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Business model as described on Nexon's company page. May need verification for all the different localizations.
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The game engine features hand-painted textures stylized with edge detection outlining. The game world is developed continuously, through the release of important [[Patch (computing)|patches]] (referred to as "Generations" and "Chapters") that introduce new areas, additional features such as pets and new skills, and advancement of the storyline. The [[Graphical user interface|user interface]] is simple and designed in the likeness of [[Microsoft Windows]]' task bar.
The game engine features hand-painted textures stylized with edge detection outlining. The game world is developed continuously, through the release of important [[Patch (computing)|patches]] (referred to as "Generations" and "Chapters") that introduce new areas, additional features such as pets and new skills, and advancement of the storyline. The [[Graphical user interface|user interface]] is simple and designed in the likeness of [[Microsoft Windows]]' task bar.


Originally, Mabinogi was an optional subscription game. It allowed free play for a limited time a day and optional subscription packages were available. In South Korea, beginning with the Chapter 3 patch, Mabinogi changed to micro-transactions. It now allows 24-hour free play and the Item Shop only offers items, no subscriptions.
Mabinogi was built on a hybrid Value Added Services model (which varies slightly for each game localization) that allows free play for limited time a day and the subscription of paid packages, purchased through the game shop.<ref>{{citeweb|url=http://company.nexon.com/english/html/game/features.asp?idx=11|title=Nexon Company page description of Mabinogi}}</ref> In South Korea, beginning with the Chapter 3 patch, Mabinogi changed to micro-transactions. It now allows 24-hour free play and the Item Shop only offers items, without subscriptions.


The game service is currently available in [[South Korea]], [[Japan]], [[Taiwan]], [[Hong Kong]], [[Mainland China]], [[North America]] and most recently [[New Zealand]] and [[Australia]].
The game service is currently available in [[South Korea]], [[Japan]], [[Taiwan]], [[Hong Kong]], [[Mainland China]], [[North America]] and most recently [[New Zealand]] and [[Australia]].

Revision as of 00:49, 5 December 2008

Mabinogi
Developer(s)devCAT (Nexon)
Publisher(s)Nexon
EnginePleione Engine
Platform(s)Windows(95/ME/2K/XP)
ReleaseSouth Korea June 22, 2004
Japan April 26, 2005
China Hong Kong Taiwan May 6, 2005
March 27th, 2008
New Zealand Australia June 20, 2008
Genre(s)Fantasy MMOG
Mode(s)MMO

Mabinogi (Korean:마비노기) is an online game released by South Korean Game Distributing Company Nexon, and developed by devCAT studio, one of several development teams in Nexon Inc. The Welsh word mabinogi is found in the original manuscripts of the Mabinogion.

The game engine features hand-painted textures stylized with edge detection outlining. The game world is developed continuously, through the release of important patches (referred to as "Generations" and "Chapters") that introduce new areas, additional features such as pets and new skills, and advancement of the storyline. The user interface is simple and designed in the likeness of Microsoft Windows' task bar.

Mabinogi was built on a hybrid Value Added Services model (which varies slightly for each game localization) that allows free play for limited time a day and the subscription of paid packages, purchased through the game shop.[1] In South Korea, beginning with the Chapter 3 patch, Mabinogi changed to micro-transactions. It now allows 24-hour free play and the Item Shop only offers items, without subscriptions.

The game service is currently available in South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Mainland China, North America and most recently New Zealand and Australia.

During the 2007 Gstar game show in Seoul, South Korea, Nexon announced an Xbox 360 version of Mabinogi.[2]

The North American closed beta test began on January 30 2008, at 2pm PST.[3] The pre-open beta only available to Fileplanet users was released on March 5 2008.[4] The full open beta was released on March 6 2008, at 3PM PST. The North American localization of Mabinogi was officially released on March 27th 2008. [5]

Gameplay

There is no class and therefore gameplay is skill-based. Players choose what skill to learn, and then improve it. To learn and improve skills, Ability Points are required.

