Quick Sample: Sword of the New World

September 26th, 2007

In early September, I downloaded the intriguing Sword of the New World, a Korean fantasy MMORPG that is “free to play,” although the game ultimately favors players who buy in game items and money with real money transfer (RMT).

I had planned to write a detailed review of the game, but an excellent write-up appeared a couple of days ago at Hardcore Casual that really tells you all you need to know

For myself, here’s what I very much enjoyed about the game:

  • The characters look amazing. The costumes are richly detailed and beautiful, and even though you can’t do even one thing to customize their faces, they are appealing. This game has truly captured the anime look and wedded it to the setting.
  • The setting is unique: pseudo-Spanish exploration of a (not the) new world. It has some of the flavor of the popular pirate genre but winds up carving out a unique niche. The setting doesn’t try to be believable. Lavishly decorated ballrooms and opulent halls line the streets of a city on the edge of an unexplored continent. But when you’re playing, you just don’t care.
  • The music is gorgeous and setting appropriate (really, you just have to listen to it), and the game allows you to control what music is playing.
  • The chance to control three characters simultaneously means a person like me, who loves to explore every class available, doesn’t have to split time among quite so many different groups. You can easily make characters of all classes and choose whatever combination seems interesting when you set up an adventuring party.

That said, I quit the game after about a week, because for all the good points, I find it’s just a terrible game. Here’s why:

  • It’s too “gamey” for me. As I’ve said before, I prefer a more immersive environment, and Sword of the New World instead reminds me that I’m playing a game. Controlling three characters means I’m not really roleplaying any one; instead, I’m operating three virtual chess pieces simultaneously. The NPCs talk openly about game mechanics.
  • Combat is either entirely too easy or almost too hard. One thing I actively dislike about most current MMOs is that they’re too easy. WoW and LotRO are both designed to be accessible to anyone, and even the most difficult challenges are met primarily with time investment, not with skill. In SotNW, though, adventuring can be so easy that you can literally leave the game running for hours at a time, then come back and see how far your characters have leveled. Seriously, the game is actively designed to let your characters grind while you eat lunch. On the other hand, the challenging dungeons and encounters require such careful management of your characters’ abilities and positions to handle the onslaught of monsters – something you won’t have practiced in the super-easy leveling you’ve done so far – that even experienced, skilled gamers may be unable to handle them consistently.
  • RMT pisses me off. There are some good arguments for a revenue model based on real cash for in-game rewards, but as someone who prefers immersion, I find such options break my suspension of disbelief. Also, I happen to prefer games in which those with more abundant real-world capital don’t automatically have an advantage.

The worst problem with the game is that I was just plain bored with it after four or five days of exploring. Without a reasonable challenge, an interesting storyline, or a chance to interact in a fun way with other players, even the beautifully realized setting couldn’t hold my interest.

Instead, I felt as if I were playing ProgressQuest. That’s not really fair, of course. The game has lots more to offer. But it doesn’t have lots to offer me.

Entry Filed under: Massively Multiplayer, RPG

2 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Syncaine  |  September 26th, 2007 at 1:18 pm

    Thanks for the link, and glad you enjoyed the post.

    The funny thing is, I could talk all day about SotNW and still not describe to. It’s just so different in so many ways. I’m not sure if all that adds up to it being fun, but if nothing else I want to reach (at least) the mid levels to see more of it.

    One interesting point I found on the forums however is the reason you can let your party basically afk level. The game was designed for the Korean market, where basically everyone plays in a gaming cafe for a per-hour rate. If you are paying hourly, most likely you will not be afk for long. That does not make the US version more fun, but it at least explains the design.

  • 2. Alec Bings  |  October 2nd, 2007 at 1:32 pm

    Hi Syncaine!

    My spam catcher marked your comment, for no reason that I can figure, so I only just discovered it. My apologies.

    Interesting about the reason AFK grinding works in SotNW. I had all the pieces of that puzzle, but I never would’ve put them together.

    I really wish I could like the gameplay of SotNW, ’cause I thoroughly enjoyed the setting. I’m hoping Pirates of the Burning Sea will capture some of the setting but be, well, just more fun.

    –Alec

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