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Ultima. It was a series of early, surprisingly influential vidya RPGs. Nowdays mostly known as the first sign of [[EA]]'s decent into capital E evil.
The '''Ultima''' series was a surprisingly influential collection of vidya RPGs. Nowadays it's mostly known as the first sign of [[EA]]'s decent into capital E evil.


The short version? One of the first Computer roleplaying games to get popular, Ultimas 1, 2, and particularly 3 were old school [[Dungeon crawling|hack & slash]] affairs, with brief voyages into [[Science Fantasy]] just to liven things up.
The short version? They were some of the first computer roleplaying games to get popular. Ultimas 1, 2, and particularly 3 were old school [[Dungeon crawling|hack & slash]] affairs, with brief voyages into [[Science Fantasy]] just to liven things up.


After receiving feedback from his first 3 games, Richard Garriott, the author of Ultimas 1 through 3, decided to make a game about Virtue, rather then just killing shit. The result is probably one of the most influential games in Western Computer RPGs ever made, Ultima 4: Quest of the Avatar. (Fun fact: the word "Avatar" for a in-game character starts with Ultima 4.) What was unique about it? Well, first, it had a plot that was more then an excuse for dungeon crawling or combat; the basic idea was to become worthy of being a champion of the realm of Britannia.
After receiving feedback from his first 3 games, Richard Garriott the author of Ultimas 1 through 3 decided to make a game about virtue, rather than just killing shit. The result is probably one of the most influential Western computer RPGs ever made: Ultima 4: Quest of the Avatar. (Fun fact: the word "Avatar" for a in-game character starts with Ultima 4.) What was unique about it? Well, first, it had a plot that was more than an excuse for dungeon crawling or combat; the basic idea was to become worthy of being a champion of the realm of Britannia.


And he followed it up with 3 sequels that attempted to top it.
And he followed it up with 3 sequels that attempted to top it.
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And then EA came. We won't speak about that.
And then EA came. We won't speak about that.


But we will speak about how the first MMORPG, if you ignore [[MUD]]s, was Ultima Online, to the point that it coined the word "MMORPG".
But we will speak about how the first MMORPG if you ignore [[MUD]]s was Ultima Online, to the point that it coined the word "MMORPG".


If you want more detail, go google up "Spoony ultima". Guy is an idiot, but he gives a good overview of what the series was like, and why Ultima 9 is so hated. If it's still up when you read this, [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SnzXsJ2vmQ here's a version that cuts out the skits].
If you want more detail, go Google up "Spoony Ultima". Guy is an idiot, but he gives a good overview of what the series was like, and why Ultima 9 is so hated. If it's still up when you read this, [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6SnzXsJ2vmQ here's a version that cuts out the skits].

Revision as of 08:03, 15 August 2019

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The Ultima series was a surprisingly influential collection of vidya RPGs. Nowadays it's mostly known as the first sign of EA's decent into capital E evil.

The short version? They were some of the first computer roleplaying games to get popular. Ultimas 1, 2, and particularly 3 were old school hack & slash affairs, with brief voyages into Science Fantasy just to liven things up.

After receiving feedback from his first 3 games, Richard Garriott — the author of Ultimas 1 through 3 — decided to make a game about virtue, rather than just killing shit. The result is probably one of the most influential Western computer RPGs ever made: Ultima 4: Quest of the Avatar. (Fun fact: the word "Avatar" for a in-game character starts with Ultima 4.) What was unique about it? Well, first, it had a plot that was more than an excuse for dungeon crawling or combat; the basic idea was to become worthy of being a champion of the realm of Britannia.

And he followed it up with 3 sequels that attempted to top it.

And then EA came. We won't speak about that.

But we will speak about how the first MMORPG — if you ignore MUDs — was Ultima Online, to the point that it coined the word "MMORPG".

If you want more detail, go Google up "Spoony Ultima". Guy is an idiot, but he gives a good overview of what the series was like, and why Ultima 9 is so hated. If it's still up when you read this, here's a version that cuts out the skits.