There are various social aspects. Characters can sitting around a campfire, playing music, having a friendly chat, and sharing food as well as changing their facial expressions as emotes.

Character creation and development

File:Character creation.jpg
Character creation screen (Japanese version)

Characters are created by using Character Cards. There are two kinds of cards: basic and premium. One basic card is given freely when there are no characters (such as when an account is newly created), but not more. Premium cards allows more customization options.

Currently there are three races: human, elf (since Generation 5, Chapter 2) and giant (since Generation 6, Chapter 2). When creating a character, one may choose an age between 10 and 17. The character will advance one year in age every (real) Saturday. Different ages yield different initial stats and affect the amount of stats raised when leveling up.

Rebirth is one important factor. To do it, a Character Cards must be purchased and applied to an existing character. Rebirth allows the player to change the character's age, gender, appearance, and reset the character's level back to 1 while keeping all previously learned skills.

At the age of 25, characters will not gain Ability Points from aging which is required to advance skill ranks, and leveling becomes increasingly harder and slower. Therefore, to accelerate character advancement, players should pay for rebirth.

The player's eating habits will affect the character's build. Eating certain foods in large quantities will increase their weight and may also raise/lower some stats. For example, berries has a slimming effect. These transformations happen over time.

Each (real world) day of the week grants players specific bonuses, such as getting a higher experience rate for certain skills, higher item creation success rate, aging, gaining AP, etc.

Combat system

In manual combat, predicting the enemy's next move and making use of different offensive and defensive skills is key in this game. However, there is also an automatic combat mode.

Some monsters are aggressive and will attack and pursue on sight. The high artificial intelligence of the enemies makes combat more engaging, reducing the existence of bots.[citation needed]

Dying causes loss of experience points and sometimes equipment (lost items can be retrieved at an NPC at a cost). Fallen players can be revived by other players, or by in-game NPC, Nao if Soul Stone of Nao (game shop item) is used. If the character has zero experience points and suffers a death penalty, negative experience points will accumulate, instead of losing a level.

Fantasy Life

There is a wide range of Life skills which give the player the chance to experience a different side of the “fantasy life”. Players can perform tasks such as tending to the wheat and potato fields, making flour, gathering wool from sheep and eggs from hens, weaving and making garments, mining for minerals and crafting weapons, playing and composing music, cooking dishes, etc.

Using a system called Music Markup Language (a variation of Music Macro Language), players may compose their own arrangements or use music scrolls created by other players. In the North American version, these are known as the "Compose" and "Play Music" skills. Different musical instruments, such as lutes, ukuleles, flutes, and others can be used to play. There are legal implications of playing copyrighted music, and while Nexon officially discourages such actions, many players do it.[citation needed]

NPC interaction is important. As the player talks to different non-player characters, more keywords will become available. These will reveal plot points and NPC backgrounds, unlock quests or skills, etc. NPCs also offer a variety of services such as shops, item repair and upgrade, skill apprenticeships and more. Players can also request part-time jobs from some of the NPCs, which can be useful to get items or earn gold (in-game currency). By interacting frequently with the NPCs, they will be able to remember the player's character.

Mainstream plots

Mabinogi has mainstream story campaigns (these were subscribers only). These campaigns have connected story lines that reveal the background story of Erinn and several important characters.

There are 3 stories in sequential order, each implemented at their corresponding Generation updates.
  • Generation 1: Advent of the Goddess
  • Generation 2: Paladin
  • Generation 3: Dark Knight
  • Generation 8: The Drake of Iria
  • Generation 9: Alchemy

Generations 4 through 7 don't have any story campaign, which is reason of complaint among part of the player base.[citation needed]

Quests, exploration and part-time jobs

File:Mabinogi NPC quest.jpg
An NPC giving the player a new quest (Japanese Version).

There are many different quests that players can complete throughout the game. Different types of quests exist, some are party quests, others involve monster hunting, item collecting or other tasks, for instance, skill-based quests like cooking or tailoring.

