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A Look At Successful Game Mods

Parz writes "Mods have been an important part of gaming for well over 15 years. Not only have they provided plenty of additional free gaming to players, but they've acted as a launch pad for independent and amateur programmers to show off their skills to potential employers. This Gameplayer article highlights the programmers who are doing it best, and what mods have made biggest and most enjoyable impact on gaming. The article not only provides details for each game, but also links to the downloads, and is a great resource for those interesting in getting up-to-date with this exciting scene." Obviously, this list will seem incomplete to anyone whose favorite mod was omitted. What mods contributed most to your enjoyment?

3 of 287 comments (clear)

  1. Re:My all-time favourite by hairyfeet · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I'd have to put in my vote for Discovery mod for Freelancer. Not only does it add great features to multiplay,but it really makes the original single player game shine. If you have ever played the original Freelance,you know that battles often are a turkey shoot,either you die instantly or they do. With Discovery the battles from the very start are challenging,because the AI IMHO acts more like playing a real player. They really give you a good fight. And there are so many new things to see and do in Discovery I don't even know where to start. Really a great example IMHO of a great mod.

    And this article is a good example of why I still prefer PC gaming. Thanks to modders after a game is beaten often you can go online and find so many new things to try and do with your game that IMHO it really adds value to the games that allow modding.

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  2. Money by Kent+Recal · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The "we have no clue but slashvertisments pay"-kind.

    Slashdot is declining but still attracts roughly 8 million page views per day.

    The article has 10 pages, each carries 5 banners.
    Let's assume they are paid a very conservative $.50 USD per one thousand unique visitors for each of these banners.
    Let's further assume slashdot drove 2 million unique's to the article.
    Let's further assume those people, on average, clicked through 3 pages before they realized there is nothing to see.

    That's a solid $15000 USD, under fairly pessimisic assumptions. They probably made closer to $30000 by the time you are reading this.

  3. Article author is clueless... by Samah · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Seriously, how can this be called "The Best Game Mods"? As much as I hate it, Counter-Strike has to be one of the biggest and widely played mods (and now standalone game) of all time, and it doesn't even get a mention???

    I could list countless other mods over the past 10+ years that make a lot of the vaporware in that article look like some 14 year-old kid just heard about modding and started making some screenshots.

    Some of the big mods that should/could have been on that list if I were to write it:

    • Counter-Strike (pre-source)
    • Day of Defeat (pre-source)
    • DotA
    • Natural Selection
    • QWTF/TFC (and now TF2 standalone)
    • A billion other popular Quake and Half-Life mods
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