10 Things You Need to Know About EverQuest Next

Call it what you want--revolutionary, evolutionary, a game changer--but EverQuest Next established itself as The Game to Watch when Sony Online
Entertainment revealed it on Friday, August 2nd at SOE Live. Our community site for all things EverQuest, EQHammer,
has already published mountains of coverage from the event with more incoming. I thought I’d kickstart your EQN addiction by telling you a bunch of stuff
you need to know. Knowledge is a gateway drug, so read on and get hooked.

#1 - This is not EverQuest 3.

There’s a reason that EverQuest Next is not named EverQuest 3 -- it was specifically designed to use EverQuest’s rich lore, classes and history in an
entirely new way. SOE didn’t just put a different spin on the tired mechanics we’ve seen in MMORPGs for the past 15 years, it got rid of some entirely,
tossed the rest in a blender with some completely fresh ingredients, and whipped up a radically different and delicious MMO margarita. We’re going to be
drinking this stuff for years to come. Drink responsibly, people; this is the EverCrack for the new paradigm.

For some classic EQ and EQ2 players, the response to EQ Next might be less, “Shut up and take my money” and more “Shove it where it ain’t sunny,” but you
can’t please everyone. And I’m betting on the likelihood of all but the most curmudgeonly of the curmudgeons being won over eventually.

EverQuest Next Landmark

#2 - Two games are better than one!

One new game is awesome, but two new games? That’s mind blowing. And that’s what you’ll be getting next from the EverQuest franchise. A few months back,
SOE president John Smedley teased EQ fans by saying that they’d get to see what the team was working on “later this year, and I don’t mean beta.” What he
was referring to was EverQuest Next Landmark. Although we don’t have a definite launch date yet, we know that SOE plans to launch Landmark this winter.

What is Landmark? EQHammer has a detailed article. Basically, think
Minecraft on meth. (Have I made too many drug analogies? I swear to the gods that I barely even drink.) SOE decided to take the suite of tools that they’re
using in-house to terraform EQNext and put them in the hands of players. What’s cool is that the tools are incredibly powerful without the mind-bending
complexity that normally comes with 3D modeling. Players will be able to create a character, go out into the world, explore the landscape, discover
materials and crafting recipes, stake a claim and then start building. SOE plans to have certain areas where they will strictly enforce the art direction
and invite players to actually participate in the building of Norrath by creating and submitting their designs. Take a look at the power of Landmark's toolset in action.

On top of all this, through SOE’s Player Studio feature, builders can create assets to sell to other players on the marketplace for real cash. You might
create an awesome tower, for instance, that you package up for the Player Studio marketplace. Imagine that someone else purchases your tower (you get some
cash for that), and then uses it to create an awesome castle that he, in turn, puts up on the marketplace. Every time someone purchases his castle, you’ll
get some royalties. Cha-ching!

#3 - Say goodbye to static classes and hello to multi-classing.

EverQuest Next will launch with 8 starting classes, and each class will have a couple of weapons from which players can choose, along with a handful of
character abilities. Through exploration and adventuring, you’ll come across opportunities to pick up new classes. There are more than 40 classes out in
Norrath for you to find. In an interview with Ten Ton Hammer’s Sardu, Creative
Director Jeff Butler said that players should look at EQNext’s class advancement system “more from a collectible standpoint” than the EQ franchise’s
previous class advancement system, where you played a static class and customized it with Alternate Advancement. He pointed out that if a player wanted to
play a pure class, and not get involved in multi-classing at all, they could do that and fully enjoy the experience. He described multi-classing as
optional, but never required. We have lots more questions about classes, so keep an eye peeled on EQHammer for more interviews from SOE Live coming soon.

EverQuest Next warrior

#4 - There are no levels.

EQNext is a great big sandbox with multi-classing and abilities and weapons galore, but no little blue (or gold) bubbles serving as dangling carrots.
Presumably, there are other more tasty carrots to be discovered. We’ll let you know when we know more about progression.

#5 - Your weapons matter.

Similar to Guild Wars 2, your character’s abilities will change depending on what weapon you’re holding. “They’re one of the class-defining things in the
game,” said EQ franchise Director of Development, Dave Georgeson, during the EverQuest Next world debut. So, not only are there 40-plus classes to mix and
match from, but each class will have a couple of weapons that allow players to change up their character’s play style.

#6 - You can blow shit up.

“We wanted you to be able to blow up anything, anytime, anywhere,” said Georgeson. The world is made out of tiny bits called voxels (the same bits you’ll
be manipulating when you’re building with Landmark.) And what can be built... can also be destroyed. This plays out in some cool ways in game. Not only can
players dig for building and crafting materials or knock down walls, they can destroy objects strategically in combat. Are there dozens of kobolds charging
toward you across a bridge? No problem; destroy that sucker and watch them plummet to their doom. But don’t worry, the world eventually heals after you’ve
torn it apart, and only some changes (namely the ones SOE wants to happen) are permanent. Here's a glimpse of the destructibility in action.