Some of them are received by the player at specific points or after certain quests are completed, others are given by the NPC's, some can be purchased as quest scrolls and, finally, there are also exploration quests that the player can enroll in through the Quest Boards.

Quest rewards may consist of experience points, Ability Points, gold, items or a combination of these rewards. Quests help the player to discover the game's regions and to find out about the many available NPC's, as they require traveling to different parts of the game world and talking to all the different non-player characters.

Exploration quests typically involve finding certain hidden objects using a pair of L-shaped rods or by finding landmarks or animals and making a sketch of these. Different exploration quests are available according to the player's exploration level. Sometimes, when a player is using the L-rods, they may encounter chests with rewards (some of these chests are guarded by enemies which characters must defeat to open the chests).

There is also a player rank for the completion of each quest, which can be viewed on the Exploration Chronicle panel. When a character completes exploration quests or simply come across these hidden landmarks, the character's exploration level will increase and as they level up the character will gain Ability Points and access to new exploration quests.

Another type of special quests are part-time jobs, which are given by the NPC's. Part-time jobs (called Arbeits in all regions but North America) are only available at a specific time of the day for each NPC and have a time limit to be completed. The player must complete the requested tasks (i.e.: delivering an item to another NPC, crafting a certain number of items, collecting objects, doing farming chores, etc.) and report back to the NPC to choose their reward. If the player completes the task only partially, the reward will be even worse than before.

Repeating these part-time jobs helps to raise the intimacy level between the player and the NPC (giving certain items to the NPC may also help). When a "friendship" has been established between them, certain merchant NPC's will reveal a secret store to the player with special items to purchase.

Time and weather

The game has its own internal clock (36 minutes of the real time corresponds to 1 day of the game), as day gradually turns into night (a dynamic weather system is also in place, with effects such as rain, thunder and sand storms). Each real time day of the week offers players the opportunity to take advantage of specific gameplay bonuses, such as increased skill success or lowered NPC store prices. Weekday names used in-game reflect the Celtic mythology that the game evokes. In Mabinogi, the days of the week are represented by seasons:

Titles

Achieving certain conditions will reward the character with a title. Titles, when applied, can change the character's stats, with the potential to be beneficial or detrimental.

Some examples:

"Lucky Guy/Girl"
"Bear Slayer with Bare hands"
"Defeated by a Fox at 17"
"Noob Elemental Master"
"Elemental Master"
"The Ogre Slayer"
"The Fishing King"
"The Adult"
"The Beta Tester"
"The seal breaker of Ciar Dungeon"
"Friend of Malcolm/Nora/Trefor/Deian"
"Paladin/Dark knight/Falcon/Savage Beast"
"The Old"

Some titles are unique in the server and only one character in that server can be awarded with the title, this is usually achieved by breaking down a Seal Stone. There are also a few titles awarded for completing an event, participating in the Closed Beta period or completing Mainstream Quests.

Other game systems

Players can set up stores to sell their items. Incidentally, items cannot be looted, as it frequently happens in other games, since any item dropped from a monster cannot, as a rule, be picked up by another player for a short time. Items can be safely traded through the trading panels. Also, any items dropped by a player as a result of the player's death is automatically recovered by an NPC nearby, where it can be retrieved.

Generation 3, in later updates, added housing areas between Tir Chonaill and Dunbarton and also between Bangor and Emain Macha. Through this housing system, players can bid for a house and pay rent for it afterwards, in order to keep it. Houses may be used as stores and players can purchase items to decorate their homes.

As in many other MMORPG's, player characters can get married in-game, by requesting this to a marriage NPC. A pet system is also available. Players may purchase Pet Cards from the game store and summon them in-game. Pets can help in combat or, in some cases, even be used as transportation, allowing the player to travel at a greater speed than on foot.

