Lego Creating Multiplayer Online Game 99
An anonymous reader writes "Players of Lego's new MMOG (massively multiplayer online game) are tasked with a mission: help save imagination from the dark forces of evil. The bad force can be kept at bay only by users' 'imagination and creativity,' said Ryan Seabury, the creative director for the game and founder of Louisville, Colorado-based NetDevil, which is developing the game for Lego. Players cannot be killed, but they can be reduced to a pile of unassembled bricks. The idea is to play the game and collect bricks, which will allow users to build more interesting models. Lego Universe, will launch in the second half of this year and will be a subscription-based service (price not disclosed)."
Blockland is similar, but more interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
In recent months I've been playing Blockland [blockland.us]. It has the similar lego/blocks aspect in it, but frankly it's a lot more interesting than what Lego MMOG sounds like.
Basic gameplay idea is that you're a small "lego" guy. You don't need to collect the blocks, you can just select them from menu and build whatever you want. You can do this with friends in multiplayer too.
But what's more fun is that the game has great support for scripting, macros, minigames, weapons and vehicles. There's tons of mods and user-created content. Different servers also all have different kind of gamemodes as they're all build by the players. There's the normal deatchmatch, tdm, ctf, zombie survival, portal games, racing and jail and city building RPG's. Some server owners concentrate on making a beautiful place (it's quite amazing what some have done) and some fun mess-around places.
Because of Blockland, I feel like Lego is seriously missing something here. It's not really that fun for long to just collect bricks and then build with them (actually the collecting part sounds awful already). In Blockland most of the gamemodes are accompanied with the building part. Some of the dig digging ctf/tdm servers are truly great, as it allows you to dig tunnels under everyone even as far as to the enemies base, or you can build better defences to your base or even surround the capture-the-flag point with a bunker.
Lego was earlier in talks with Blockland authors to make it a Lego MMO, but looks like they went the more boring route :(
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Well, boring is in the eye of the beholder.
At some future date:
Dev: 12:00 midnight. Time to go live!
Producer: Hit it!
Dev: Ahh, first logins already!
Producer: [12:01] What's that there? A giant Lego penis? WTF!
PETITION TO REMOVE RED BRICK NERF (Score:5, Funny)
PETITION TO REMOVE RED BRICK NERF
These changes are unnecessary, aggressive, CRIMINAL ACTS against the VERY BUILDERS WHO constitute the FOUNDATION OF LEGOLAND!.
Red bricks ALREADY have a 10 second cooldown, why would you reduce our DPS! WE already suck next to blue bricks.
Reply #1: /signed
Reply #2:
Learn to build noob
Reply #3:
can i has ur bricks?
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I've spent 3 weeks trying to get the Blue Bricks of Bamboozle set. I'll be pissed if they let any noob just walk in a get it for a few tokens.
Screw it, I'm going back to the Mega Blox MMO.
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Oh great, more MMO style nerd ranting and raving about what you are allowed to do and not to do if you do not want to be branded a noob. Thanks Wow for that....
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Sounds like Garry's Mod [garrysmod.com] with bricks.
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And possibly slightly more rigid connections between pieces.
GMod "jelly tanks" ftw!
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Actually the Lego MMO was talked about as having event and trigger scripting similar to that found in Little Big Planet, so your fears may be unfounded (yet to be seen one way or the other).
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Blockland looks like shit (Score:2)
And I just looked at Blockland - boy it looks crap.
Lego Universe looks great.
(Check out the trailers
http://www.gametrailers.com/game/lego-universe/4954 [gametrailers.com]
)
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That's why I hoped they would had continued the talks with Blockland's creator. It's just a one man project (with lots of content made by community too), so it has its certain amateurish look, but the game mechanics are great.
This is current news? (Score:2)
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In this case several years, this Lego MMO's first release date was in 2008 :-p
In Lego Universe the forces of evil are... (Score:5, Funny)
Entropy!
Obligatory Zorg. (Score:2, Interesting)
[Pushes the glass off the table. It shatter on the floor, and several small machines come out to clean it up]
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
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LEGO Digital Designer [lego.com] and it's free. You can build at least (with the option to order the pieces needed to build a real version)
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no linux version, and when i last tried it, did not work in wine (launched, but was pretty much unusable).
a shame, really. would be cute if their software was like their bricks - not bricked, but open for tinkering :)
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Indeed - Lego should have taken their cue from The Sims Online, There, and Second Life rather than cookie cutter MMORPG's. The evidence is abundant that people want a virtual world to hang out, create, and socialize in. (Reaching as far back as MUD's. Back in the day, when UO ruled the roost, it was occasionally called the 'worlds bloodiest chatroom'.)
