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Flyff

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Flyff
Developer(s)Gala Lab Corp. (formerly: Aeonsoft)
Publisher(s)
  • KOR: Gala Lab Corp.
  • JP: Gala Japan Inc.
  • TWN: Macrowell Technologies Co., Ltd.
  • RUS: Mail.Ru Games
  • NA: Way2Bit Co. Ltd. (Bora Island)
  • EU: Way2Bit Co. Ltd. (Bora Island)
  • THA: Asiasoft Corporation PCL
  • VNM: VDC-Net2E
  • PHL: PlayPark
  • IND: PlayMojo
Platform(s)Windows
Release
  • KOR: August 16, 2004
  • NA: December 25, 2005
Genre(s)Fantasy MMORPG
Mode(s)Multiplayer

Flyff (short for Fly for Fun) is a fantasy MMORPG by Korean development company Gala Lab (formerly Aeonsoft & nFlavor).[1]

Flyff is hosted in 13 countries and 10 languages and has over 30 million registered accounts.[2]

Development

In December 2002, Aeonsoft developed the first provisional prototype of the game, called Clockworks Ltd. In September 2003, the company changed the game's name to Flyff, and began its first closed beta in Korea. In July 2004, it won the Game of the Month award from the Korean Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism. Over the next year, it was launched in three more countries: China, Taiwan, and Thailand. In October 2005, the US received the closed beta, which ran for a month before Flyff was commercially launched in December.[3]

Publisher

In August 2011, Gpotato was the original publisher of FlyFF when Developer Gala-Net Inc. opened the North American Group Branch in Sunnyvale, CA. Gpotato had many other region branches each released at different times as the games popularity increased.

Upon the loss of a reported 40% of revenue in 2012 compared to 2011, The North American and European branches of Gpotato were sold for $17.5 million to Webzen.Inc.[4] The new publisher announced it acquired 100% of Gpotato on February 1, 2013 [5]

In August 2020, Webzen sold the publisher rights to Way2Bit after many problems with the community.[6]

Gameplay

Players control an avatar that spends most of its active time fighting and most of its inactive time running a shop. Character classes are chosen at level 15 and sub-classes at levels 60 and 130, referred to as the first, second, and third job changes. The job changes are obligatory—when a character reaches the requisite level, experience gain stops until the completion of one of the job quests.

Levels are gained based on experience, which can be acquired by killing Masquerpets and by performing quests. Quests generally involve killing specific Masquerpets and collecting the different quest objects they drop; a typical early quest is that of "Party of Is," with the requirement of collecting 7 Chupims through killing Pukepukes.[7]

At each level, the character receives skill points that can be invested in skills available to its job(s). There are two types of skills: those used for attacking and those used for protection and/or enhancement. Skills may have cool-down times and may cause status effects, with confusion, stun, and bleed among the most common effect. It is not possible to acquire maximum levels in all available skills until becoming a level 60 Master.[8]

Characters can be improved by acquiring objects such as improved equipment. Masquerpets drop equipment, the in-game currency penya, consumable items such as food and potions, and quest objects, or players can purchase equipment from other players note this is usually extremely expensive because of the high quality gear that can be acquired this way. These can all be traded between players; Flyff gameplay involves large amounts of buying and selling in order to collect desired equipment. Most equipment items have minimum levels at which they can be used.

Combat

Flyff features melee, ranged and magic combat, with different skills available to different classes. Health points, fight points, and magic power bars are able to be replenished through food, vital drinks and mana refreshers; some classes depend on assists to heal them with magic.

PvP

Player versus player (PvP) combat is allowed on all servers without penalty in the form of dueling. Both players must be over level 15, and within 30 levels of each other, then they must confirm the duel first unless they are within the PvP Arena, a free-for-all environment found on all servers.[9] Player killing is allowed only on the Yetti server and carries a high penalty.

Social systems

Lord System

Introduced in version 12, the Lord system allows eligible[10] players to be voted as the Lord of their server for 2 weeks. Players must have obtained Hero or Master status to qualify as a Lord candidate. While a Lord, a player may introduce a number of events on the server.

Party System

Players who join a party gain increased experience and loot. A lone player does not benefit from or harm a party. A party starts as a Regular Party, in which experience is distributed evenly among party members in the same location. At level 10, the party becomes Advanced, at which point experience can be distributed to players based on their amount of damage done. An Advanced Party may have up to 8 players; having this many players in a party increases player experience with each monster killed during training.

Guild System

Guilds allow players to socialize; players within a guild can chat with each other and many in-game activities are guild-based. Guilds have a hierarchical chain of command, consisting of the Master/Leader, Kingpins, Captains, Supporters, and Rookies. The guild master may change the permissions for guild members, allowing members to withdraw items or money from the guild bank, rank-up or de-rank other members, and be paid daily. Guilds are able to choose an emblem and cloak to represent themselves and have the use of a warehouse. When a guild reaches the appropriate guild level, increased by supporting the guild through quest items and Penya, the guild master may create guild cloaks at a cost that sport the guild's symbol. A large amount of Flyff end-game content is guild-related.

Guild Siege

This event, held on Saturday in channel 1 of each server, allows guilds to compete in a free-for-all environment. A total of 8 Guilds may enter, and each Guild may have 10 players. To compete, the Guild leader must place a bid; the 8 highest bidders compete.