Other features worth mentioning are the "friend", party and guild systems. Guild creation requires the purchase of an extended play package from the game store. Guilds can expand/level up by meeting an increasing quota of points (called Guild Points, or GP), which are earned by the guild's members by staying in-game. PvP combat is also possible in special arenas.

Skills

File:Mabinogi fishing.jpg
In-game screenshot: a player catches a fish (Japanese Version).

Each character can develop a large number of skills, although some can only be learned if the character is of a certain race (Human, Elf, Giant). Skills are divided into four categories: Combat, Life, Magic and Alchemy. Combat refers to melee and ranged attack skills, as well as defensive moves. Life refers to crafting and performing skills, such as fishing, cooking, composing, tailoring, smithing or potion making. Some of the Life skills available are also mini-games. Magic comprises three kinds of elemental magic (fire, ice and lightning) and non-elemental magic, such as healing and recovery skills. Information on Alchemy

Ability Points (obtained when the player levels up, ages or has completed important quests) are required to take each skill up a level. Each skill is ranked from F to A and then from 9 to 1 (F being the lowest and 1 being the highest possible rank of a given skill). By practicing different skills, the experience for these skills (and also for character level) will go up. If the player performs a certain skill until it reaches "perfect skill" training (before advancing that skill to the next rank), they will also receive special bonuses. Skill levels cannot be lowered once they are advanced, unless a Skill Untrain Capsule is used (only available on the Item Shop and can be bought using Nexon Cash). Additionally, the AP required for ranking up may differ between Humans and Elves in certain skills.

Paladin and Dark Knight Skills

Players can acquire special Paladin skills, which allow their character to transform into a Paladin and use power-up skills, after completing the Generation 2 mainstream plots. They can also convert their Paladin to a Dark Knight by solving the quests available in Generation 3, Chapter 4. Dark Knights and Paladins strongly oppose each other. Dark Knights have an additional skill, not available to Paladins, which gives them the ability to control monsters. The player can only transform into a Paladin or a Dark Knight once a day (in-game time). But remember you have to PAY to even use the forms even though you finished the storyline.

The Mabinogi World

File:Mabinogi worldmap generation 5.jpg
Mabinogi World Map, as of Generation 5 (Japanese Version).

In the Mabinogi world, there are three beginning towns in Generation 1, named:

  • Tir Chonaill (a beginner area)
  • Dunbarton
  • Bangor

There is also a wide variety of other maps, such as the fields which connect the towns, dungeons and quest maps, the "Soulstream" (where Nao appears) and "the Gate".

The game world is expanded continuously through subsequent major patches. Generation 2 introduces a new town to the world of Erinn, Emain Macha. Generation 4 adds a new region, Rano, which belongs to a whole new continent, named Iria. This continent is quite large (when fully implemented, it is about three times larger than the size of the Urla mainland, where Generations 1 through 3 take place).

Generation 5 reveals another region of Iria, called Connus, and implements a new race of characters, the Desert Elves. It also adds the elven town of 'Philia'. Generation 6 brings yet a new kind of race, the Giants. A new area called Physis (a place eternally covered in snow) and a town called Vales are added at this point.

Generation 8 adds another extension to the continent of Iria, Zardin, where a new mainstream quest takes place for the human characters. This area features active volcanoes and sulfur geysers, and is "not a part of Erinn," according to the game.

Generation 9 adds some new regions and a new town, Taltin. Taltin is a town of Alchemy, where most of Chapter 3 main streams take place. Taltin is on Urla mainland, next to Dunbarton.

However, Tara isn't yet updated, but it seems to be updated on Generation 10.

Moon gates and Mana tunnels

"Moon gates" in Urla connect remote areas and allow players to teleport through them. The destination of moon gates changes every (in-game) day. They are periodic and can be mapped and predicted (as many Korean and Japanese fan sites already do). At a particular night, all moon gates teleport to one place. "Mana tunnels" in Iria connect different points across the continent. These, however, work differently from Moon gates. Mana tunnels can only teleport players to a mana tunnel that the character has used before. The light cycles are important to these portals: Moon gates are active only at night, while mana tunnels can only be used during the day. Mana tunnels, when active, replenish the players' mana if they are standing close to it. Players can also move from one continent to another by boat or by selecting "Continent move" from the main menu.

