Home Featured Content

7 Ancient MMORPGs That People Are Still Playing

Ever since internet connectivity made possible the inception of the genre, the addictive gameplay grind of massively multiplayer online games has dug its claws into the body of many unsuspecting gamers. Questing, looting, farming, ganking, and raiding across vast digital worlds, populated by real people; MMOs can very quickly swallow up great wedges of your spare time, turning even the most spritely young bucks into sleep deprived, pizza eating zombies of the night.

2) Eve Online

Recommended Videos

eve_combat

High fantasy MMORPGs have certainly proven the most popular thematic setting for titles of the genre, but Eve Online has forged its own legacy with a space setting. The game’s unified online galaxy setting is vast, comprised of tens of thousands of stars and planets that was, up until only a few years ago, inhabited by half a million or so people from around the world.

Eve Online might be old, but its systems and mechanics are impressively deep. In-game professions such as mining, trading, and piracy tie-in with Eve Online’s narrative, which is based on humanity’s struggle and constant confrontation over resources and economic competition.

On top of the complexities of its in-game professions and economy, players are able to purchase and upgrade a huge amount of different ship types. Unlike other MMORPGs, your skills advance passively and constantly in real-time, and there are a huge variety of upgradable skills (its intricate systems were well ahead of its time).

First launched in 2003, nearly 14 years later Eve Online’s player base is now starting to decline, but there are still around 15 thousand gamers still traversing the galaxy of New Eden on a regular basis.