Ultima X: Odyssey represents the latest chapter in one of the oldest and most beloved role-playing franchises in all of computer gaming. It's a highly ambitious game, because UXO will feature the massively multiplayer role-playing experience of Ultima Online, and it will also include the epic sense of adventure found in the single-player Ultima games. So while you will be just one of many players running around the vast fantasy world of Alucinor, the designers are working hard to ensure that every adventure you pursue will have a special and, more importantly, personal feel. Origin's Jon Hanna explains how they're designing a game that's up to the task.

Putting the Role-Playing Back in Massively Multiplayer Role-Playing
Jon "Calandryll" Hanna
Lead Designer, Origin Systems

In our previous designer diary, we discussed how UXO's combat creates a profoundly unique experience requiring well-thought-out strategy and quick thinking. Combat is a lot of fun, but it's even more enjoyable when there is a purpose behind the fight. That's where the Odyssey Adventure System comes in. Questing in online RPGs has long suffered from the same repetitive gameplay problems as combat, but with UXO we're ready to change that.

Questing in most online RPGs unfortunately involves sending you on countless errands, requiring you to run for 10 to 15 minutes (sometimes more!) at time. Nothing ever happens during these quests. There are no surprises, no decisions, and no opportunities for role-playing. Aside from the need to steer your character through the world and click on non-player characters, you barely even need to be at your keyboard. Travel is part of any adventure, but it shouldn't be the entire quest. That's not gameplay. As in the previous diary, I'll use The Lord of the Rings to illustrate my point. Imagine if instead of the harrowing journey, filled with subplots, important decisions, and heroic deeds, Frodo just ran to Mount Doom, threw the ring in the fire, and the quest was over. There would be no drama, no story, and no opportunities for heroism. Unfortunately, that's what passes for quests in many online RPGs.

In UXO, instead of having to wander around looking for NPCs to give you something to do or having to read Web sites looking for lists of quest NPCs, the quests come to you. Going back to the The Lord of the Rings example, imagine if Frodo walked around the shire asking if anyone needed an evil ring destroyed. That would be silly. Instead, the ring quest finds Frodo, and he is thrust into a grand adventure. That's what being a hero is all about, and that's what happens in UXO.

The adventures are all hand-built and take advantage of our private-area technology. For example, you may receive a quest to travel to Red Fang Keep to investigate some strange activities. When you enter the keep, a private version of that map is created, and the quest elements (monsters, ambush points, cinematics, special events, and so on) are loaded on the map. Since you and your party-mates are the only characters on this private map, you can venture through the quest without having to wait in line to fight the boss monster and without having to worry about griefers or kill-stealers. Even though you may have been inside Red Fang Keep before, you'll find that the spawn locations of the monsters, or even the monsters themselves, may be different. Private areas allow us to create very deep quests, filled with surprises and unique challenges.

On top of that, you get to make meaningful choices as you progress through the quests based on how you want to develop your character with respect to the Ultima virtues. Your choices are based on eight virtue abilities (such as valor, spirituality, sacrifice, honesty, and compassion), which earn players special virtue abilities that further define and customize the character's skill set. You'll experience different aspects of the quest and get different rewards based on your choices. I'll walk you through a typical Ultima X: Odyssey adventure to give you an idea of what it's like.

We left off in the previous diary having just finished off a group of rhinorks. You're resting up when suddenly a bright light flashes before you and a man appears. He is an imposing figure dressed in white and gold, and you immediately feel a sense of great power within him. He is the Avatar, hero of Britannia and creator of the world of Alucinor in which you now live. He speaks to you and says that he needs your help. You must travel to Felgoll Forest to help a ranger track down a druid wanted for murder. You gather your courage and agree to help.

After a short trip to a nearby moongate, you and your party teleport to Bane Thicket and find the entrance to Felgoll. You find the ranger who tells you of the druid's misdeeds. You agree to find this druid and learn more about the situation. After a short run, you come upon the druid and learn that he killed the humans because they have been poaching griffins in the forest, driving the beasts to near extinction. He tells you there is only one left and that he will kill again to protect it if necessary. In most online RPGs, you would simply follow a linear storyline, following whatever path the quest forced upon you. But in UXO, you have a choice. You can either demand the druid's surrender for his crimes, or you can seek out the poachers and attempt to save the last living griffin.

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD