Lineage II
Lineage II | |
---|---|
File:Lineage2 CT1.5 Poster 2.jpg | |
Developer(s) | NCsoft |
Publisher(s) | NCsoft AsianMedia for South-East Asia |
Engine | Unreal Engine 2.0 |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows |
Release | |
Genre(s) | MMORPG |
Mode(s) | Multiplayer |
Lineage II: The Chaotic Throne (Korean: 리니지 2) is a fantasy massive multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) for the PC, and a prequel set 150 years before [2] Lineage. It has become very popular since its October 1, 2003 launch in South Korea, reporting 610,918 unique users during the month of March 2007.
Overview
Players create a character as their avatar in the game's medieval-style virtual world. Humans, Elves and Dark Elves start off in the Kingdom of Aden while Dwarves and Orcs start off in the Kingdom of Elmore (Elmore was an entirely different continent until recent versions of the game that have since joined Elmore to Aden). Players can choose from either fighter or mystic professions at the start, except for Dwarves and Kamaels which are only able to select the fighter profession. This choice acts as an archetype for later profession options. Each race has its own set of classes, even if humans, elves and darkelves have a lot of classes which are very similar to their counterparts in the other two races.
Players have a variety of things they can do for fun in the game. They play alone or as part of a group to fight monsters and complete quests for new skills, experience points, and items. Player versus player (PvP) is a significant portion of the game. The game provides many social, political, and economic aspects which are developed through the community and by the actions, in-game, of single players. Lineage II features siege warfare like the original. To make sure PvP stays under control, the design includes a Karma system that provides negative consequences for killing other players when they are not fighting back.
Lineage II features greatly improved third-person 3D graphics over its predecessor. The game uses the Unreal 2.0 Engine developed by Epic Games.
Saga
Sagas are the set of story plots of Lineage II. The first time they introduced this is with the introduction of Saga 2: The Chaotic Throne which will start with the "Interlude". The first Saga was entitled "The Chaotic Chronicle"
Chronicles
Chronicles are large-scale updates to Lineage II done every half a year. They are free expansions to the game that every subscriber must download in the form of a patch. As the "Chronicles" advance, a new story develops. There are major game alterations in each new Chronicle, and the game balance has greatly changed in every case so far. Each chronicle also adds a great deal of new content to the game, including new skills, quests, areas and items; some chronicles also increased the level cap.
Saga 1: The Chaotic Chronicle
Prelude
Lineage II went live in North America on April 27, 2004. All open beta players were required to purchase a copy of Lineage II to obtain a CD key to activate their previously used account. The purchase included the payment for the first month of gameplay. Prelude was the first time a monthly fee of $15 was charged.
There was no change in game mechanics between open beta and prelude.
Chronicle 1 : Harbingers of War
Released June 29, 2004 Chronicle 1: Harbingers of War added stirring castle sieges, new fierce monsters, items and quests, and a significantly expanded 3D world. Among the many new quests available to players is the Audience with the Land Dragon quest, which results in a showdown with the massive Land Dragon, Antharas. [3][4] Many of the new quests are designed to challenge higher level players, in particular. Also featured in Chronicle 1 are dozens of new weapons and skills for players to obtain. Clan housing was added, where clans can bid on clan halls through an auction system. Additionally, player and creature movement speeds were increased and new PvP arenas were added.
Chronicle 2 : Age of Splendor
In Chronicle 1, when a clan successfully won a castle siege, there was not much gained from it other than reputation and pride. After Chronicle 2 was released December 8, 2004, a manor system was added. New parts of the map were added as well, such as the water city of Heine, Devastated Castle, Tower of Insolence, the castle of Innadril, the Aden Coliseum, Alligator Island, Field of Whispers, Field of Silence, and others.
