Ultima Online

Ultima Online

Original cover art
Developer(s)

Origin Systems (1997–2004) Electronic Arts (2004–2006) Mythic Entertainment (2006–2014)[1]

Broadsword (2014–)[2]
Publisher(s) Electronic Arts
Director(s) Starr Long
Producer(s) Richard Garriott
Designer(s) Raph Koster
Programmer(s) Rick Delashmit
Scott Phillips
Composer(s) Kirk Winterrowd
Joe Basquez
Hal Milton
Platform(s) Microsoft Windows, Linux[3]
Release date(s) 24 September 1997[4]
Genre(s) MMORPG
Mode(s) Multiplayer

Ultima Online (UO) is a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG), released on 24 September 1997,[4] by Origin Systems.

Ultima Online is a fantasy role-playing game set in the Ultima universe. It is known for its extensive player versus player combat system. Since its release, it has added eight expansion packs, a booster pack and dozens of free content updates. The release of Ultima Online: Kingdom Reborn in 2007 brought a new game engine with upgraded visuals.

Gameplay

Ultima Online continued the tradition of previous Ultima games in many ways, but due to advancing technology and the simple fact that it was Origin's first persistent online game, many new game mechanics appeared. Partially designed as a social and economic experiment, the game had to account for widespread player interaction as well as deal with the tradition of players feeling as if they were the center of attention, as had been the case in single-player games.

Worlds

Ultima Online began with a single world, with specific expansion packs adding additional territory and new worlds. The second world was the "Lost Lands", with additional land, dungeons, creatures, and terrain. The third was Trammel. This led the developers to distinguish the original world by making the environment more grim, and naming it "Felucca".[5] The two kinds of servers were "normal" servers with both Trammel (consensual PVP) and Felucca (non-consensual PVP) ruleset and "siege" servers with non-consensual PVP and no item insurance. Siege servers support one character slot on an account, limits to ways of traveling and other limits.[6]

The worlds in Ultima Online include:

Expansions

Throughout Ultima Online's history, there have been many major additions to the game. Expansion packs have been released regularly, all of which add new content in the form of landmass, art, quests, items, or game mechanics.

Title Release date Features
Ultima Online: The Second Age 1 October 1998 Lost Lands, along with an in-game chat system and new creatures. Also known as T2A. It was released in two boxed versions with different artwork and a single manual.
Ultima Online: Renaissance 4 May 2000 Doubled the size of the world, adding a second copy. The worlds were called Felucca and Trammel, after the two moons in Ultima's Britannia world. The Trammel world did not allow player killing and was geared towards fighting monsters. Felucca adopted a darker, more foreboding look and kept its player vs player roots.
Ultima Online: Third Dawn 7 March 2001 Included a 3D client to compete with 3D competition like EverQuest. A special Third Dawn-only land was created, called Ilshenar. It was accessible only to 3D clients until the release of Lord Blackthorn's Revenge.
Ultima Online: Lord Blackthorn's Revenge 24 February 2002 Brought "a dark new world based on new characters from Todd McFarlane" to Ultima Online with improved game artificial intelligence, in-game help and improved character creation.
Ultima Online: Age of Shadows 11 February 2003 Brought the landmass of Malas with space for new housing, two new character classes (Paladin and Necromancer) and the ability to customize house designs. The item system was reworked with this expansion. Armor resistance was split into five types and many new properties that affected game play were added to weaponry. As good equipment became vital, this expansion also brought with it item insurance. Subscriptions reached a peak of over 250,000 accounts following the release.[12]
Ultima Online: Samurai Empire 2 November 2004 Brought ancient Japanese mythology and folklore to the game, two new classes (Ninja and Samurai) and a new area to explore, the Tokuno Islands. The new class skills shifted the balance of player vs. player combat away from mage dominance.
Ultima Online: Mondain's Legacy 30 August 2005 Introduced a new race, elves, and a new skill, spellweaving. Several dungeons were also added.
Ultima Online: Stygian Abyss 8 September 2009 Featured a new playable race, the Gargoyle; additional play areas; and three new skills: imbuing, throwing and mysticism.[13] Stygian Abyss also featured significant upgrades to the Kingdom Reborn client, which has been renamed to the Enhanced Client. The original client is still supported.[14]
Ultima Online: Time of Legends 2015 New Areas: Shadowguard and Valley of Eodon; two new champion spawns; сompleting the virtue system; lots of new items; new skill-masteries; updates to classic housing.[15]

Booster packs

At a public relations event on 28 August 2010 it was announced that the development team was moving to a "booster" style development process.[16][17] The stated goal was to release two boosters per year.[18]

Title Release date Features
Ultima Online: High Seas 12 October 2010 Focused on additions to fishing, sailing and the pirate skill. Four new ship types, improved ship movement, pirate NPCs to hunt, and new boss encounters are introduced along with improvements to the fishing skill like new types of fish and crustaceans to catch and an increased skill cap.[19]

