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Dungeons & Dragons Online: Eberron Unlimited (abbreviated as "DDO") is a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by Turbine, Inc. for the Microsoft Windows operating system, and originally marketed as Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach. Turbine developed DDO as an online adaptation of Dungeons & Dragons (D&D) based loosely on the D&D 3.5 Rule-set. It is set in the Eberron campaign setting. Internet access is required to play.

DDO is a fantasy action role-playing game. Progression is defined by completing quests and leveling up. After creating an avatar on the character selection screen, players are required to go through a tutorial, which may be skipped after completing once. Players receive quests from non-player characters. After accumulating enough experience points through quests, the character is entitled to gain a level, which grants access to more feats, spells and skills.[1] There are currently twenty levels in the game. Each module has added new quests and areas to explore.

Development

Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach was developed by Turbine, Inc. over the course of approximately two years. The initial prototyping and concepting was done by Jason Booth, Dan Ogles, Cardell Kerr, Ken Troop, and Michael Sheidow, in coordination with Wizards of the Coast, the current publisher of the Dungeons and Dragons pen and paper game. Later, this initial team was moved to work on Turbine's other title in development Lord of the Rings Online, or left the company. Development was then led by James Jones, and DDO was released on February 28, 2006. It is published by Atari.

Setting

DDO is set on the fictional continent of Xen'drik, in the world of Eberron, a D&D campaign setting. Players can create their characters following the revised edition of D&D 3.5 rule-set fashion, and play them in both indoor and outdoor environments, including a large variety of dungeons.

Although the game is based in large part on the D&D 3.5 rule-set, it contains numerous changes from the tabletop game, most of which were introduced due to differences in the dynamics between the media of computer game combat and tabletop gaming. For example, Turbine wanted DDO to use a real time combat engine, where tabletop D&D uses a turn-based system. This brought considerable amount of changes in combat, character skills and feats; situations where Turbine felt the turn-based combat system and real-time combat did not mesh well. Most noticeable differences are greatly increased amount of hit possibilities in round/same amount of time (as much as twelve times more), greatly increased spell-casting resources over rest periods, and spell point system instead of spell slots. Magic items are greatly under-priced (average of 1/8 the D&D prices), magic weapons and armors have a maximum of only two abilities, characters have considerably higher stats, and offensive effects created by characters do not harm their allies. A near-complete list of other differences between DDO and D&D has been listed on the DDO Wiki.[2]

The core of the game is set in the city of Stormreach, a giant-scaled city built ages ago, and recently settled by humans. There are a number of areas within Stormreach: The Harbor, Marketplace, and four Dragonmarked Houses (House Deneith, Jorasco, Kundarak and Phiarlan). In addition, there are a number of adventures that are taken beyond the city walls, into other areas across the continent, each home to quests of their own.

Generally, the issues of the game revolve around the following dark plots:

  • Giants attempting to regain mastery over the city of Stormreach and the continent of Xen'drik
  • The gate to Xoriat attempting to be reopened
  • The Black Abbot and his minions of Khyber (Eberron) and other undead attempting to gain power over Xen'drik
  • Devils from Shavarath attempting to invade and conquer Eberron

Subscription information

As of 9 September 2009, DDO is free to play in the USA, with an available micro-transaction store; players can gain VIP status by paying a subscription fee, which garners them additional rewards every month. Furthermore, a free-player's first micro-transaction converts him/her to a "Premium player" with a few additional perks (though substantially less than those of a "VIP").

There are five DDO servers for the North American market (merged from the original 14), named after various geographic aspects of Eberron. For the European market there were initially 5 servers, named after Eberron deities. After a server merge in early 2007, 2 remain. In North America, Turbine themselves deploy the game and maintain the day-to-day operations. In Europe this has been outsourced to Codemasters with the help of Alchemic Dream. In China, the game is operated by Shanda.

There are no servers for the Southern Hemisphere market. The game distributed in Australia by Atari is the US version. Players in that region will get a ping of ~300 ms to North American servers.