Clockworks War

The Clockworks War is a guild dungeon that guilds of any level may enter a single time. If the guild fails against the dungeon boss, its players may reattempt to win as many times as necessary for a time period of one hour. Only one guild is permitted inside the Clockworks Arena at a time.

Couple System

The couple system, implemented in Version 13, allows a marriage-style connection between two characters.[11] Characters who become a couple are granted special buffs and skills and receive gifts with new couple level gained.[11]

Mentor/Pupil System

The Mentor/Pupil system, implemented in Version 15, allows any player level 91 or above to take on any character who has not completed their second Job Change as a pupil after completing the mentor qualification quest. This Mentor/Pupil bond provides a special bonus to experience gained by both mentor and pupil while both characters are logged on to the same server. Additionally, upon the pupil reaching certain level marks, the mentor gains 'Mentor Points'; as the mentor gains more of these points, additional pupils may be taken on, to a maximum of 3 pupils when over 100 Mentor Points are gained. These additional pupils grant increases to the experience bonus of the mentor; the other pupils' experience bonus' remain unchanged.

While no action apart from the initial bonding is necessary within the Mentor/Pupil relationship, mentors are encouraged to help their pupils with advice, quests, and/or occasional gifts. If at any time either pupil or mentor becomes dissatisfied, the player may cancel the bond. The Mentor Points of a mentor who loses all pupils returns to 0 and must be regained through new Mentor/Pupil bonds.

Other game systems

Events

Events involving rare drops and extra experience are held almost every week by the gamemaster team. Maintenance is held every Tuesday evening (gPotato) and Thursday noon (FlyFF PH).

Collector System

Re-Introduced in version 11, the Collector System[9] allows players to collect rare and unique game items through the use of a Collectors.

Private Shops

Players can open private shops, in which held items can be sold at any price. Other players can enter these shops and purchase the items within, with the purchase money transferred to the shop owner's inventory.

Raising Pets

Players may keep seven types of Raised Pets, which start out as eggs. An egg can be hatched by the Pet Tamer NPC after feeding the egg 50,000 pet feed. To evolve a pet, players must complete quests given by the Pet Tamer. Pets must also be fed to keep them alive. Each Raised Pet has five levels and three appearances. A player accompanied by a pet receives additional stat points based on the type of pet.

Elements

Monsters are generally associated with a particular in-game elements, of which there are five. Each element is vulnerable to one element and resistant to another. Weapons and armor can be "elemented", conferring advantages against monsters of some types and disadvantages against others; many aggressive spells are also elemented.

Cash Shop

Flyff uses a micropayment system through which users can obtain 'Game Cash'. Game Cash can be exchanged for premium items not otherwise available in the game, including clothing, potions, different kinds of scrolls and pick-up pets.

Sequel

On February 13, 2012, Gala Lab, the development arm of Gala, Inc., revealed artwork for its upcoming game named F2: Floating Fortress. F2 was announced to have large-scale duel and PvP arenas, aerial combat, sieges and various types of PvP quests.[12] The title was meant as a sequel to FlyFF.[13]

On July 25, 2014, the sequel was officially cancelled by Gala Lab. The project was ceased because of various internal circumstances that the company had been through.[14]

See also

References

  1. ^ Gala Lab - History Archived 2012-09-10 at WebCite
  2. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-02-19. Retrieved 2013-01-27.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ aeonsoft. "About Aeonsoft | History". aeonsoft.co.kr. Archived from the original on 2009-09-16. Retrieved 2009-09-19.
  4. ^ Shankle, Ashley (2013-02-01). "gPotato NA and EU Sold to Webzen". www.gameskinny.com. Retrieved 2020-11-18.
  5. ^ "Webzen buys 100% of Gala-Net, gPotato". Engadget. Retrieved 2020-11-18.
  6. ^ "Webzen will no longer run Flyff as transfer of the MMO to a new publisher is underway | Massively Overpowered". Retrieved 2020-11-18.
  7. ^ "Main Page - FlyFF WIki". Flyff-wiki.gpotato.com. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
  8. ^ Flyff Team. "Master Quest". flyff-wiki.gpotato.com. Retrieved 20 Sep 2009.
  9. ^ a b Stella. "Flyff Release Version 11: The Awakening". news.mmosite.com.com. Retrieved 2009-09-19.
  10. ^ IGN Editor. "Fly For Fun - Three Key Elements". rpgvault.ign.com.com. Archived from the original on 2009-01-23. Retrieved 2009-09-20. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  11. ^ a b Richard Aihoshi. "Fly For Fun's Couple System". uk.pc.ign.com.com. Retrieved 2009-09-19.
  12. ^ cinderboy (2012-02-13). "FlyFF 2 – Developer teases sequel to popular online game | MMO Culture - Bonding online gaming cultures". MMO Culture. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
  13. ^ cinderboy (2012-11-11). "[G*Star 2012] F2: Floating Fortress – FlyFF sequel spotted | MMO Culture - Bonding online gaming cultures". MMO Culture. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
  14. ^ Kim, Joyce (2014-07-25). "The Cancellation of FLYFF 2 Development Has Been Confirmed. | FLYFF Puzmon | FLYFF". Gameskinny.com. Retrieved 2016-07-14.