Well this thread had caused a stir at least.
@Apple & Beach can you tell me where you're from at least?
@Apple & Beach can you tell me where you're from at least?
Sure, London.Well this thread had caused a stir at least.
@Apple & Beach can you tell me where you're from at least?
Dude, a lot of your posts scream insecurity. You need to look into this and find out the source. I am not a threat. I am a friend.His cherrypicked words are quite appealing, No way thats a LOMCN Member
Hey @Jev , Can you see if hes an AI while your at it?
Sure, London.
Where you experience three seasons in one day.
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Dude, a lot of your posts scream insecurity. You need to look into this and find out the source. I am not a threat. I am a friend.
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Sir, you’re quite circuitous.
I'm simply being active on a forum, apologies if you felt threatend by myquestionsinterrogations
Im only having a friendly conversation trying to get to know you better Mr.Beast
That being said, welcome back to the community and Hello friend!
I'd be lying if I said the didn't want a server with longevity. I'd love a server that has a long lifespan in mind, and executes it well. Being completely honest, the only servers to do that in recent years were Mir Chronicles & Artificial (sort of, they had a couple good years but its now mostly fishers and the odd players).
The biggest challenge is keeping players interested. In my personal opinion there are a couple major factors to take into account to make a successful longevity server.
1) The first a most important: Don't create a Discord server. If you want somewhere for discussion, the Lomcn team can open a subsection forum dedicated to your server. Discords have proven time and time again that there are a handful of influential players that will cry till hearts content till they get their own way. Influence from players via discord has, and continues to kill Mir servers quickly.
2) The server has to be released in a good standard, i.e most of, if not 95% of bugs and glitches fixed. There are too many players out there with knowledge to exploit known bugs, but also makes gameplay awful, and off-putting. (So please don't rush a server together as your post did suggest), longevity requires game developer-like experience.
3) Do not rush content. Don't rush content updates as fast as you can create them. People do tend to reach end-game rather quick nowadays, and cry for further content, but the matter of fact is that it doesn't allow the casual player(s) time to experience the current content before being made irrelevant again. That's another great point, games nowadays do need to cater for both your jobless stay at home lazy bunch, and casuals so there needs to be a way of bridging that gap. In my opinion, your casuals are the most likely to stay around longer, as the people who race to the top are generally the ones who burn out quicker.
4) Don't be influenced by community cries for change. Sure, take on board any feedback, but ultimately make decisions on any changes or amendments based on your own test and analysis of the situation, and deal with it on a case by case basis.
5) Engage with the community. Keep the community up to date with planned changes, updates or behind the scenes. Hire community managers or mods to speak up on your behalf if your time is consumed. When server owners disappear or go silent, the community lose faith.
6) I know you've already touched on this, but don't create a server with profit in mind. Sure, find a way to make a few quid to cover the necessary costs, but one thing I've found with Mir is you have a wide range of demographics which can cause disadvantages.
7) Be innovative. Don't be scared to try something new. Think outside of the box, implement completely new, and unseen idea's.
8) Test, test & test again.
9) Don't be soft on the community. If they're purposely exploiting, or cheating, ban them, no exceptions.
10) Which brings me to my last piece of input. Purpose built anti-cheat software. It's become incredibly obvious that the servers around today are not at all capable of catching or dealing with cheats. A really good anti-cheat system will go a long long way with Mir, as players are constantly trying to find a way to gain unfair advantages.
There's my 50p timer expired, so I'll just retire to the background now.
I intend to consolidate communications here. This is about building a great server and driving traffic here for visibility.I'd be lying if I said the didn't want a server with longevity. I'd love a server that has a long lifespan in mind, and executes it well. Being completely honest, the only servers to do that in recent years were Mir Chronicles & Artificial (sort of, they had a couple good years but its now mostly fishers and the odd players).
The biggest challenge is keeping players interested. In my personal opinion there are a couple major factors to take into account to make a successful longevity server.
1) The first a most important: Don't create a Discord server. If you want somewhere for discussion, the Lomcn team can open a subsection forum dedicated to your server. Discords have proven time and time again that there are a handful of influential players that will cry till hearts content till they get their own way. Influence from players via discord has, and continues to kill Mir servers quickly.
I intend to explore all exploits and bugs and remedy before launch. This is a key priority.2) The server has to be released in a good standard, i.e most of, if not 95% of bugs and glitches fixed. There are too many players out there with knowledge to exploit known bugs, but also makes gameplay awful, and off-putting. (So please don't rush a server together as your post did suggest), longevity requires game developer-like experience.
3) Do not rush content. Don't rush content updates as fast as you can create them. People do tend to reach end-game rather quick nowadays, and cry for further content, but the matter of fact is that it doesn't allow the casual player(s) time to experience the current content before being made irrelevant again. That's another great point, games nowadays do need to cater for both your jobless stay at home lazy bunch, and casuals so there needs to be a way of bridging that gap. In my opinion, your casuals are the most likely to stay around longer, as the people who race to the top are generally the ones who burn out quicker.
