The Digital Continuum: Dark Elf days in WAR
Filed under: Betas, Fantasy, New titles, Warhammer Online, Opinion, The Digital Continuum, Massively Hands-on

From the moment you enter Warhammer Online as a level one Dark Elf surrounded by Black Arks and clanging metal, you'll be made to feel like an evil and menacing figure. This is done in various ways and I'm glad to say that it's never undone. One way Mythic invests you into your character is the first quest you ever receive and it's going to put a smile on a lot of your faces, unless you're an Order player. If you're an Order or player, you'll probably want to run into my sword for Malekith's sake. Trust me, it's really all for the best.
So what's the first Dark Elf quest, exactly? Kill your treacherous brethren in the name of the true Phoenix King, Malekith. Oh- and don't forget to enjoy yourself.
It doesn't stop there. Why would it? Not a couple of quests later you'll find yourself mesmerizing (via dark magical crystal) and subsequently capturing a High Elf so that you can throw him into a pit of slaves consisting of skeletons, corpses and other quavering captures still clinging to their hopeless existence. Pretty awesome, right? That's just the beginning. You'll get to raid libraries in order to find forbidden knowledge and release a particularly vicious beast onto unsuspecting victims. My personal favorite quest involves a certain High Elf pet classes' animal companion and your delightfully requested incisive action upon them.
All of this intoxicating madness is set during an epic-sized Dark Elf invasion, too. The followers of Malekith are determined to win back their original homeland, Ulthuan and enslave all of their snobbish, haughty and foolish brethren. In other words, you're playing within the middle of a brutal and bloody civil war. This is the kind of thing you'd expect to see at the tail end of a leveling experience in any other MMORPG but it's staring you in the face right after character creation in this game. This vicious in-fighting at your earliest presence in-game is sublimely beneficial towards cementing the fact that war truly is everywhere in Warhammer Online. After the smallest amount of Dark Elf questing, you'll encounter your first Public Quest. It begins with you and masses of other evil yet pale Elven players killing off the equivalent of priests and protectors. These men and women are guarding something very important and you soon discover that it happens to be a weakened Sun Dragon. You see, the Dark Elves are so insatiably ruthless that they'd much rather stab at the heart of a pitifully weakened dragon than at one of a stronger and healthier Dragon. It really just makes more sense to them and adds that decidedly delicious sinister touch. Plus, the best part of it all is that you receive several elective rewards in the form of potions, green armors and eventually very nice blue pieces of equipment from participating in the unadulterated slaughter-fest. All Public Quests are designed this way. They consistently offer up choices among rewards, which is an excellent feature considering it's a rare occasion that everyone is satisfied by the same thing. I happen to love brand new 'stabby-pointies', myself.
You don't experience this civil war through PvE content alone -- of which there is plenty -- you also take this arguably exquisite war between brother and sister to the RvR battlegrounds and instanced Scenarios. The lovely thing about Scenarios is that they can be accessed directly on your user interface and from anywhere in the area that they're set in. This allows you to keep playing at your preferred pace while waiting on some good old objection-based PvP gameplay to start up. One of the things I noticed while playing through the first tier of Warhammer Online's Dark Elves is that you can mix and match your gameplay as you see fit. The game won't punish you for it. In fact, it almost feels like it's happy to oblige. I often found myself participating in Public Quests while waiting for a Scenario to fill up. Plus, as an added bonus, the game drops you back where you were once the Scenario is finished. It's all very slick.
All right, so here's the negative paragraph. Even with all the great things that I experienced in the Dark Elf starting zone, I could definitely feel a void where the Black Guard should have been. Unfortunately, the loss of the Black Guard and Choppa is made to seem worse having seen the art and read the concept designs for both classes. I know these guys could have been -- or are going to be -- awesome. I was planning on playing both of them, actually. One as my main and the other my secondary. Although, I'm probably in the minority there. While I can't speak to the Choppa -- seeing as how Greenskins are still under NDA -- I can say that I never even got a chance to play-test the "raw meat and potatoes-stuffed" Black Guard. Thankfully, the lack of a Dark Elf tank doesn't break the game. Far from it really, since all the classes are surprisingly flexible within reason in concern to their core role. Essentially, Warhammer Online seems to be balanced enough to handle the lack of a core class, which is a testament to the balancing Mythic has done up to this point. You can bet that I'll be waiting patiently for the day when we get our "Black Guard" patch, though.So here are my initial thoughts summed up: Dark Elves -- so far -- are a wonderfully fun race set in a creatively crafted MMO with some rough edges. A whole lot of what's been promised is there, though: Public Quests, smart kill quests, cleverly entertaining quests, the Tome of Knowledge, open world RvR and engaging Scenarios. Within the first five or eight levels you're going to see and experience all of these things. Thankfully, there's still more for me (and you) to experience. I haven't yet gotten to experience living guilds, city raids, high-level RvR and or high-level Public Quests. Lets not forget the other two Destruction factions, either. So consider this a tentative thumbs-up and watch Massively over the next week or two for plenty more discussion on the game.























Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
8-09-2008 @ 8:32PM
Gylfi said...
I'm fairly puzzled at how you found kill collecting quests so exciting, same for reading all the nlabbing in the quest text.
Reply
8-09-2008 @ 10:18PM
Kyle Horner said...
What was exciting about them is that more than half of the time I'd have completed them without even accepting them. So I'd come back to a quest hub that suddenly had a bunch of NPCs with "finished" markers over their heads. When I talked to them, they'd thank me for killing X creature and reward me right on the spot
8-10-2008 @ 7:37AM
Ghen said...
The text always makes things more exciting. Take the new quests added to Dustwallow Marsh in WoW; just kill quests, delivery quests, and one searching for items quest... but the story made it a real adventure to finish.
8-11-2008 @ 10:05AM
Blake said...
"Objection-based" PvP sounds like a winner.
Reply
8-11-2008 @ 3:22PM
joseph.ahughes said...
Yeah, maybe we could have a level called "Badgering the Witness".
8-11-2008 @ 2:28PM
Drak said...
Yeah, maybe we can have a PvP level called "Badgering the Witness" for an escort or "Incompetent, Irrelevant, Immaterial" for a 3 tower point control.
Reply
8-13-2008 @ 7:19AM
Larry-Steve said...
Lol, I have reasons why I wasn't aware the NDA was lifted for Dark Elves, but seeing as you got to post YOUR experiences, here come mine!
You know how this whole war started right? Malekith systematically designed the entire thing. This To-be-King is one evil and intelligent 'mo fo'. Placing the Greenskins under his power and taking advantage of the new Chaos Champion's arrival has moved him and his armada straight into HE territory. Very Evil, the most Evil of Evil, just really freaking Evil. ONLY to learn that the most savage melee hero you can be is a scantily clad hooker with some cooking knives... If they don't implement the Black Guard EVENTUALLY, I will cry. We read of those as a fortress within themselves. The concept art had me drooling. (The black plated menace had 7 swords on him!!!)
I was slightly disappointed with the play style of the Witch Elf though. Nothing too unique. The usual use a resounce to bleed, poison, and attack. They get two weapons. Their armor is a plated bikini with barbs on it.
I didn't play either of the two others b/c I was REALLY intent on that damn Black Guard. Oh well, I guess...
Oh, and w/o breaking the NDA, I played a Choppa and BE VERY VERY VERY VERY HAPPY YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU'RE MISSING. He was amazing...
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8-13-2008 @ 6:29PM
Barth said...
I've never seen an MMO where you actually need a real tank at such low levels. I think everyone is making too big a deal out of the lack of one at this point.. whether it's bad there isn't one, or how amazing it is that one isn't needed.
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