Chronicle 3 : Rise of Darkness
With Chronicle 3 released May 2005, came a new twist to the L2 universe called the Seven Signs. The idea behind this twist is to pit two factions (Dusk & Dawn) against one another in a competition for Seals. This competition is voluntary but not joining may hinder progress later in the game (when one is a high level player). Seal stones are items dropped by mobs that, when turned in, will give players Ancient Adena. Ancient Adena is another level of the Economy in L2 and allows players to purchase items they would not normally have access to.
The addition of the Seven Signs competition also brought a large number of dungeons across Aden called Catacombs and Necropolises, that only participants in the competition can access. For one week, players compete for and turn in as many seal stones as they can. When dawn wins, the sky turns light blue and the moon gets a giant closed blue eye; When dusk wins, the sky turns red and the moon gets a giant open red eye.[5]. Winners are given exclusive access to the Catacombs/Necropolis and the losing side will be locked out for one week. During this period, players can also exchange their seal stones for Ancient Adena. There is also a part called the Festival for parties of 6 or more. The party enters a room and kills monsters (also called mobs) until a time limit is up. This part of the Seven Signs also contributes to scoring in the Seals competition.
Other notable changes are: castle owners now have access to a fire-breathing Wyvern (Dragon) that they can fly around Aden (it should also be noted that they are very expensive to spawn and keep alive while in use); A Grade armor/weapons were added; and a subclass system was introduced that allows players to add another class to their character after level 75.
Chronicle 4: Scions of Destiny
Scions of Destiny was released on February 8, 2006. It featured expanded content in the form of new territories, enemies, summons, equipment, and a system designed to reward diligent, high level players that are victorious in a tournament in which they contend with other players in single combat. This expansion was released by NCsoft's North American counterpart on their Public Test Server on the 8th of January 2006.
Chronicle 5: Oath of Blood
The Chronicle 5 expansion was released September 6, 2006. Clans received a makeover and the player level cap was raised to 80. New siegeable castles were added to the towns of Rune and Schuttgart. The Demonic Sword Zariche was introduced.
Clan reputation can now be earned through Clan Academy, Clan Warfare, Clan Hall Battles and Clan Quests. Clan Reputation can be used to increase the rank of the clan to unlock clan skills and items. Clans of rank 5 and higher can create academies for the purpose of training and developing clan members. Members that complete their second class transfers through the academy receive commemorative items and increases the clan's reputation. Clan members of level 5 and higher can obtain a clan title. Clans can now have a maximum of 140 players, compared to the previous 40 players; accordingly, alliances can now only have 3 clans, instead of the previous limit of 12.
Roughly 50 skills were added for levels 55+ and the functions of certain skills were refined.
An extensive new crafting system was also introduced based on Life Crystals[6] farmed from raid bosses, which can be traded to NPCs for items!
Saga 2: The Chaotic Throne
Interlude
The name of the next Lineage II Saga was made public on October 12, 2006. Named "Lineage II: The Chaotic Throne", and the first release is entitled "Interlude", setting a new course for the Lineage II legacy[7]. Interlude went live on Korean servers in December 2006, while on the US & EU regions, Interlude went live on April 11, 2007[8].
Lineage II South-East Asia started with the Interlude patch on August 1, 2007, skipping the 3-year long Saga 1: The Chaotic Chronicle.
Features : Roughly 60 skills will be added, 51 of those are for levels 76+ and 9 for levels 55+. The function of certain skills will be refined.
Interlude consists of many new features, other things include masks, weapon augmentations, additional hunting zones, a new demonic weapon for PvP, and a lot more. Interlude features the 'lost island' (or new island for the players) named "Primeval Isle" where, according to Lore, the Giants used to live. You can reach there by taking a ship, by swimming from the north of the dark elf village, or jumping off Rune castle town's harbor and swimming there.