Turbine generally performs weekly maintenance from 6:00AM to 10:00AM Eastern (-4 GMT) on Monday or Tuesday mornings, game upgrades and patches are generally applied from 6:00AM to 2:00PM Eastern (-4 GMT) on Thursday mornings.

In Europe the game is maintained by Codemasters and remains still subscription based, although European users can register and play for free on the Turbine servers in the USA.

Gameplay

DDO is played from a third person perspective. There is the option to move the camera view to first person perspective. The camera follows behind the player and can be adjusted to view surroundings. The game is controlled either by keyboard or gamepad. Every action in game can be remapped to suit the player, even controller buttons. This allows a player to play the game just like a console game if desired. DDO also makes use of macros. Within a toolbar on screen, items and action abilities may be placed and activated at will. Everything in game takes place in real time. For instance, characters move around in 3D with directional keys and may dodge long range attacks aimed at them.

A party system is in place, placing more emphasis on multiple players grouping together more so than most other MMO games on the market. Joining a party or creating one is accessed by the Grouping panel. Interacting with other players is implemented with chat windows on screen. Voice chat with other players is also possible with a headset or microphone if in a party.

Progression

Standard groups can be up to 6 characters. Characters gain experience by completing quests. Killing monsters will usually increase the size of the experience reward, but are not always central to the reward. In some cases, simply running through a quest from one end to the other will grant an XP reward. Raid parties may be up to 12 characters. They are usually high level adventures with multiple tasks to complete. There is usually a specific method of unlocking them. DDO does support solo play, mainly by a special "Solo" level of difficulty on many low-level quests. Since the "Mod 9" update (September 2009), "Normal" difficulty also scales well for solo players when "Solo" difficulty's not available for any given quest. A more typical party consists of multiple characters filling roles such as "tank" (melee types), healer (clerics) and caster (magic users).

The quests in DDO are organized by character level, difficulty, and length. Each quest has a base level, and the XP reward increases if all of the party members are below that level, and decreases if any of the party members are above that level. Characters more than three levels below the "base level" are not allowed to initiate a quest, however they are able to join a quest started by another party member.

Most quests have an item or monetary reward when finished, but the character must have talked to the quest giver to receive the reward. Some dungeons require several visits to the quest giver to complete the entire quest chain. Speaking to the quest giver also generally allows players to repeat the quest. Note that completing a specific quest multiple times will reduce the XP given upon completion.

The quests are narrated by a "Dungeon Master" who gives additional details and information to the players about what they see and hear on their adventure. For the "Delera's Tomb" quest chain, the dungeon master duties are performed by (now deceased) D&D co-creator Gary Gygax. In his memory, a special 'shrine' area of the graveyard was added. A higher-level quest chain features the voice of D&D's other co-creator, Dave Arneson, also now deceased.

There are five difficulty levels for quests: Solo, Normal, Hard, Elite and Epic. Hard and Elite increase the XP bonus the first time the quest is run at the given level, and generally provide a much more challenging experience to the players. As a bonus, the quality of the "loot" (items, equipment, etc) in the chests in hard and elite is better. Generally speaking, the highest level quests on the Elite setting offer the best treasure, although that is not always the case. Epic difficulty is available in very few quests, and only to characters who are level 20.

On the other hand, Solo offers very little loot, and few, if any, special items. Generally, the Solo difficulty section were added to the game in June 2006 to make it more accessible to lower-level characters who do not have a group. There was until Module 6 a huge XP reduction for solo play (this was reduced from 50% to 20% with the launch of Module 6), and only some low (6th and lower) level dungeons offer this capability.

Features

The game includes built-in voice chat, integrated into the overall experience.

DDO is an instanced game, where each party receives a private "copy" of a dungeon for their own use.

There are localized versions for the European market. Languages available so far are English, French and German.

A gamepad is supported, as well as a virtual keyboard.

Characters

Races

All races are initially available in the game, except for Drow and Warforged, which must be unlocked. Current player character races are: Humans, Elves, Dwarves, Halflings, Warforged, and Drow. The game does not feature a full complement of playable races from the Dungeons and Dragons world, and is missing core races (Gnome, Half-Elf and Half-orc), as well as the additional Eberron-specific races of Kalashtar, Shifter and Changeling.

