by Jeff Woleslagle on Dec 04, 2009
Loading... is the premier daily MMORPG news, coverage, and
commentary newsletter, only from Ten Ton Hammer.
Netbooks are blossoming into the pint-sized powerhouses we hoped they'd be, and with discounts galore this holiday season, it's high time we see how they game. On Monday we laughed at system requirements and installed four MMOs on a netbook just to see how they'd perform. Today we continue the experiment with a fresh batch, including Aion, World of Warcraft: Wrath of the Lich King, Warhammer Online, and Runes of Magic. The results may surprise you, so start your weekend with Loading... Four MMOs and a Netbook, Part 2!
The ONE Power UP Game Card works as currency in
href="http://onegamecard.com/sub/games.aspx" target="_blank">21
games.
Click here
for your chance to win one $10 ONE Card, a winner drawn daily through
Dec. 4th. No purchase necessary.
You vote with what you view at Ten Ton Hammer, and the
result is the Ten Ton Pulse (
href="http://www.tentonhammer.com/thepulse/" target="_blank">What
is The Pulse?).
Here are today's top 5 Pulse results:
WorldBiggest movers today:
Star Trek Online (down 5 to #13)Because we at Ten Ton Hammer heartily believe that it's our job to do stupid things with MMOs so you aren't tempted to, I've tried out a host of MMORPGs (the ones that have been released, anyway) on a Toshiba NB 205 to see if MMO gaming on the most mini of lower-than-minspec computers was still a dream. Because of their portability and increasing power, netbooks are growing ever more popular, and my secret motive in all of this is to see if I can leave my hefty, expensive beast of a laptop at home during my holiday travel while still feeding my MMO habit.
In Four MMOs and a Netbook, Part 1, I checked out Dungeons & Dragons Unlimited, Classic World of Warcraft, EVE Online, and Lord of the Rings Online, with DDO and EVE Online winning the framerate race in surprising style. Before I continue, in a bleak attempt not to fill my inbox with developer ire, let it be known that with just about all of these games, my little bundle of joy is below the minimum system requirements for the game. For reviews, we believe in evaluating games on their own terms, so we're not knocking any MMOs that fail to live up to our externally imposed standards. I'm just hoping to be pleasantly surprised with the results.
Note that I'd wanted to check out EverQuest 2 and Age of Conan, but both produced errors I couldn't reconcile in time for this article. EQ2 was flummoxed by my Intel 945 chipset, common amoung this generation of netbooks, and AoC hung at the launcher despite all the UAC tricks I could muster. In their place I first tried to toss in browser-based Free Realms for some color, but Free Realms has a minimum resolution of 1024x768. My netbook, like many or all of its ilk, tops out at 1024x600.
Warhammer Online - With all the settings bottomed out, I only got a viciously unplayable 1-3 FPS, far below our netbook target of 10 FPS, making WAR as unfriendly to netbooks as Lord of the Rings Online. There's not much else to say here, other than with Mythic's latest Free-to-Play Forever campaign, they could probably use a massive influx of min-spec'ers to fill out the RvR areas of the game. Aion - Though I had to tweak out much of the beauty of the game, the "Fixed FPS" option works wonders with a restart, and FPS was a steady 8-11 throughout the tutorial area. You probably don't want to venture into the Abyss with a netbook and gameplay wasn't quite as fluid as DDO, but I'm marking Aion as netbook tested, netbook approved. World of Warcraft (WotLK) - I tried Vanilla WoW in Part 1 and admitted to disappointment that WoW seems to have abandoned its minspec-friendly roots. Curiousity drove me to turn up the system requirements a notch and check out Wrath, though I knew pretty much what I'd find. What I saw of the game looked good, too good in fact. In a fairly unoccupied corner of Dalaran I encountered my lowest framerates yet, 0-2 FPS, so I feel comfortable saying that WoW isn't nearly the minspec masterpiece that other netbook gaming articles have made it out to be. Runes of Magic - The lone free-to-play entry in this batch, I expected decent framerates since F2Ps make their money on volume, and wasn't disappointed with consistent 8-12 FPS framerates. I'm actually glad I had to scrub EQ2 and AoC because RoM, along with DDO, EVE, and possibly Aion, are likely going to stay installed. My lone complaint is that unlike the majority of the MMOs I tried, Frogster hasn't invested in streaming technology, forcing players to download the 5.2 gig client patch. Streaming only the parts of the game players play would save them serious bandwidth and get players into the game faster.So there you have it, DDO Unlimited, Runes of Magic, Aion, and EVE Online are our MMO-on-a-netbook favorites, with Classic WoW a maybe, and LotRO, WAR, and WotLK not worth the download. Surprised that Aion scales better than WoW? Have your own netbook gaming recommendations? Share them in the Loading... forums and have an awesome weekend.
Shayalyn's Epic Thread of
the Day
From our WoW General Discussion forum
Urf...WoW withdrawals.... sigh
"I'm
here without you, baby..." Khalus is pining for WoW, and he's posted an
older WoW video (featuring that song from Three Doors Down) as a
testiment.If you've ever undered the uncomfortable twitchiness that is
MMOG withdrawal, you know what he's going through. There
are people who've been in the same rocky boat sympathizing and
giving advice in today's epic thread. Join them!
==============================
Awesome Quotes from the
Epic Thread
"The game is a lot of fun - but
sometimes you have to take breaks and get away from it for a while
because it can be consuming. I know when I left it was getting to that
point for me. I am still debating about coming back so we'll see."
- Miralyn
==============================
Have you spotted an Epic Thread on our forums? Tell
us!
5 new Ten Ton Hammer MMOG
features today! 132 in November! 4,004
in
2009!
New Exclusives and Guides today at Ten Ton
Hammer
Today's Hottest Content
Thanks for visiting the Ten Ton Hammer
network!
- Jeff "Ethec" Woleslagle and the Ten Ton Hammer team