the end of next year, nearly 450,000 subprime mortgages per quarter are scheduled to undergo their first interest rate reset. [My emphasis]
According to a December 2006 study by the Center for Responsible Lending, a nonpartisan research and policy organization:
More than 2 million people with subprime loans are facing foreclosure this year and nearly 20 percent of subprime mortgages issued between 2005 and 2006 are projected to fail.
But numbers and testimony and even history mean little to those who suddenly find themselves up against the wall. In every city and town across this country "For Sale" signs are popping up on lawns. Behind each of those signs lies a personal story, a family tragedy, which like the tragedies of the Great Depression, tells of innocent Americans felled by an affliction they never saw coming. Walk any street in this country today--even in affluent neighborhoods--and each time you see one of those signs the hairs on the back of your own neck stand up, because those signs instill the same fear people felt when they walked into a bank in 1932 and found their money gone.

Two million people have found themselves one step away from figuratively being tossed out onto the street, the way millions were in the 1930s. Meanwhile, there are young people starting new lives for whom home ownership is rapidly receding, middle-aged people who finally had scraped together enough for a down payment only to find they can't get a mortgage and older people for whom their home was their retirement and now find its value dropping like George Bush's poll numbers. Finally there are even millions more for whom the collateral damage from the crises promises to cast its shadow over their American Dream.

The International Monetary Fund recently drew the following lessons from various financial crisis:
It is difficult to tell at the time whether a financial crisis will have broader economic consequences

Regulators often cannot keep up with the pace of financial innovation that may trigger a crisis.
Both have characterized what happened after the repeal of Glass-Steagall. It is too bad Bill Clinton did not have their wisdom when he made his decision, but then when you make decisions by triangulating, how much weight do you give such studies?

And the current crop of politicians? Look closely at their donor lists, which I detailed in the series "Follow the Money." Then wonder why no moderator or other candidate has asked Hillary Clinton if she supports her husband's repeal of Glass-Steagall? Ask the other candidates if they support Bill Clinton's move.

Meanwhile the signs keep sprouting and the playing field keeps tilting and soon the snow will start to fall, drifting against the signs. How many more people will have lost their homes when the snow melts?


Crosspost: The Strange Death of Liberal America,My Left Wing


 

9/25/08 2:41 AM
Viewed 122, Replies 8

Hehe, look at all the new members, 2-3 days registered, who are so excited about this game.

The art of shilling is truly dead when peeps are so obvious.

9/23/08 7:43 AM
Viewed 563, Replies 24

a significant death penalty

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