Development

Ultima Online is the product of Richard Garriott's idea for a fantasy game involving several thousand people who can all play in a shared fantasy world. Prior games allowed hundreds of people to play at the same time, including Habitat (beta-tested in 1986), The Realm Online, Neverwinter Nights (the AOL version) and Meridian 59; however, Ultima Online significantly outdid these games, both graphically and in game mechanics. The initial team was composed of Garriott, Starr Long, Rick Delashmit, Scott Phillips and, a bit later Raph Koster, who became the lead designer. Koster wrote public "designer letters" and usually went by his nickname of Designer Dragon. Koster drew inspiration from prior online games,[20] such as DartMUD.[21]

The project started in 1995 and was presented to the public at E3 as "Ultima Online: Shattered Legacy" in May 1996. The development cost was much greater than traditional computer games; it relied on people accessing servers via modem. Ultima Online's initial features included persistent player housing, skill-based character progression (without levels or classes),[22] a craft-based and player-driven economy,[23] and unrestricted player-versus-player combat.[24]

An artificial life engine was supposed to be implented into the game. Starr Long, the game's associate producer, explained in 1996:

Nearly everything in the world, from grass to goblins, has a purpose, and not just as cannon fodder either. The 'virtual ecology' affects nearly every aspect of the game world, from the very small to the very large. If the rabbit population suddenly drops (because some gung-ho adventurer was trying out his new mace) then wolves may have to find different food sources (e.g., deer). When the deer population drops as a result, the local dragon, unable to find the food he’s accustomed to, may head into a local village and attack. Since all of this happens automatically, it generates numerous adventure possibilities.

However, this feature never made it beyond the game's beta stage. As Richard Garriott explained:

We thought it was fantastic. We'd spent an enormous amount of time and effort on it. But what happened was all the players went in and just killed everything; so fast that the game couldn't spawn them fast enough to make the simulation even begin. And so, this thing that we'd spent all this time on, literally no-one ever noticed – ever – and we eventually just ripped it out of the game, you know, with some sadness.[25]

Beta and assassination of Lord British

Lord British was Garriot's in-game alter ego, who was killed during an in-game appearance at Ultima Online's beta test on August 9, 1997. During a server population stress test, a player character known as Rainz cast the "fire field" spell, killing Lord British. Producer Starr Long blamed it on human error: Lord British's character, like others, had been made invulnerable to this kind of attack, but by design the invulnerability did not persist over several game sessions. When the server crashed shortly before the incident, Garriott forgot to reset his invulnerability status. Shortly after, administrators banned Rainz's account from the beta test for repeatedly exploiting, rather than reporting, bugs. According to Origin, he was not banned for the assassination but rather for prior complaints against his account highlighted by this incident. Beta testers protested Rainz's ban as well as subsequent actions of Long and other developers, during which his in-game character used a spell to indiscriminately kill other characters who observed the assassination. MMOCrunch calls it the most memorable event in MMORPG History.[26][27] September 1997 was the last day of the original beta test. The beta ended with a bang, as players were treated to an "end of the world" scenario with Shadowlords, demons, and other evil creatures slaughtering every character in sight.

Origin era (1995-2004)

In September 1997, Ultima Online launched and opened the first game servers to the public.[28] Upon release, Ultima Online proved popular, reaching 100,000 paying subscribers within six months, causing severe lag problems. In 1999, servers opened around the world to support the rising popularity of the game, in Japan, Europe and South Korea. In 2000, Garriot resigned from Origin, taking Lord British with him. Game players created their own fanfiction speculations as to why the Lord had vanished. In February 2000, a large in-world event had a massive army of undead lay siege to the Britannia city of Trinsic. The event ran concurrently on all servers over several months. Another server opened in Australia during this time. In May 2000, Ultima Online's second expansion Ultima Online: Renaissance dramatically altered the game. It split the game world into two parts called Trammel and Felucca, one was a consensual PVP zone, while the other was non-consensual. In November 2000, a Ultima Online's first official fanfest was held, called the UO World Faire in Austin, TX.[29] In March 2001, Ultima Online's third expansion |Ultima Online: Third Dawn was released. It added a new area to the server called Ilshenar. This new area could only be accessed with a new game client that launched with the expansion. The original game client could be used in the previous server areas. In January 2002, Ultima Online's second official fanfest was called Online Worlds FanFest, also held in Austin. Players were able to meet the developers, as well as guest speaker Todd McFarlane. February saw the release of Ultima Online's fourth expansion Ultima Online: Lord Blackthorn's Revenge. Notably, it enabled access to the areas previously only available to the newer Third Dawn game client. In February 2003, Ultima Online's fifth expansion Ultima Online: Age of Shadows was released. It was the most game changing update yet including: offering players the ability to custom design their game homes, a server area that doubled the size of homes, and overhauled the item system. Around March 2003 Ultima Online reached approximately 250,000 subscribers. In February 2004, Origin Systems shut down. Ultima Online no longer had a named studio managing it. Development headquarters moved from Austin to Fairfax, Virginia.

