Timeline of MazeWorld (no ontology)
From Mazeworld
SU Tempest (Talk | contribs) m (→1.5 Era, second chapterE) |
SU Tempest (Talk | contribs) |
||
Line 64: | Line 64: | ||
** The "garbled transmissions" were intended as a joke to "hide" new gameplay features seen as so important they needed to be "crypted". As such, the "garbled transmissions" were links leading to pastebin, each showing a string of hexadecimal code. [http://pastebin.com/TH4VXZxJ The hex messages, and their translation.] | ** The "garbled transmissions" were intended as a joke to "hide" new gameplay features seen as so important they needed to be "crypted". As such, the "garbled transmissions" were links leading to pastebin, each showing a string of hexadecimal code. [http://pastebin.com/TH4VXZxJ The hex messages, and their translation.] | ||
- | + | = The 2.0 Era = | |
Even then, the way the game was at the time with v1.7 felt incomplete, and the [[Tempest|author]] felt it needed even more to suit to what was felt as needed. Thus, on '''February 2nd, 2012''', '''Version 2.0 was announced''', with a gigantic list of new items and features, mainly lots of new weapons, the introduction of a new [[Weapon accessory|weapon accessory type]] (UGLs), a lot of new clothing and armor, tons of new encounters (introduction of mercenaries, new youkai, new creatures), and important changes in encounter-worn equipment. The release date was then pegged to '''the game's birthday, on February 10th'''. | Even then, the way the game was at the time with v1.7 felt incomplete, and the [[Tempest|author]] felt it needed even more to suit to what was felt as needed. Thus, on '''February 2nd, 2012''', '''Version 2.0 was announced''', with a gigantic list of new items and features, mainly lots of new weapons, the introduction of a new [[Weapon accessory|weapon accessory type]] (UGLs), a lot of new clothing and armor, tons of new encounters (introduction of mercenaries, new youkai, new creatures), and important changes in encounter-worn equipment. The release date was then pegged to '''the game's birthday, on February 10th'''. | ||
Revision as of 02:32, 5 November 2012
The concept origins
The name "MazeWorld" is retained for one of the author's concept games, after reshaping and rethinking a game idea which took multiple forms over the course of nearly three years. As early as 2008, the author wished to create a realm to be used as the context of a game, but only very rough ideas based on this concept alone were created. The only consistent details were that the realm was to be secluded and dystopian, would house a high amount of creatures and enemies, and would have, in general, a lot of content (lots of items, weapons, etc), and that the player character would be an outsider to this realm forcefully pulled in, with the objective of overcoming the dangers of this world and finding a way out.
Between 2008 and 2010, several tries were made, ranging from RPG forum, 2D platformer, RPG Maker-made roleplaying game, and even first-person shooter concepts were explored, but ultimately abandoned due to lack of interest, time, or resources, sometimes all three at once. Ultimately, after discovering classic roguelikes such as NetHack, and its variant SLASH'EM, the author was sufficiently inspired to create a table-top style roleplaying game with roguelike elements. It wouldn't be a video game proper, but a roleplaying game, it would definitely be.
The closer past
Between 2010 and February 2011, the project took on the name of "Project Downpour", named after one of the previous game concepts attempted and ultimately abandoned, before it took its current name of MazeWorld. A rough sketch of the game was then created and tested out privately with the author's friends; it proved, in their words, to be enjoyable and addictive and that they would always come back for more. The concept was simple: A random number generator would be used to generate room numbers, those room numbers each pointing out to an event; this event could be a new weapon, a monster, food, meds, clothing, armor, traps, and so on. The Mazes were truly born. Working from the original concept, the seemingly simple idea was greatly expanded upon to the shape it takes nowadays.
Birth of a game
On February 10th, 2011, Mazeworld left the conceptual stage of privately held games on MSN and was ported on to IRC, introducing the use of scripts and bots which are still used today. The author felt that IRC was a better platform for the game to evolve as it allowed the use of those bots, which are more flexible than MSN Plus! scripts; plus, the use of an IRC channel was the way for the Mazes to gather more people than simply two (the GM/Author and the player). Even though the roots of the game as a single player experience can still be felt today, it was a change in the direction of public, spectated games in which a player would take on his/her challenges while onlookers and spectators could watch and (occasionally and sparingly) comment.
The Pre-1.5 Era
The Pre-1.5 Era is the name given to the first months of Mazeworld, which saw the game's proper debut on IRC. It began with version 1.0 on February 10th, 2011, which is now considered to be the game's birthday. This era ended with the introduction of version 1.5. This is an era where it is difficult to establish what was introduced, and when, due to a lack of records. I have given my best efforts to find them out, though.
- May 7th, 2011: The first wiki was founded on the Wikidot platform.
- The version of the game was then v1.32 and had 1155 events.
- May 23rd, 2011: Update to Version 1.35. The list of changes has been, unfortunately, lost.
- May 30th, 2011: Creation of the Leaderboards and the scoring system.
