"I have a long history with Korean MMOs," Lee Kwai tells me. "There are certain expectations around classes based on that legacy. It's important to strike a delicate balance. But when you're fighting one v one, or one v six, or 50 versus 50, or 200 versus 200, the abilities are used in many different ways and the strategies of combat change drastically. And one thing that mage classes are known for is area attacks, so during combat like sieges or massive battles there's usually strategies that arise based on how to coordinate magic attacks, and that's where they really get a lot of that reputati
The Longbow is a top-tier ranged weapon which delivers high damage output at a range rivaling melee weapons in terms of DPS. It provides the ability to engage enemies from a distance and has skills that allow healing abilities for you and your all
Players still need to grind out those items for them to appear on the auction house. Once purchased, they are not max level, which means players will still need to grind for upgrades. There’s a shadow of pay-to-win here, but it’s deeply convoluted and it won’t be common for players to be splashing cash on the best gear. You can also earn Lucent by selling your own gear. If you’re a hardcore player, you could generate enough Lucent to keep buying things from the Auction House whenever you want - no wallet requi
Amazon’s track record with MMOs is solid, but also undermined by problems. Both New World and Lost Ark had huge launches with over a million players on day one. New World is of course getting revamped later this year with New World: Aeternum tied into a console release, but its performance on PC has been lacklustre for months. Current player numbers have it hovering around the 5,000 mark. Lost Ark is much healthier, with around 20,000 active players. Those games have given Amazon time to learn the ins and outs of publishing MMOs in the west, but will it be enough for Throne & Liberty to stick the landing alongside its pe
The upgrading, or 'enchanting' system as the game likes to call it, requires various materials each time an item is upgraded. Each of these items can be gathered from various sources, and sometimes also upgraded from weaker versions of themsel
When transferring gear, the old item's gained experience will be applied to the new item. You can transfer an item to another item of the same rarity and you will keep the level (as mentioned above); but you can also transfer a lower-quality item into a higher-quality it
A realm of skills, abilities, pets, co-op events, dungeons, huge cities full of players, menial tasks, cooking, fishing, you name it, Throne And Liberty has it: and if it doesn’t have it yet, it might get it in a future update. Large-scale co-op events, both PvE and PvP, are the main focus behind the endgame grind. Before we get into all that though, we have to address something pretty import
As far as unique ideas go, Throne and Liberty Quests and Liberty ** ’s main claim to fame is its addition of real-time attack counters to typical MMO combat** . Occasionally, in battle, a pair of concentric purple circles appear around an enemy in what's called a Fury Attack. The larger one begins to close on the smaller one, and as long as the player presses the correct button by the time they align, they’ll enter a defensive posture for a few seconds. In this posture, they’ll deflect any attacks that come their way. Parrying one of these Fury Attacks with perfect timing usually bestows an additional buff, which is weapon-speci
Excellent presentation aside, Throne and Liberty ** suffers from a mostly generic story** . It’s a perfectly suitable fantasy framework to hang a game on, but little more, mostly centered on a group of chosen ones (the player characters) and a war against those who would exploit their powers. It occasionally introduces some interesting concepts, like the main character’s ability to travel through time and visit pivotal events in the world's history. But those rarely amount to anything more interesting than they appear on the surface. Unfortunately, that sort of thing is a trend for Throne and Liber
However, this is still an MMO through and through - so the quests are repetitive. The zones you travel through are fairly interesting though, and mob variety is fine. There are rolling fields, beaches, gnarled watchtowers on top of hills guarded by goblins. Nothing here really screams originality.. But there remains a soothing familiarity to the wayThrone and Liberty begins: when there are hundreds of players grinding scarecrows in a random field somewhere, you know this is a serious
It’s basically the opposite problem of power creep: I got used to, and then bored of, my base abilities too quickly , and found that I didn’t gain enough more to feel like my progress actually mattered. Sure, I was dealing more damage as I leveled up, but I was using almost the same exact combos, the same tired strategies in every single battle, with only tiny changes throughout. As a result, later battles, especially the more difficult ones, felt like more of a chore; I just wanted to get through them so I could move on and explore the next loc