1st Throne: The Kamael
The 1st Throne was released to the retail server on Wednesday, December 12th 2007. 1st Throne includes a new race, "The Kamael".[9] Official art depicts them having a single wing and have elven characteristics, but whereas the elves use light magic, the Kamael will use dark magic. The 1st Throne also introduces the Fortresses which will allow smaller clans to retain a site whereas major clans hold castles, the fortress system creates a feudal system between clans as fortress owners will be required to swear allegiance to the territory rulers (castle owners) in order to gain some additional benefits. Fortresses have an internal instanced dungeon and private NPC shops and services such as buffs. Also introduced were two new hunting areas focused on higher level players, isle of prayer and Hellbound. Isle of Prayer includes several instances which must be completed and eventually the defeat of a boss named Baylor to gain entry to Hellbound. Hellbound is an island which is instanced and only able to be entered through two warp gates. Hellbound is unique in that it has several stages and changes with those stages.
The expected nation wars (inter-server mass pvp) were not introduced in this update as previously believed.
1st Throne: Hellbound (Kamael +)
This patch to the first throne was released on April 23, 2008. Changes include an increased level cap of 85 (only for main class), many new skills at level 81 which differ by not requiring SP, new skills for main classes dependent on the character's subclasses (including transformations for 80 subs), an increased focus on clans over alliances and the creation of an underground coliseum where players can form teams to fight against each other. Included with the hellbound release was the news of a future event (summer 2008) that will allow players to exchange their subclass with their main class on a one time basis.
2nd Throne: Gracia
The first Gracia update introduces game system changes including quality of life improvements such as the Vitality System[10]. With This new system that is implemented in Gracia you get increases of experience point gained by storing up points while not online, raiding or just hanging out in town. It will lead to a quicker and better leveling experience. The crafting system will also get a nice boost. Artisans can now create special items and have a chance to craft more than one item with one set of materials up to C grade items. The 2nd Throne: Gracia expansion will be released in three parts.
Taiwan servers have updated to Gracia on July 29th 2008. European and US servers have update to Gracia on August 12th 2008.
Characters
Characters act as a player’s avatar within the game. Players are afforded up to 7 characters per server. As characters kill non-player character (NPC) monsters, they accumulate experience and skill points (SP). As experience points accumulate, the character's "level" increases, meaning various attributes of the character are augmented. In HellBound, The maximum level that players can reach on their main class has been increased from level 80 to level 85. The maximum level that players can reach on their subclass has not changed, and is still level 80. Players purchase and then upgrade their character’s skills using SP. A character may only be deleted if not a member of a guild, or clan. The process of deletion usually takes six to seven days.
Races
There are currently six races in the World of Lineage II. Human, Elf, Dark Elf, Orc, Dwarf, and Kamael.
Kamael
The Kamael are introduced in the second saga of Lineage II, named The Chaotic Throne.[11][12] They appear as an ash-skinned elf with one angel wing. The Kamael are one of the two races in Lineage II who only have a fighter class (the other race being the dwarves). They are the only race in the game with sex-dependant classes.
The Kamaels were created in the era of myth by the giants to make war on the gods. They have only one wing because they lost the ability to harvest their true power. Some have been able to uncover their true potential. In their final form, they transform into a dark angel.
Allen 'Delsyn' Rausch called the Kamael "an interesting race in that, unlike other Lineage II races, they focus specifically on the warrior path with high-level class paths (Ranged warrior Arbalester females or melee-oriented Berserker males) segregated by sex."[13]
Classes
There are currently a large amount of classes (36) for all races all together. Each race and subsequent class has a set amount of Stat Points already assigned to their class.
Subclasses
Upon completing the quests after reaching level 75, a player may add subclass to their character. This subclass starts at level 40. Limitations are put in place on what subclass one can choose. Dark Elves and Elves may not choose a class from their opposing race. Overlord and Warsmith cannot be chosen by any class. In addition a player may not choose a class that matches their main class (a Dark Avenger may not become a Paladin, likewise a Treasure Hunter may not become a Plains Walker). Once a subclass has reached level 75, you may choose another. A character may hold a total of three subclasses in addition to their main class.