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I just want a mechanism for building spaceships which I can then fly to blow up other people's spaceships, pirate ships, castles, or whatever else people build. Then if someone happens to blow up my spaceship I'd get to design a brand new one.
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Oh come on. Ever since the early days of Lego Castle (early 1980s) there have been factions for kids to enact battles between. It's not exactly a new phenomenon for kid's play either. Certainly it was one of the main play themes for my siblings and I (usually Space constructions). Even in boring old Lego City, for kids it is always about stuff going wrong so you actually have something for all those police/firefighters/medics/builders to do!
Besides, this game includes a lot more than just battling bad guys.
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What article?
- /. Readers
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LEGO my MMO.
Grr, now I need to go eat a waffle.
Imagination? Please. (Score:4, Insightful)
Lego sets of the past decade or so have been mostly build-it-once kits, and then you have a toy that the kid either plays with or leaves on the shelf. There's no imagination required, you just follow the directions. The parts are so specialized now that you can't take it all apart and come up with your own design, because they can only fit in one spot and have only one possible function. When I was a kid, I used to build super cool cars and spaceships and houses using these buckets of random Lego we had. There were some specialized parts, like laser thingies and stuff, but you could add that to your ship to make it super awesome and imagine how the guns would work. I used to also add bomb-droppers. Later in my Lego-career, me and a friend used to build little cannon stations and then targets out of Lego, and shoot blocks at the targets using rubber bands. That was fun.
Do they even sell bulk kits anymore? How can you get plain old blocks without going on ebay and buying someone's old, used random lots of Lego?
My point is that Lego itself is the enemy of imagination. By selling kits that you can't do anything else with besides build their prescribed design, they are stifling the imaginations of kids. It's really disappointing, actually. Like what's the point in building the set from Star Wars? What creativity is there in that?
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Actually I was thinking the same thing but there is a Lego store near Chicago in Woodfield Mall that sells individual colored blocks by the pound I believe. They also started going back to their roots a bit and remade a lot of the pirate, space, town, and medieval sets that were the cornerstone of my childhood.
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Re:Imagination? Please. (Score:4, Informative)
Seems you can at least order via Lego site [lego.com]. Actually now I'm wanting to order that Lego Giant Box [lego.com] :)
They also have some Lego Digital Designer [lego.com] where you can build the design on computer and possibly order the needed pieces.
But I agree, I'd rather get some good set of basic pieces than some of those pre-designed packages. They most likely make good money for Lego tho.
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There's more re-use than you might expect. Battle droid-arm balconies have become a standard building tool in both what the community does and what Lego themselves do.
If you think the specialized parts aren't useful that's your own limitations, not a problem with the sets. Go peruse brothers-brick.com and you just can't say with a straight face, "well this part is only good for (use in original set)." In particular the blue dragon a ways down right now (cement mixer truck nostrils!), or the classic ford pic
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larger models are fairly good at having generic, reusable parts. technic series usually excels at that as well (at any size).
but then a store here had large discount on last christmas for legos (40% ? don't recall for sure), so i grabbed a bunch of packages they still had left. one of them was a small motorbike. :)
only when i opened it, i noticed that all of the bike body was single molded plastic. internal "frame", wheel attachments and everything was another part. i'll admit that was a disappointing model
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Seems you can at least order via Lego site [lego.com]. Actually now I'm wanting to order that Lego Giant Box [lego.com] :)
LEGO® Giant Box
Item #: 5589
Sorry, item is not available in this country: Canada.
dammit
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Europe probably, Lego is a Danish company after all. Maybe there's some equivalent site for US/Canada.
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I'm wanting to order that Lego Giant Box :)
Sorry, item is not available in this country: Canada.
:(
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There was a talk with LEGO guys about how they were trying to reduce specialized parts and return to a generic brick model. They are also stopping the movie tie-in products [slashdot.org].
What I really despise are those dreadful Bionicle kits. They are the essence of everything that's wrong with LEGO nowadays.
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The Lego Star Wars sets showed a direction of reducing over-specialized pieces. Sure, there's going to be a unique Yoda figure, etc, but the vehicles, etc weren't that bad. They could have gone overboard with specialized pieces for wings, etc, but didn't. Take a look at the Imperial Shuttle. Looks real nice.
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The recent introduction of Toy Story sets and on-going Indiana Jones and Star Wars sets would indicate otherwise.