Electronic Arts era (2004-2006)

The sixth expansion, Samurai Empire, launched in November 2004 was Japanese-themed. It offered two new professions, the Ninja and the Samurai, as well as new Japanese-themed housing tile sets. New lands, the Tokuno Islands, were added, with the cities being styled after ancient Japanese cities.

Ultima Online was the first MMORPG to reach the 100,000 subscriber base, far exceeding that of any game that went before it.[30] Subscriber numbers peaked at around 250,000 in July 2003, but then began a steady decline. In 2008 the game had around 100,000 subscribers.[31] As of April 2008, Ultima Online held a market share below 0.6% of the massively multiplayer online game subscriptions.[32] This may in part be attributed to the 2004 release of World of Warcraft, which quickly established hegemony over the MMORPG market and has attracted scores of players from all preexisting games in the genre.

Expansion number seven, Mondain's Legacy, launched in August 2005. It featured the second player race, Elves. The quest system received a major upgrade, as did the crafting system. Spellweaving was added to the skills. Many new dungeons were added. This expansion was the first that was only available online (offline versions on CDs could be ordered). Mondain's Legacy was the last expansion, with updates becoming more irregular after that point.

Mythic Entertainment era (2006-2014)

In June 2006 Electronic Arts purchased Mythic Entertainment, the creators of Dark Age of Camelot. Mythic was tasked with managing EA's MMORPG portfolio, including Ultima Online. That month it was also announced that the anti-cheating software PunkBuster would be integrated into Ultima Online. This marked the first time PunkBuster would be used with an MMORPG to help curb cheating and exploiting. However, it was never integrated into the game, and in November 2006, Electronic Arts put the PunkBuster integration on indefinite hold.

In August 2007 Ultima Online: Kingdom Reborn was released. This was the first major overhaul of the client and artwork systems since Ultima Online: Third Dawn. The final expansion was Stygian Abyss (2009), which focused on the gargoyle race. After Stygian Abyss the development model shifted from expansions to "booster packs" that were intended to be smaller updates released more frequently. However, the first booster pack High Seas of 2010 was also the last.

Broadsword era (2014-)

It was announced on 6 February 2014 that development of the game would be transferred from Mythic to Broadwsword, a new studio, that would take over future development.[33]

Other releases

Ultima Online has had several special releases that were not expansions, but came with boxed or in-game extras.

Shard emulation

Fans of Ultima Online reverse-engineered the game to produce server emulators of the original Electronic Arts servers.[34] With emulation server software it is possible to customize most aspects of the game and support large numbers of concurrent players on a single server.

Clients

Electronic Arts provides the standard clients with which players are allowed to connect to the Ultima Online servers, though some third-party clients were made.

Original client

The original Ultima Online client is 2D and presents a crisper, simpler artistic flavor that some people find more attractive than the 3D client. Some of the graphics used are high-resolution versions of graphics used in Ultima VIII: Pagan.

Ultima Online: Third Dawn client

The 3D client was originally released as a part of the Ultima Online: Third Dawn expansion, but received poor reviews due to performance issues (especially memory leaks early on) and sub-par graphics. An update to the 3D client was made on 30 January 2006 when characters and creatures from the game were scaled down to smaller sizes. As of early May/Late April 2007, the Third Dawn client was no longer supported by Electronic Arts, and focus shifted to the Kingdom Reborn client and its successor the Enhanced Client. Electronic Arts Ultima Online servers do not allow the Third Dawn client to connect.

Ultima Online: Kingdom Reborn client
Screenshot from Ultima Online: Kingdom Reborn.

Ultima Online: Kingdom Reborn was announced in August 2006 and was released 27 August 2007.[35] The new client modernized the game's look, making it easy to add new content without backsliding through outdated and outmoded art, while maintaining the niche market as an MMORPG that can run on lower-end computers. Electronic Arts referred to the Ultima Online: Kingdom Reborn client as "2.5d," meaning that it was written in 3d and then moved into 2d to make it easier for lower-end computers to run. The client is available as a free download.

Electronic Arts originally stated that the Ultima Online: Kingdom Reborn client would replace the long-standing Ultima Online client. Support for this client ended on 9 September 2009, to streamline the patch process prior to the release of the Ultima Online: Stygian Abyss expansion.[36]

Enhanced Client

A modified version of the Kingdom Reborn client, renamed as the "Enhanced Client", was introduced as part of the Stygian Abyss expansion. It was released as an open beta in July 2009. Changes included enhanced macro abilities, a more configurable interface, changes to the mapping system, and graphical improvements.[37] The enhanced graphics of the Kingdom Reborn client had been retired in favor of lower resolution original graphics that more closely resembled the original 2D client. This graphic set was based on the Third Dawn client and was previously available in the Kingdom Reborn client as optional original graphics.

