Meridian 59 Offers Free Trial
Psychochild writes "I'm the owner of the online RPG Meridian 59. We've been working hard on updating the game since relaunching it in 2002, rewriting the rendering engine to take advantage of 3D hardware acceleration, adding modern features like mouselook and rebindable keys, fixing bugs, and adding new content. We're currently offering a free trial of Meridian 59 for those interested in learning more about the game and the independent developers now running it."
Alot of the Everquest beta people came from Meridian 59 from what I remember. I haven't gotten around to trying it out at the time, this seems like a good opportunity to check it out.
I'd play, but billing and account support has been so terrible.
I signed up on the re-release by the new developers... took a break, and was still billed by their billing company they use... took like 3 months of extra billing to finally have them stop!
Now, I attempt to return to the game, where they never remove accounts, and cannot get a response on getting my account info back.
to bad...
Ok...so maybe it's an advertisement of sorts, but you can't blame the guy. First, he clearly stated that he is the owner rather than trying to disguise himself as a random player. He's got a product that is clearly suffering compared to the big guns (EQ, SWG, WOW). He's mentioning an opportunity to play at no cost. And most importantly, he just wrote the post...Slashdot made the decision to put it out there.
I worked on a great puzzle game called Rich Diamond for a couple years that has never made any real money. It doesn't seem wrong for me to mention it here, and yet it's technically more of an advertisement than Psychochild's post. Mine is guaranteed to be visible at least until I get modded down.
If I recall correctly this game was the first 3d mmorpg to *I think*.
:)
There's some disagreement about who did what first. Meridian 59 uses a first-person 2.5D engine (similar to DOOM); now it has an engine that uses 3D hardware acceleration and adds in neat things like dynamic lighting. It can reasonably make the claim to be the first modern online RPG to use 3D.
M59 was the first game to offer a box in retail and it established the current subscription-based business model. The game also had terrible marketing at the hands of 3DO, creating shameful ads that probably scared off more people than they attracted. This is one reason why it languished under the shadow of other games while often presenting a more technically accomplished and interesting game.
Anyway, the game is still around and going strong. We've worked hard to update the game, and we've added a lot of new features, notably the new rendering engine. It looks very nice, if I say so myself.
Have fun,
Brian "Psychochild" Green
MMO developer's blog
Meridian 59 is soo old.
Which isn't an issue if you really thing about it. First of all, the game has a lot of content. There's secrets in the game that people that have played for 8 years still are finding. Look at EQ and see how much more content has been added since they launched. Of course, in EQ you would have had to buy expansions, whereas in M59 we have free content patches on a regular basis. Meridian 59 has a lot of depth of gameplay. It's also amazingly stable, too, since we've worked out the bugs in the game a long time ago. So, being "old" means we have a lot of content and we have a stable game. Oh no!
Admittedly, the game isn't packed full of eye candy like newer games are. But, the graphics are "good enough" and the gameplay is very fun. No other game offers the blend of open PvP, player skill-based gameplay, and game balance that M59 offers. If you like PvP combat, this is the game to check out. And, now we're offering a month long free trial to check it out.
As for alternative OSes, we're looking to see if there is a demand. Since M59 has had a lot of content added to it, especially the recent upgrades on the client side such as the new rendering engine, porting is a non-trivial effort. We're an indie game developer, which means we have limited resources. Sitting down and writing a port to another OS means that we're taking away time from adding new content to the game and keeping existing players happy.
Have fun,
Brian "Psychochild" Green
MMO developer's blog