TwoSix said:
The prep work in playing WoW involves turning on your computer and logging in. The fact that you may have to "prep" (by farming consumables, getting enchants, etc.) doesn't preclude the fact that you're still PLAYING.
I don't know many people at all that would consider farming to be playing the game. Most people equate it to work, not gaming.
So you're playing a PnP RPG all by yourself, no DM? Interesting....
There are PnP games where that's viable, but I'll admit I wasn't counting the DM. Fair point.
Infinite content is more of a story thing. I've yet to hear of a PnP encounter that involves the coordination needed for Vael, C'Thun, Four Horseman, etc.
Again, you can't have it both ways. There's absolutely nothing mechanically preventing someone from making an encounter as complex as Wow raid bosses in D&D or any other PnP game. Just because you've not heard of one doesn't mean it's imposible, and my question was
what WoW mechanics cannot be found in PnP games.
Well, it is unaccessible for a few hours on Tuesday. But besides that, you can play whenever you want.
Again, depends on what you do when you play. Raids generally only happen in the evening after work during the week. Solo content is all the time, of course.
You either live in a college town or an extreme statistical outlier. I know many people who spend months looking for a gaming group.
Again, my original question was
what is in WoW that you cannot find in PnP, not what can be difficult to find depending on where you live.
You're not seriously comparing 3D animated characters and backgrounds to an unmoving mini, are you? The ability to physically see what your character is doing is a big draw for computer RPGs over PnP.
I dunno about that; there were tons of complaints when WoW originally released about how cruddy the graphics were, and yet it's the most popular computer game to ever exist on the planet. If we were talking about FPS games then yeah, I'd agree with you - but I'm relatively certain that graphics are a secondary concern over gameplay even with MMOs.
Sorry, but all of his items are valid points. Stating that both WoW and PnP games have various strengths is hardly an attack on PnP, and I see no reason why the thoughtful post by GSHamster was treated as such.
My point was that there is
absolutely nothing in WoW that was not already taken (directly or from another game that stole the concept) from PnP RPGs. I thought that was pretty clear. I don't have any clue why you think I thought it was an attack on PnP games.