The rise of the Big Three
Mazeworld saw the rise of three talented players, who started with their respective contestants for the first time: UncertainKitten with Heather, Trance with Aria Fujisaki and Dragoshi with Matthew Kethys. Those three became the Big Three, the top 3 players of the game, a title they still collectively hold as of today (September 2012). Affectionately called "the HAM of Mazeworld", after their respective initials, their success shall remain an example to follow, a timeless feat still unmatched, but which should be followed by contestants of the future, and perhaps one day, surpassed.
- Heather was famous for her legendary recklessness, perverted berserk tendencies, her Heckler & Koch G3A3 battle rifle fitted with a 50-round drum, used and abused for just about anything that needed to be blown to pieces, and inexplicable amounts of luck. She originally planned to take down the Game Masters , but after finding love in her ally, a kitsune named Akemi, the two simply escaped with a bang, being at the time the first contestant to escape the Mazes with a combined carried wealth in the five figures: a total of 19000 P$, plus other riches and gear, became their war loot and their reward for a run full of emotion and events. She finished her run on September 3rd, 2011.
- Aria Fujisaki was elevated to the rank of icon after being the first contestant to finish two consecutive runs in a row and earning the nickname of "Black Arrow Shooter" (BAS), in blatant homage to anime character Black Rock Shooter, now as iconical as her signature weapon, the Zastava M93 Black Arrow sniper rifle. She was notable for her excessive chivalry and courage, refusing to take cover and taking on enemies practically only with this weapon. Collecting achievement after achievement, "Black Arrow Shooter" was at the time, and still is today, the only person to have obliterated twice the Maze Soldier leader Colonel Wight, and destroyed no less than three times the MATTEO-CMP00 combat mech, a secret enemy that is no secret anymore for the iconic contestant, showing that there is no end to the success of a determinated and well-armed person. She is also famous for having befriended a Ryu she bought in a hiring bureau, which was named Syldra. Aria and Syldra became extremely famous as they continue their adventures, Aria riding the youkai dragon, and the two fighting relentlessly, until the dragon's untimely death, which was more than avenged by the contestant's victory, now better known as BAS, by achieving the FinalT ending. She finished her second run on April 4th, 2012.
- Matthew Kethys followed suit and completed 2 consecutive runs on his own, 24 days after Aria did exactly, surpassing Aria's own score. He was reputed to not let emotion or bullshit get in his way and was practically the "tank" of the Big Three. With good reason; Matthew would carry the iconic PKP Pecheneg machine gun along with a good reserve of spare ammunition belts (each are 200-round!), universally considered to be the most powerful weapon in the game, as well as a tricked out Colt mk18 mod0 with a 100-round C-MAG magazine, for which he carried no less than 1400 rounds of spare ammunition, a trivial and huge amount that one would find easy to (harmlessly) joke on. This is, that is, what he left the Mazes with and no doubt he would have carried and used more had he got the occasion. He stormed through the most dangerous of the Mazes' events at the time, shooting his way through just about ANYTHING that would stand on the wrong side of his guns. It must be noted that the PKP Pecheneg originally belonged to the very first Mazeworld winner, Hana Crosswise; the weapon was found in her grave, in a Graveyard Room; a symbolic move if anything, since both weapons practically shot the way of both contestants to victory. He finished his second run on April 28th, 2012.
The 1.5 Era
Technically speaking, Mazeworld's upgraded to version 1.5 on July 10th, 2011, but was officially made one week later, on July 17th, so it coincides with the author'd 18th birthday, using the occasion for a double celebration. The update brought many new features which are now staples of the game. This started the 1.5 Era, which ended with the introduction of version 2.0. As a minor anecdote, the term Mazer was coined during the 1.5 era. This word is an affectionate nickname to denote a Mazeworld player.
- July 10th, 2011: Updated to Version 1.5, though the official update day is listed as July 17th, 2011. To celebrate both the update and his incoming birthday on the 20th, the author exceptionally threw a Birthday Special.
- The amount of events was increased to 1235.
- Introduction of a new feature: Bionics. The first implants available were Implants 1 to 10.
- Introduction of a new service: Hiring bureau.
- New encounters: Giant scorpion, Thunderbird, Aer Dragon, Knucker, Wyvern, all of the golems, Tikbalang, Poltergeist, Korrigan, Black Worm, Raiju, Clown zombie, Lich, Vere Celen, Maid, Butler
- New weapons: Colt Anaconda, Techno Arms MAG-7, Mossberg 500 Cruiser, Winchester Model 1887
- New crafting items: Hitman blueprint, G3 blueprint
- New supply crates: The MEDAID series of crates was introduced, with the creation of the first four.
- New clothes: Maid suit
- New medical aids: Oxycodone, PCP, Yohimbine
- September 11th, 2011: Update to Version 1.6. Only a partial amount of changes has been found.
- The amount of events was increased to 1327.
- Introduction of the Alternate Missions, all related characters and events, as well as the Alternate Endgame.
- Introduction of a new feature: Kennels
- Introduction of a new feature: Strength perks, and the 1d6 roll. Strength perks further differentiated encounters by giving them variable pain sensitivity. The 1d6 roll was created to determinate how many instances of an encounter would be met by the contestant, according to the strength perk.
