smootrk
First Post
wrongHeyJoe said:Obviously you have no clue what an MMORPG is.
wrongHeyJoe said:Obviously you have no clue what an MMORPG is.
I wonder what would happen if we used that anology on you... Would probably get me banned, just not worth it in my opinion. A word that Eric's grandma won't mind though is 'clueless'.smootrk said:If it looks like a duck, and sounds like a duck, then it is likely a duck!
smootrk said:I think name calling, or inferred name calling (quite skillfully done Cergorach) is not really necessary. It is my opinion, and I have not seen an argument that really changes it yet.
I thought this thread was about D&D Insider... and having to pay for use of the online tools and games hosted through it. We are not talking about the books.Jim Hague said:Except that you apparently missed the bit on the front page of the site where 4e is flat-out stated as being primarily a physical product. As in the DI/Insider stuff is optional.
If it walks like a duck and quacks like a duck, it's likely a duck...unless the person calling it a duck doesn't know what a duck is.
Asmor said:"Bu-bu-but you gotta pay for a subscription!" you say? Well, I had a subscription to Dragon magazine, and I know lots of others did as well. By this logic, every magazine is an MMORPG
smootrk said:I thought this thread was about D&D Insider... and having to pay for use of the online tools and games hosted through it. We are not talking about the books.
Odhanan said:Essentially, a subscription to a paper magazine makes you the owner of content that is published periodically until you stop your subscription. Then you keep being the owner of what you already got. With D.I., you essentially rent a temporary access to a content which will not be available forever, due to evolutions of the media and technologies that support it.
Sure. I didn't mean to derail the point. Just used it to throw another ball in the arena.Maggan said:Yeah, well, I think the point was that the subscription part does not make an online service a MMORPG. Unless we start counting the Wall Street Journal and such services as MMORPGs, that is.
/M