#7 - Norrath is like an onion -- it has layers.

What you see on the surface of Norrath is just the beginning. There are layers of depth for players to uncover and explore, thanks to the destructible
world. “You don’t have to wait for us to reveal [the world] to you,” says Georgeson, “You can just grab a pick and start making a tunnel.” As you explore
through these layers, you’ll trigger events or quest opportunities and even, occasionally, earthquakes. What is destroyed can be recreated in new ways, so
that the world is constantly changing and players are constantly finding new content, not waiting on some expansion pack to open up a new area. Underground
caverns, magma chambers... it’s all there waiting to be discovered.

#8 - The AI is watching you.

EverQuest Next has what SOE is calling “emergent AI.” Thanks to their collaboration with Storybricks, NPCs in EQNext will react to your behavior in game,
as well as the behaviors of other players.

“As you play this game, you’re going to be making decisions,” says Georgeson. “And those decisions will have consequences. What that means is the game is
remembering everything you did, and it’s reacting. The different NPCs, what quest opportunities are available, all those things are reacting to
you based on what you have done.”

Imagine the Crushbone orcs. They’re mean, greedy, and they dislike cities where they’re likely to get their asses handed to them by guards and groups of
adventurers. They do like lonely stretches of road where they can jump a lone traveler, beat him up, and steal his stuff. Instead of setting up a static
spawn camp that will burp out a new group of orcs a few minutes after the last group was killed, EverQuest Next will drop orcs into the world at large and
let them do their thing based on their wants and needs. Perhaps the orcs will search out that lonely stretch of road and set up camp. But should that road
become less hospitable -- should players alert the guards or begin harassing the orcs -- they might pull up stakes and move on. This means that the world
is constantly changing, even in relatively small ways, as a result of player activity.

#9 - You can change the world. Permanently.

Through a mechanism called Rallying Calls, EQNext players can actually affect much larger, permanent change on the world of Norrath. Here’s an example:

Let’s say adventurers have been given a directive from the Combine Accord asking them to go out into the world and rebuild the city of Halas. (Yep, certain
beloved cities won’t exist in EQNext until you band with other adventurers to raise them up.) The Rallying Call invites everyone in the game to join in the
process (although you can ignore it at your whim if that’s how you roll), and it can take up to a couple of months of real time for the task to be
accomplished. But players won’t know what events will trigger the story to move forward; they’ll need to discover them on their own. This means that
progress on any Rallying Call will look different on every server.

EverQuest Next - ice blockade

You can change the world permanently, but this ice blockade is a temporary spell to keep the bad guys at bay.

During a Rallying Call, players might find themselves doing things like gathering resource materials, or venturing out to explore the nearby areas and
pacify any threats. Let’s say that, during your attempts to tamp down the local goblin threat, you piss off the goblins and they begin burning down your
outlying villages. (Whoops!) The next stage of the event might have you building stone walls to keep those pyromaniac bastards from incinerating your town.
And you may also have raised the ire of the goblin king, who might go out and make some allies and raise an army to siege your keep, the final stage in
the Rallying Call. This will open up even more new quest opportunities such as defending the walls, destroying catapults, or thwarting saboteurs.
Eventually, the player community will defeat the threat, and a new Rallying Call will roll out somewhere else in the world. Halas will have become a
permanent structure... unless SOE should see fit to destroy it again sometime in the future.

The world will be changing so much as you play that it will be virtually impossible to recreate your gameplay experiences should you roll a new alt. When
friends join you on your server months after launch, you’ll be able to say things like, “Back in my day, Halas didn’t even exist!”

#10 - SOE is serious about an “open development process.”

Through a program they’re calling Round Table, SOE intends to engage the community and involve them
in the process of building EverQuest Next. They absolutely want to hear what players want from the game, and they’re listening to ideas and criticisms.
Rather than keeping their development process top secret, they’ll be asking for your input, so go participate.

According to the official EverQuest Next site, "Landmark is scheduled to launch this winter and EverQuest Next is still in the early stages of development
with no announcement date set." Although you’ll be applying for beta in both games, we’re going to go ahead and assume that folks will be getting into
Landmark first. And, since it’s scheduled to release this winter, that beta should be happening soonish. So, go ahead and apply for the EverQuest Next beta, then cross your fingers and wait for that invite.


To read the latest guides, news, and features you can visit our EverQuest Next Game Page.

Last Updated: Mar 29, 2016

About The Author

Karen is H.D.i.C. (Head Druid in Charge) at EQHammer. She likes chocolate chip pancakes, warm hugs, gaming so late that it's early, and rooting things and covering them with bees. Don't read her Ten Ton Hammer column every Tuesday. Or the EQHammer one every Thursday, either.

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