Quote: Original post by Cambios
Do we really want this industry to evolve to a point where scouring external, third party web sites is a de facto requirement for enjoying any level of success in a game?
The first thing I thought of when I read this is when I was younger I had Mortal Kombat for Sega. I also was lucky enough to talk my mom into buying me the book with all of the moves and finishes in it. How is this any different? Countless times friends and I have scoured books and internet for tips and tricks to beat bosses/do cool moves/get out of situations on all sorts of games, not just MMORPG's.
Quote: Original post by terlenth
Reading up on any hobby is the norm. Especially if you want to be really good at it. And that in my perspective is what gaming is, a hobby.
I agree. The high end raiding in WoW gives great rewards, which are supposed to be hard to get. I personally would love to get these items, but accept that fact that I probably won't any time soon. I don't have the time to do 25 man raids and get this gear, and I accept that as part of the game. If someone wants this gear, and has the time to raid, then they also have time to research the encounters. There are sites all over the web dedicated to WoW strategy. I don't think this is any different at all to look up how to do Liu Kang's finishing move where he turns into a dragon and bites off the top half off his opponent, AND memorize how to do it, AND do it correctly.
I don't believe researching game play is only for hard-core players, regardless of the game/genre.