Richard Garriott Discusses the Ultimate RPG with MMORPG.com
Richard Garriott, hot off of welcoming his daughter into the world and helping Portalarium secure a whole pile of additional funding, sat down with MMORPG.com for an interview about his planned Ultimate RPG (which, we recently learned, is still being referred to as New Britannia).
…while we did not get into the full scoop of Ultimate RPG (I was hoping too), but what we did learn is Richard’s clear philosophy for the game. He wants to make sure hardcore players know they are not abandoned. It is one of the guiding principles of the design for the game. It is being made with the hardcore players at the very heart and soul of the title. Also, it is very important for the team to meet their goals on the game and create that RPG experience which made Richard’s Ultimas so memorable.
Richard said that you will find your way into the game through a portal, hence Portalarium, similar to the idea in Ultima 4. The game will have personal ethics, social events, and be founded on a very strong story system. You will have plenty of challenges as a player in this game. He really wants to create a new body of fiction. He really wants the great story of the game to transcend the setting. With the story at its core for the RPG it will have a new setting and a new fictional wrapper for players to delve deeply into.
The best part of the interview was that Richard said the game has sandbox interaction at its core. He said it is styled after Ultima Online and Ultima 7 in that regard. That news should really get everyone excited! Even though the game is set for social and mobile networks Richard was very clear that it is not MMO Light. He said that too many of the free to play games right now don’t have the story or substance behind them for the long term investment by players.
It’s an interesting time in gaming, Dragons and Dragonettes…and a good time for Ultima fans. Or, at least, those that can look past the fact that the game is played in a browser window or a mobile app.
Same old, same old.
I’m not dissing Richard Garriott here, but the truth of the matter is that it feels every interview he gives is the same. He’s certainly consistent so that’s good, but reading a Garriott interview just give a sense of deja vu.
I say it’s time we learn more hard facts about New Britannia 😛
I dunno… In relation to other recent happenings, some of what he is saying takes on more of a meaning.
Heh…and now you know why I’ve been sounding like a broken damn record about how social games can be significantly more than what Zynga pumps out.
Social and mobile aren’t genres…they’re platforms. What has been lacking to date is developers being brave enough to push the boundaries of these platforms.
Only maybe, now, that time is over.
Indeed. I don’t know if Richard Garriott will like Ultima Forever… but in essence this is very much the sort of things he wants to accomplish as well, especially considering the game will come for IPad.
Just thought I’d add 2 bits to this. While I on the fence about the browser based nature of this title, that isn’t enough to just dismiss a game these days. My biggest problem with a browser based title is having Windows Start Bar and other OS functionality surrounding the game window I am trying to be immersed in. The only browser game I’ve bothered with honestly was Quake Live, and when you put it in fullscreen and play for more then ten minutes you can easily forget it is running off of your web browser of choice.
Well, thats about it. Hopefully anyone who was cringing at the idea like me can be relieved a bit with that in mind. 🙂
Well you can always havethe Windows Star Bar hidden 😉
And indeed there are browser games offering true Full Screen mode – you just press a button and it’ll feel like you are in a “normal” game and not in a browser.
This is actually the case with Ultimate Collector. With one click of a button, you play full screen with now browser or windows bar to be seen – so I have no doubt this will be the case with URPG/New Britannia as well.
Quick Richard – proclaim your daughter “Lady British”. It might come in handy…
Or…I don’t know? His wife, maybe? Could she adopt the moniker?