Players are able to switch between their main and subclasses through the appropriate NPC. Once the class has been changed, the character’s attributes switch to those of chosen class. However inventory, quests, recommendations, PvP and PK scores carry over.
Heroes
Heroes are Noblesse characters who have competed in and won the Grand Olympiad at least 1 out 9 times. There is a limit of 35 Heroes at any time. Only the character's main class will receive the title. Heroes receive special weapons and abilities; in addition, they may speak globally to their entire server. They also receive a glowing aura so that they stand out against other characters.
Pets
In Lineage II, a player can obtain a monster that becomes their pet through the completion of quests. Unlike other summons or magic, as long as certain conditions are met, a pet will not be bound by time limitations, nor will it be dismissed by force. These pets can also hold most items in their inventories while they are called, including pet weapons and armor that can be equipped by the pet.
Pets fall into two categories:
Player earned experience (Offense Pet): Wolf, Great Wolf, Fenrir, Hatchling, Strider, and Wyvern.
Player earned experience (Defense Pet): Baby Buffalo, Baby Cougar, Baby Kookaburra, Improved Baby Buffalo, Improved Baby Cougar, Improved Baby Kookaburra and Sin Eater
Concerning the Hatchling and Wolf Pets; they are the only Lineage II pets that may evolve. The Hatchling or Baby Dragon has an evolutionary pattern through which it evolves into the Strider and under special means to a Wyvern. The only means to obtain the Wyvern is by becoming a Clan Leader and controlling a castle or having control over a Clan Hall in the town of Aden. The Strider, Wyvern, and Great Wolf are the only pets a player may use as a form of transportation.
When a Hatchling, Baby Buffalo, Baby Cougar, Baby Kookaburra or a Wolf reaches level 55, they can be evolved into their next forms. The Baby Buffalo, Baby Cougar and Baby Kookaburra become Improved Baby Buffalo, Kookaburra, or Cougar. The Hatchling becomes a Strider and the Wolf becomes a Great Wolf. If your Great Wolf is above level 70, you can evolve it into a Fenrir that is mountable by speaking with the Pet Manager NPCs.
If the owner is in a clan that owns a clan hall in Aden or Rune, or the Rainbow Clan Hall, they can trade their Strider in for a Red Strider or their Great Wolf for a Great Snow Wolf or they Fenrir for a Snow Fenrir. These upgraded pets have greater combat or defense capabilities and cannot be traded or dropped.
Geography
Currently, Lineage II is broken into two regions, Aden and Elmore.
Aden lies south of the Border Outposts and its capital castle is Aden Castle. Elmore lies to the north of the Outposts and encompasses Goddard, Rune and Shuttgart. Its capital castle is Rune Castle.
Aden currently taxes the following castles: Gludio, Dion, Giran, Oren, and Innadril.
Rune currently taxes the following castles: Goddard, Schuttgart.
Aden's geography ranges from deserts to tropical forests. Elmore is more rugged having mostly mountainous regions along with a frozen winter wastelands.
NCsoft Publisher Partnerships
NCsoft & AsianMedia
Lineage II - South-East Asia or simply L2-SEA is NCsoft's first "Publishing License" grant for their flagship game to a completely independent company. NCsoft granted a distribution license to AsianMedia for ArenaNet's Guild Wars for the Philippines. AsianMedia has been licensed to distribute, publish, and operate Lineage II. NCsoft's licensing grant initially limits AsianMedia licensing to three countries namely, the Philippines, Singapore, and Malaysia.
NCsoft & NCtrue
In July 2005, NCsoft[1] (Korea) and True[2] (True Corporation Public Company Ltd., formerly Telecom Asia) established NCtrue as a joint-venture. The companies publicly reported the funding for the venture was capitalized at $4 million USD, and that NCsoft would hold a 49% stake in the venture, and True 51% respectively.
