Go behind the development process of The Elder Scrolls Online: Morrowind
We sat down to chat with Elder Scrolls Online game director Matt Firor about why Zenimax Online Studios made a paid expansion for its gigantic online game.
As the MMO days of old have come and gone, we at Gamasutra have been intrigued by the massively-multiplayer online role-playing games from that era that are still standing and finding new ways to attract new players. One game in particular, The Elder Scrolls Online, recently released a new paid expansion titled Morrowind, which returns Elder Scrolls players to the world last seen in The Elder Scrolls III: Morrowind.
To learn more about why Zenimax Online Studios went for a paid expansion for a game with an upfront pay-to-play cost, we invited ESO game director Matt Firor for a chat on the Gamasutra Twitch channel. You can watch our full conversation above (and see Gamasutra editors Alex Wawro and Bryant Francis go on a passive-aggressive adventure), but if you’re on your way to Vvardenfell yourself, here are a few key takeaways from our chat.
Morrowind, built on the back of the One Tamriel update, is meant as an entry point for new players.
When we asked Firor why Zenimax Online Studios would release a paid expansion, he explained that the goal was to create a platform of content that, along with the progression changes made in One Tamriel. Firor described a big shift compared to the older ways he used to work on MMORPGs, where instead of designing content primarily skewed for end-game, veteran players, to being deliberately designed to onboard new players and introduce them to a new setting alongside older plaeyrs.
MMORPGs have changed a lot since Firor got started.
While going over Firor’s resume, he pointed out he’s basically worked on massively multiplayer RPGs his entire career, and took the time to share some of his observations on how working on these kind of games has changed since his time on Dark Age of Camelot.
Insights into the design behind ESO’s server system
Firori was able to break down the difference between the old way of handling MMO servers, and the motivation behind trying to get everyone playing in one server space and relying on instancing to keep the crowds of players from overlapping with each other. Fundamentally he says, it’s about removing a set of hard choices from players that existed in ye old days of RP servers, PVP servers, and servers representing different time zones.
If this conversation was enlightening for you, we’d love it if you could follow the Gamasutra Twitch channel, so we can deliver to you more developer interviews, editor roundtables, and gameplay commentary.
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