Reception

Awards

Ultima Online's success resulted in Guinness World Records awarding the game eight world records in the Guinness World Records: Gamer's Edition 2008. These records include "First MMORPG to Reach 100,000 Players", "Longest Running MMORPG", and "First and Only Person to Kill Lord British", which was done by a player named Rainz during a server reset which turned off his invulnerability.[38] In May 2001 Ultima Online won the MPOGD game of the month award [39] In 2010, Ultima Online was the first inductee into the Game Developers Choice Online Awards Hall of Fame.[40] In 2012, Stratics presented Ultima Online with a "Historic Achievement Award" to commemorate "fifteen years of innovation, imagination, and dedication in support of the Ultima Online community."[41] Time designated it as one of the 100 greatest video games of all time in November 2012.[42]

Cancelled sequels

Two sequels were planned by Electronic Arts, but both were canceled during development so that more focus could be spent on the original.

Controversies

Since the designers of Ultima Online wanted to provide freedom and sense of agency, it was important to allow players to act in a villainous role. The consequences of in-game criminality were adjusted over time, but maintaining the general commitment to player freedom. As explained by designer Raph Koster, "Being safe from evil is, in my mind, an uneven tradeoff for the fact that you don't get to be heroes anymore, in that you can just opt out of fighting evil. It may be nobody wants to be heroes except when it doesn't count, when it isn't challenging, that people would rather fight 'pretend evil' than the real thing, but I don't personally believe that. I still think people are better than that."[43] Eventually, the Renaissance expansion created large areas of the game in which it was not possible to harm other players. A significant spike in account reactivation was attributed to this aspect of Renaissance.

Ultima Online was sued by former player volunteers ("Counselors") and settled in 2004 without admitting wrongdoing.[44] AOL had their volunteers train customer service personnel it hired, then shut down the volunteer program. Concern over future lawsuits led Microsoft to shut down their volunteer program for Asheron's Call.[45]

References

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  2. Archived 21 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine.
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  4. 1 2 "10 Years of Ultima Online: Ultima Online Through the Ages". 1up.com. 2007. Retrieved 2010-09-08.
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  8. Gaz, Big (3 April 2002). "Blackthorns Revenge Released – News at Gameplanet New Zealand". Gameplanet.co.nz. Retrieved 2012-01-29.
  9. 1 2 3 "Ultima Online Age of Shadows (PC) – PC Games – CNET Archive". Reviews.cnet.com. Retrieved 2012-01-29.
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  13. Zeeman, Chrissay (8 September 2009). "Publish 60 Notes". Retrieved 3 May 2011.
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  15. "Developer video diary". 24 February 2015. Retrieved 19 May 2015.
  16. Electronic Arts (August 2010). "Town Hall Event Announcing Adventures on the High Seas". Electronic Arts. Retrieved 2011-05-03.
  17. Crowner, Calvin (3 September 2010). "Producers Update – 9/3/10". Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  18. Crowner, Calvin (10 September 2010). "Producer's Update – 9/10/2010". Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  19. The Ultima Online Team (12 October 2010). "Welcome to the High Seas! – Publish 68 Notes". Retrieved 3 May 2011.
  20. "Raph Koster's Website". Raphkoster.com. Retrieved 2012-07-29.
  21. Koster MUD-Dev Posting "DartMUD was influential on me, certainly—ought to have been for everyone."
  22. Alexander, Thor (2003). Massively Multiplayer Game Development. Charles River Media. p. 24. ISBN 9781584502432.
  23. Alexander, Thor (2003). Massively Multiplayer Game Development. Charles River Media. p. 22. ISBN 9781584502432.
  24. Alexander, Thor (2003). Massively Multiplayer Game Development. Charles River Media. p. 91. ISBN 9781584502432.
  25. Garriott, Richard. "Good Game interview". in conversation with Bajo of Good Game. ABC Television, Australia. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
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  27. Brad King (8 June 2002). "Make Love, Not War Games". Wired (magazine).
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  31. mmodata.blogspot.com (2012). "Subscriptions (SS) and Active Accounts (AA) with a peak between 150k and 1m.". mmodata.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2012-07-19.
  32. MMOGchart.com (April 2008). "MMOG Subscriptions Market Share". MMOGchart.com. Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 2010-11-19.
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  44. T.L. Taylor (19 April 2004). "UO lawsuit settled". Terranova.blogs.com. Retrieved 2012-07-29.
  45. Developing Online Games by Mulligan and Patrovsky, page 252

External links

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