- New encounters: Student, all Hitmen/hitwomen, Digger dwarf, Shaman orc, Fury, Ogre, Frost ant, Fuujin, Komainu, Komatora, Tanuki (and Hostile tanuki), Satyr, Head maid, Chief butler
- New weapons: Beretta ARX-160, Norinco QBZ-97A, SAKO TRG-42, Heckler & Koch HK69, Taurus MT-9, Manurhin MR 73, Smith & Wesson Model 500 (introducing .500 S&W), Star Megastar, Kusari-fundo, Medieval warhammer, Pick-axe, Rapier, Screwdriver, Stiletto knife, Tessen
- New crafting items: Scara blueprint
- New valuables: Gold cuff link, Gold lighter, Golden pen, Gold cigarette case, Golden 4.2mm bullet, which along with the aforementioned blueprint, are the crafting ingredients for the now famous Golden Gun
- November 7th, 2011: Update to Version 1.61
- The amount of events was increased to 1328.
- List of changes.
1.5 Era, second chapter
What first started as a simple update to 1.62 became a list of new features that piled up, constantly pushing the release date until the symbolic New Year's Eve, as it turned into version 1.7. The wiki opened the Other topics section and brought many new features which changed and enriched the gameplay, starting a trend to improve existing features on top of adding new ones, such as new features tied to roomstyles (crackable vaults in vault rooms, for example), the inclusion of fortune-telling elements, of restaurants and themed chefs to enrich the food system of the game, of the now ubiquitous Maze Citizen encounter type, to populate the Mazes and add to the atmosphere. In short, it is at the time of 1.7's release that Mazeworld, both as a game and as a realm, began growing sufficiently in the author's eyes to the point the realm now has a distinct feel, a sort of unique 'personality'.
- January 1st, 2012: Update to Version 1.7
- The amount of events was increased to 1363.
- List of changes.
- The "garbled transmissions" were intended as a joke to "hide" new gameplay features seen as so important they needed to be "crypted". As such, the "garbled transmissions" were links leading to pastebin, each showing a string of hexadecimal code. The hex messages, and their translation.
The 2.0 Era
Even then, the way the game was at the time with v1.7 felt incomplete, and the author felt it needed even more to suit to what was felt as needed. Thus, on February 2nd, 2012, Version 2.0 was announced, with a gigantic list of new items and features, mainly lots of new weapons, the introduction of a new weapon accessory type (UGLs), a lot of new clothing and armor, tons of new encounters (introduction of mercenaries, new youkai, new creatures), and important changes in encounter-worn equipment. The release date was then pegged to the game's birthday, on February 10th.
- February 10th, 2012: Update to Version 2.0
- Mazeworld turns 1 year old!
- The amount of events was increased to 1540.
- List of changes
Between February and June of 2012
Afterwards, subsequent "revisions" of 2.0, which were quick and short updates adding or fixing a lot of things, were introduced over time. A total of 8 revisions were made, which spanned over several months. Those revisions can be seen here.
Website migration
Two days after the release of revision 7, which coincidentally, could have been big enough to be an update on its own, the wikidot platform is abandoned and this very website, Mazeworld.net, is chosen to be the new home of the MazeWiki.
2.0 Era, second chapter
Revision 8 is introduced in June 20th, introducing even more weapons to the Mazes. But the biggest announcement had to be made yet; Mazeworld 2.1, which would introduce and re-work so many features of the game it would reshape Mazeworld entirely. Several months of work to develop the new features of 2.1 then started, only finishing in August 9th when the author announced he would implement Beta testing, the aptly named 2.1 Beta during which players were invited to do mock sessions specifically to test out the new elements of the game. Ultimately, the testing was completed and deemed a huge success, propelling Mazeworld into a new and refined era.
- August 9th, 2012: Launch of 2.1 Beta
- 2.1 Beta was announced after months of hiatus during which the author worked on a big list of new features.
- For the first time in the game's history, players were directly involved in feature development and testing, giving direct input through simulations (mock game sessions).
2.0 Era, third chapter
Even though no delicious and moist cake was available to celebrate this, MazeWorld 2.1 is officially released on September 6th, 2012, with all the features announced and tested in Beta now implemented into the main game for all players to enjoy, thus marking the beginning of the new and improved MazeWorld era.
- September 6th, 2012: Update to Version 2.1
- The amount of events was increased to 5512, then 5551 after error fixing and corrections.
- List of changes
2.0 Era, fourth chapter
The game further matures and improves with the release of MazeWorld 2.2 on November 2nd, 2012, introducing two new calibers, several new weapons, bionics, and other items, but most importantly the introduction of a new service, the Maze Customs; where players will be able to fine-tune and customize firearms, further expanding the possibilities for loadout customization and allowing players to have a way to express their style and personality through their contestant's weapons.
- September 6th, 2012: Update to Version 2.2
- The amount of events was increased to 5886.
- List of changes