As for specialized pieces, if the new themes are any indication Lego has embraced them more than ever before. I think the problem with the early generation of Star Wars sets was not so much due to specialized pieces but rather unimpressive designs. Lego acknowledged the problem and has taken a lot more care in making more robust and impressive sets.
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I can tell you that for AFOLs (Adult Fans Of Lego), the vast majority of "custom" parts are embraced. At the very least parts usually have a broad application within their specific role, but more often than not, because they all have studs, or technic holes, or bars or clips or various ways to connect to other pieces, people find all sorts of uses for them.
Lego now have a broader range than ever. If you want more conservative sets, they are there. Some of the sets with bionicle-type parts are specifically t
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The last time I looked at the lego blocks in the toy department at WalMart, there were three or four 'tub of blocks' purchase choices available. They were toward the back, and not as well displayed as the 'theme kits.'
I agree about the boxed single-purpose kits. For goodness sakes, most of them don't even look like Lego blocks, except for the packaging.
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You can't give instructions on imagination. So what if there are instructions? You mean you can't build anything else just because the set was intended to build a specific thing? My son will build and rebuild the "intended" model a couple times, and THEN he gets creative. Those Star Wars sets have some pretty unique pieces. He has a blast with them.
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That would be the decade before the previous one. They've sort of got their act together a bit recently.
I know because I've been looking at some today. Sadly I'll have too be patient, hog junior is still at the duplo stage.
In a world run by Ubisoft... (Score:4, Funny)
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What about Tyco blocks? [google.com]
In the pirate world (Score:3, Funny)
FTFA:
Will the pirate world be built with Mega Bloks?
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Why should they? Lego got there first [lego.com]
Mega Bloks needs to counter by appealing to the Pastafarian market.
Or maybe with Cthulhu milieu sets. I'm sure the Lovecraft literary estate would negotiate a deal.
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I like the Halo kits [megabrands.com].
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Woosh!
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I can hardly wait (Score:3, Funny)
to start grinding up to the point of raiding for sweet, sweet epic purple bricks.
Public chat will be full of "L2PYM" (Learn to play your model) taunts and Chuck Norris Lego facts.
Lego gold-colored plastic coin sellers will start spamming.
Griefers will player-kill you and reassemble your bits into something rude and embarrassing. And permanent, since they'll OMGH@x0r the system to glue the parts together that way.
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Chuck Norris can make a 4-peg red block using only three, single peg yellow blocks and a ROUND HOUSE KICK!
(That is for your red-shift geeks out there)
Lego Penis (Score:2)
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on PS3 ... pay for subscription?! (Score:1)
one of the many reasons i got a PS3.
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Ok i'd buy the game... but not if a subscription fee is required. one of the many reasons i got a PS3.
Ars (I think it was Ars, at least) recently reported that PS3's online features are soon going to require a subscription.
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Only a rumor so far, last I heard was that they might have a basic free service (including online play) and extra features available as premium services.
Obligatory Southpark reference (Score:1)
Imagination? [wikipedia.org] Will Kyle suck Cartman's balls?
Red Blocks (Score:2)
NetDevil??? (Score:2)
4chan, think of the children! (Score:2)
Video (Score:1)
Undoubtedly ... (Score:3, Funny)
Stargate's Replicators (Score:4, Funny)
Players cannot be killed, but they can be reduced to a pile of unassembled bricks. The idea is to play the game and collect bricks, which will allow users to build more interesting models.
Well, until Maj. Carter develops a weapon which disrupts the communications between the individual bricks, rendering them inert and harmless.
I for one welcome our Lego WoW overlords (Score:1)
I for one welcome our new Lego World of Warcraft overlords and look forward to bashing in the lego skull of an Orc with my two-handed Lego Battleaxe.
I'm hoping for a purple drop.
Roblox (Score:1)
My kids are looking forward to this. However, they have been happily playing Roblox (http://www.roblox.com/) for years now. Lots of kids + pure imagination.
Timing (Score:1)
Think you may have missed this one by some margin.
I signed up to the newsletter when this was first announced, thinking the thing would be out in about a month. The earliest email I received (entitled "It's the first ever LEGO Universe Newsletter!", fyi) dates from 6 September 2007.
Still, only out by 900 days. Better luck next time, ./.
I'd be ok with a pay for 'Premium' service (Score:1)
This is going to be epic win or epic fail (Score:1)
You, can never have too many, commas (Score:2)
I, don't know why people feel the need to put a comma after the subject in a sentence. It, is stupid.