Noted & appreciated.4) Don't be influenced by community cries for change. Sure, take on board any feedback, but ultimately make decisions on any changes or amendments based on your own test and analysis of the situation, and deal with it on a case by case basis.
Noted & appreciated.5) Engage with the community. Keep the community up to date with planned changes, updates or behind the scenes. Hire community managers or mods to speak up on your behalf if your time is consumed. When server owners disappear or go silent, the community lose faith.
Non-profit till the end, but donations will be permitted and funds circled back into content development and community growth.6) I know you've already touched on this, but don't create a server with profit in mind. Sure, find a way to make a few quid to cover the necessary costs, but one thing I've found with Mir is you have a wide range of demographics which can cause disadvantages.
Already there, thank you!7) Be innovative. Don't be scared to try something new. Think outside of the box, implement completely new, and unseen idea's.
Testing is besting. I understand this concept well. Thank you.8) Test, test & test again.
Noted and firmly agreed. Any attempt to manipulate the games natural course will be met with furious anger.9) Don't be soft on the community. If they're purposely exploiting, or cheating, ban them, no exceptions.
You let me know who can build it or show me the way and I will follow.10) Which brings me to my last piece of input. Purpose built anti-cheat software. It's become incredibly obvious that the servers around today are not at all capable of catching or dealing with cheats. A really good anti-cheat system will go a long long way with Mir, as players are constantly trying to find a way to gain unfair advantages.
Thank you for your contribution, the best one yet. This is what the type of posts I am eagerly anticipating. I trust more follow as it’s a project that we can all be apart of.There's my 50p timer expired, so I'll just retire to the background now.
Why thank you young man. 204 a great number.Omnibus' personality #204
Hi Damian. Great question.I'm intrigued, what is your vision for mir? Do you have any specific ideas in mind that would enhance the game and engage the player base all while keeping that unique mir experience.
It's been touched on by quite a few members that servers these days do die pretty quickly, hence it would probably take something pretty radical to change this, determination alone will not.
2003….. remarkable.Well this thread is rolling along nicely
Feels slightly condescending or is that just me?
The people here and also the game I am a diehard fan albeit an older one now. I didnt mean to cause any offence you just had a strange manerism when speaking to others. We are normally more relaxed on here and a little less formal. We all dream of that "Perfect" server but it will be no easy task and if you decide to go through with this (i for one hope you do) I do not envy you.Hi Damian. Great question.
I’m currently researching through quite an expansive about of threads and posts over the last ten years here and putting together it all together for review.
I have noted that server development and player engagement was always high initially then rapidly decline after initial profits where made or interest was lost by server creator/operator.
To connect this with your question, I feel the right thing to do is to have a strong foundation of files to work with initially.A great example of this would be the Chronicles files stability and features.
My vision is oriented towards player experience and maximising player interaction In game - I have a bunch of ideas and concepts to encourage this but that is something I plan to share once I’m able to gather more intelligence on the limitations of certain server files.
I’m quite aware to not confuse my intention with my wherewithal so I am completely confident I can deliver on my side, it’s the participating parties that I will need to negotiate with to get this on its feet, quickly.
If the Lomcn Gods allow me passage, I shall easily deliver a server of 300-400 UC.
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2003….. remarkable.
I do feel slight friction sir and pessimism, but it is expected as with all things, change is inevitable and most times suspect to ill thoughts.
What keeps you coming back after 21years?
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Totally agree sir.Nice to see you got the account back mate.
People on here seem to think that the pump and dump servers are how Mir is now, however I believe there are still a select few devs who actually want to put out a decent server, still make a few quid in the process and keep Mir alive.
Take your time with it and do it properly
Do you plan to use Crystal for your server? If so wouldn’t it be best to go through the massive list of bugs and have those fixed for everyone?I have a particular set of files I want, I believe I am the right person to build on the success of these files and protect them.
Depends on the flexibility of those files and what we can do with them to bring in features and functionality. Do you advise crystal? Are they the best out right now? What are the best files right now to use?Do you have plan to use Crystal for your server? If so wouldn’t it be best to go through the massive list of bugs and have those fixed for everyone?
Crystal is the only open source set of Mir 2 files, I’d argue the best option but people have their own views.Depends on the flexibility of those files and what we can do with them to bring in features and functionality. Do you advise crystal? Are they the best out right now? What are the best files right now to use?
Because people use Crystal as a base, create servers from it, profit from it and then don't push the bug fixes they do to the main open source. But then you fall into "I paid £5 to have that bug fixed", at the end of the day those people moaning of the bugs are the same people who have fixed them on their own forks and not given back.Why have the bugs not been resolved? What is the main factor ?
I will be looking into crystal..
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