Dungeons

File:Mabinogi giant spider boss.jpg
The giant spider in Alby dungeon is one of the weakest boss monsters.

There are several dungeons in Mabinogi. When a player enters a dungeon, they will find a lobby with a statue of a goddess, and a platform before it. A separate dungeon instance is created for every unique type of item thrown on the platform.

Depending on what the player drops, they might end up in a dungeon instance with players already in it. However, that does not affect the use of Evil Passes, which will create a harder dungeon compared to other items. Evil Passes are available as drops from normal dungeons. Beginner passes, which create easier versions of dungeons, are only available to select dungeons.

Dungeons maps consist of rooms and corridors connected to each other. Along the way, the player will encounter chests or other devices which will, if opened or activated, summon monsters that must be defeated in order to progress in the dungeon path (keys that unlock dungeon doors must also be found this way). At the end of each dungeon, there is a large room, dubbed the "boss room", which will usually have the boss enemy of the dungeon (sometimes escorted by a number of other enemies).

Once the boss and its minions are defeated, a small room is opened, inside of which there will be several treasure chests and a statue of the goddess to allow players to warp back to the entrance. The number of treasure chests inside the treasury will be equal to the number of characters in the dungeon (at the time of opening the door). Players can thus explore the dungeons in teams.

When a player is killed inside a dungeon and if they cannot wait for rescue, they can choose to be revived at one of three possible locations: in a town, at the previous dungeon statue, using a Nao revive (limited and available only to subscribers of the Nao Support or Fantasy Life packages), or at the dungeon lobby. If the player revives at the previous statue, they can pick up their dungeon progress where they left off, that is, the chests they have opened and the monsters they have already killed will not be reset. However, there is a big penalty for this and their status (health, mana and stamina) will not be reset either. If the player decides to revive at the dungeon lobby there is a lesser penalty and a new item must be dropped to enter the dungeon again (in which case, a new dungeon instance will be created unless the player dropped a second copy of the item that was used to create the dungeon). If the player uses a Nao revive, they will be revived on the spot with full health, mana, stamina, hunger and fully blessed equipment with minimal experience loss.

Mabinogi Heroes

An action RPG, "Mabinogi Heroes" was announced in April[citation needed], and it is currently being developed by Devcat studio. Both games share the same world, but have almost no connection beyond that.[citation needed]

News

On January 28, 2008, it was reported that a 16-year-old boy from Japan hacked the website of Nexon Japan and accrued 36 million yen (325,000 Dollars) worth of game points used in Mabinogi. It sparked discussions among the public about the security of an online game's billing system.[6][7]

A sequel to the game, Mabinogi II, is currently in development.[8]

References

  1. ^ "Nexon Company page description of Mabinogi".
  2. ^ Brandon Sheffield, Seoul (2007-08-11). "G*: Nexon Reveals Xbox 360 MMO Mabinogi, Talks Maple Story DS". Retrieved 2008-03-24.
  3. ^ Leigh Alexander (2008-16-01). "Nexon Announces Mabinogi". Retrieved 2008-03-24. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  4. ^ Earnest Cavalli (2008-29-02). "Mabinogi Open Beta Lands March 5". Retrieved 2008-03-24. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  5. ^ Keith Cross (2008-24-02). "Commercial Launch Announced". Retrieved 2008-03-25. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. ^ meteo (2008-28-01). "Mabinogi Was Hacked by A 16-year-old Boy". {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  7. ^ "Boy hacker scams 36 mil yen for virtual dress". 2008-01-24. Retrieved 2008-03-24.
  8. ^ "DevCAT Mabinogi II recruitment page".

Worldwide official game sites

Fansite/Database sites