![]() ![]() Concern about long-time commitment to maintaining these games.Perceived instability of these projects and their coding and backend tech. ![]() Distrust of volunteer developers who may not always have the best interests of the players at heart.I feel likewise with Return of Reckoning, the Warhammer Online server that I keep promising myself I’m going to check out. It wasn’t that I was uninterested (nor am now), but that there are some yellow flags that warn me away. Last year’s revival of City of Heroes, amazing as it was, wasn’t enough to keep me coming back for too long. ![]() That’s pretty amazing.Īll of this gets my approval - I have no ethical or moral qualms about preserving shuttered MMOs - but I’ve also noticed that I am emotionally wary about getting invested in such games. And not only can you play them again, but you can play them with thriving communities of modern day players. Today, you can step back into games like Star Wars Galaxies, The Sims Online, and Earth & Beyond, even though these MMOs have been shuttered for many years now. ![]() There are so, so many of these out there, and while there’s not one for every dead MMO that exists, plenty of these former projects are being preserved with love and care by diehard fans. Rogue servers, as we call them at Massively OP. In the year of our good Lord 2020 A.D., there is certainly something to celebrate in the MMO scene: the rise and acceptance of emulators. ![]()
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