seawasp: (Poisonous&Venomous)
seawasp ([personal profile] seawasp) wrote2014-11-12 07:13 pm

World of Warcraft...

... actually downloaded and tried the free version for a bit yesterday. (Well, given how honkin' huge it is, I actually had downloaded it over the prior night).

I doubt I'll be playing it again. It's pretty enough, I guess, and the FMV to start it was impressive, but the controls suck (not surprising, I'm using a keyboard), the tutorial features aren't sufficient, the flexibility in creating a character was minimal, and the icons and text are printed in teeny-tiny print I can barely read even when holding the computer up near my face.

No character interaction or intro; I get more character in Oblivion. And the controls on the PS3 just are totally lightyears beyond anything on a keyboard. (yeah, I presume there's probably some awesome USB joysticks or something out there, but I don't have one).

But I'll leave it on my HD for a bit; I may change my mind and give it another shot. 

[identity profile] ebartley.livejournal.com 2014-11-13 03:48 pm (UTC)(link)
Well -- it doesn't require a large screen to play(*). I think for most people it requires a large screen to be fun. Lots of exceptions, of course (especially good eyesight, already hooked on Warcraft, lying in bed with the laptop screen a foot away, specialized interests in Warcraft where the screen size doesn't matter much, etc.) I would expect most people starting warcraft to have similar reactions to yours on a small screen.

That said, the camera zoom, angle, etc. can be adjusted, and I mentioned shift-V above to toggle the type of nameplate display.

(*) There are some specialized cases involving playing in groups where you really *need* a large monitor. But those aren't things you'd do just starting out.