NCsoft president, Kim Jack, stated that Thailand, would serve as the gate to Southeast Asia market and that the venture would be instrumental in laying the framework to penetrate the Southeast Asian market in the future. Moreover, the intention of the venture was to take NCsoft one step closer to constructing a global network for online gaming services like Lineage 2.
Currently NCsoft has joint venture offices in Japan, Taiwan, and China.
Private servers
In 2004, the official Lineage II server software was leaked and a significant number of private servers appeared. Modification of the official game client allowed players to connect to non-official (private) servers. However, some private servers that run emulated server code require only modification of the hosts file in the player's operating system, leaving the client unchanged.
There are currently three completely independent open source server emulators. All of which have been released under the GPL license and allow the client to connect with only a host file change. L2J, the first emulator created for Lineage II, is written in Java, and is the most mature server emulator available. L2Adena[3] is written in C++ and is currently under development. L2castell[4] is a complete rewrite of a Java server emulator started by L2J developers who disagreed with certain design aspects of the server.
Some private servers have populations reaching into the thousands. Playing on private servers is free, although many are supported by donations from players.
After the initial Prelude and Chronicle 1 file leaks, the official software was modified by the use of Assembly Language, Hexadecimal Editing and DLL hooks to support the clients and features of later Chronicles. These modified versions of the Chronicle 1 software were called "Hybrid".
Currently, it is common for private servers to be found hosting the Kamael version of the client. The game play is commonly altered by boosting the experience rates, the monetary drop rate, and the item drop rate, making higher-quality gear easier to obtain. Many servers also feature unique "twists" which keep them apart from the rest.
In 2006, the Lineage II Chronicle 4 Public Test Server files were leaked and sold to private server owners. Figures as high as $15,000 US were being asked, but it's not confirmed if anyone paid for this, as the files were later leaked from the sellers and made publicly available. The C4 applications require a 64-bit microprocessor architecture to run.
NCsoft has taken some actions against private servers. One such server has been shut down by the FBI while its owner has been arrested for copyright violation.
As of 2007, the community created server files for Chronicle 5 have reached a useful level of accuracy. Private servers based on these files are getting more and more popular in the private server community.
NCsoft Involvement
On November 16, 2006, the private server L2Extreme was shut down by the FBI. L2Extreme has recently resurfaced in the private gaming community. During the time L2Extreme was shut down, countless rumors pertaining to the reasons surfaced.
On November 20, 2006, NCsoft issued an official press release[14] on their involvement with the FBI raid, verifying its validity. Additionally, the news was posted on the official Lineage II website, and a report was also posted on the FBI website in February 2007.[15]
On November 21, 2006, NCsoft began sending out cease and desist warnings to many private servers or their hosts. [citation needed]
Gameguard
GameGuard is an Anti-Cheat Protection by INCA Internet that attempts to prevent cheating or hacking in games such as botting or memory modifications; if Gameguard detects hacking by the user or any other illegal activity it will close down the client.
A known problem currently exists with game guard and Lineage2. That being certian Antivirus software such as AVG Anti-Virus sees Gameguard as a threat and also identifies it as a Trojan. When submitting the file for review, the result comes back as a correct identification.This problem also blocks out the lineage2.exe file. One must restore the file from the virus vault and make an exception for the game guard file in its entirety to regain access to play lineage 2 problem free.
Botting
Like many MMORPGs, Lineage II has been the target of botting, in which an external program is used to simulate the actions of a player. Such activity is prohibited and is a bannable offense, though seemingly rarely enforced. Nevertheless, players continue this practice, since the player is able to leave his/her computer and the bot will continue doing what it has been programmed to do. Some of the most well-known bots are L2Walker and Superman (formerly known as L2Wind). There is a conspiracy theory, based on fine coding, numerous features and versatility of those programs (surpassing the official game client by far), that developers of Wind and Walker were/are in league with NCsoft itself.[citation needed]
Apart from easing some of the more mundane aspects of gameplay, botting can also be used as a way to generate Adena (Lineage II currency) which is then sold for real world cash. This phenomenon, Economy Interaction, is quite controversial and is common in most of today's large MMORPGs.
It should be noted that GameGuard, the "anti-cheat" system used by Lineage II, allows a player to run the game with the aforementioned bot programs running in the background; the player does not need any form of "anti-cheat" bypass to bot in this game. On the other hand, some other tools are blocked by GameGuard, like the "GameCam" program which is not a cheating tool but a program used to produce videos from in-game footage. The majority of private Lineage II servers make it impossible to start the game when a bot program is detected on the player's computer.
Controversy
Current As of Interlude, NCsoft has released two weapons called "The Demonic Sword Zariche" and "The Blood Sword Akamanah". These swords are very powerful, but are also temporary: they disappear once their "health" runs out. The swords are found as random drops from slain enemies. The developers have said that they are willing to see if these swords will help stop botting because of the strength that they possess, but players use the swords mainly for powerleveling.
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Zariche
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Akamanah
Pricing
Lineage II requires a $15 USD monthly fee to play for the United States/European regional server. Lineage II - South-East Asia (L2-SEA) 30-day subscription is PhP 350.00 (USD8.00); MYR 36.00 (USD10.00); SGD 20.00 (USD13.00). L2-SEA is published by AsianMedia for the Philippines, Singapore and Malaysia, and the Open Beta Test (OBT) started on August 1, 2007. L2-SEA's timezone and time format is the new ASEAN Common Time (ACT), which is UTC+0800H. Taiwan servers charge a 480NT 30 day subscription fee.
Awards
- Expansion of the Year (Chronicle 5: Oath of Blood), Stratics Central Editor's Choice Awards 2006[16]
- Honorable Mention, Game of the Year, Stratics Central Editor's Choice Awards 2006[17]
References
- ^ "System Requirements". www.lineage2.com. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
{{cite web}}
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(help) - ^ "Lineage II a Prequel set 150 years before Lineage I". Retrieved 2007-09-21.
- ^ "Lineage 2 Chronicle 1 Harbingers of War Released". www.gamershell.com. June 29, 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
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(help) - ^ "June Newsletter". June 2004. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
- ^ Lineage II : The Chaotic Chronicle
- ^ "Lineage II/LifeCrystals". strategywiki.org. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
- ^ "Interlude". lineage2.com. February 22, 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
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(help) - ^ "NCsoft Launches New Era in Lineage II". www.plaync.com. April 27, 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
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(help) - ^ "[더 카마엘 프리뷰] 최종편". lineage2.plaync.co.kr (in Korean). August 14, 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
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(help) - ^ "Gracia Update". MMOFury.com. July 31, 2008. Retrieved 2008-08-05.
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(help) - ^ Lineage 2 Official Site on Kamael
- ^ IGN on Kamael
- ^ Allen 'Delsyn' Rausch, "Lineage II: The Kamael First Look (PC)," GameSpy (Dec. 7, 2007).
- ^ "FBI, NCsoft Close Down Computer Game Operation". www.plaync.com. November 20, 2006. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
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(help) - ^ "Cracking the Code: Online IP Theft Is Not a Game". www.fbi.gov. February 1, 2007. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
{{cite web}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ "Editor's Choice Awards 2006: Expansion of the Year". www.stratics.com. 2006. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
- ^ "Editor's Choice Awards 2006: Game of the Year". www.stratics.com. 2006. Retrieved 2007-09-11.
External links
Official
- Lineage II South-East Asia (L2-SEA) official site
- Lineage II US Official site
- Lineage II Indonesia Official site
- Lineage II Malaysia Official Site
- Lineage II Korean official site
- Lineage II Singapore Official Site
- Lineage II Japanese official site
- Lineage II Philippines Official Site
- Lineage II Taiwanese official site
- Lineage II Thai official site
- Lineage II EU official site
- Lineage II Brazilian official site
Non-official