Classes

DDO Character Classes
Style Class
Melee
Barbarian
Fighter
Monk
Paladin
Specialist
Bard
Ranger
Rogue
Spell
Cleric
Sorcerer
Wizard
Favored Soul

There are 11 playable classes with no race restrictions. Following the 3.5 edition rules and the rules of the Eberron campaign, players choose a class to begin with but are not limited to remaining in that class.

At the character creation screen, the player is allowed to choose a path or to customize their stats. Choosing a path will automatically give the character feats when they gain a level.

Absent from the table are the standard classes of Druid, the psionic classes and Artificers (an Eberron-exclusive class). Prestige classes do not exist as standalone character classes (although many are available as enhancements to base classes). There are no experience penalties for multi-class characters. Apart from alignment restrictions there are no restrictions on multi-class combinations.

The new class Favored Soul has been added in the new content update along with the free to play and new store.

The Classes

  • Fighter: A warrior with extra feats, allowing him to specialize in melee.
  • Paladin: A warrior that trades some of his melee power for the ability to cast divine spells.
  • Barbarian: A warrior that has special powers when angry and specializes in damage dealing.
  • Ranger: An archer and a dual-wielding melee (in exchange for removing animal companions, DDO gives all rangers both combat styles).
  • Monk: A combatant usually fighting without weapons, without shield and without armor, that performs amazing techniques in battle by using a power source called Ki.
  • Favored Soul: A divine caster that follows the path of the Cleric but is able to throw spells with surprising ease.
  • Rogue: Has the most skills in the game. He can find and disarm traps. Rogues can also open locks and find hidden doors.
  • Bard: Has a lot of skills and is a weak arcane spell caster.
  • Wizard is an adaptive caster.
  • Sorcerer is a focused caster.
  • Cleric: a strong divine spell caster that uses all armor without penalties.

Alignments

Dungeons and Dragons Online does not feature the full spectrum of alignments available in Dungeons and Dragons, instead limiting itself to only good and neutral alignments. The ability to play evil aligned characters is unavailable. Some character classes have restrictions based on alignment. A Barbarian and Bard may not be Lawful. A Monk must be Lawful, and a Paladin must be Lawful Good. A character may not multiclass into those classes if the alignment is not allowed for that original class. In addition, some weapons and equipment have alignment restrictions as well.

Feat, Skill and Enhancement system

In DDO, there are a number of progressive systems in place for additional variety between characters. Feats are special abilities that grant a character additional actions or abilities. Skills can be increased to give better proficiency of talents. Enhancements can be chosen which augment feats and talents.

Feats are divided into regular feats and class feats. Whereas most feats are available to any class(so long as the requirement is met), class feats can be chosen only by specific classes. For instance, Ranger is the only class that is able to choose Favored Enemy, which grants an attack bonus against certain monsters. Every class is granted at least one feat during character creation, as well as one every level of a multiple of three. Other feats include Toughness, which grants additional Hit Points, and Whirlwind Attack, which lets a character perform a special attack where the character spins 360 degrees.

Skills are available to all characters. It is a fixed list of talents such as Jump and Tumble. Upon leveling up, a character adds a certain number of points into those talents based on the Intelligence statistic. For instance, putting more points into Jump will allow a character to jump higher. Also, each skill is augmented by a character's stat. For instance, Tumble is connected to Dexterity. The higher a DEX score, the more able a character is able to roll away from attacks. Finally, Skills are dependent upon classes. Each class has a certain number of skills connected to it. Class skills cost one point to raise one point. A skill not connected to a class costs two points to raise one point.

Enhancements further customize characters. Every level is divided into five tiers. Each tier, reached by accumulating XP, grants one Action Point(AP), for a total of four AP's per level. These can be spent at any time, and are traded into a trainer NPC for an enhancement. These are similar to Feats, but do not provide as significant an alteration to a character's attributes. Each enhancement costs a certain number of AP to attain. An example is Fighter's Critical Accuracy II, which costs 2 AP, and requires Fighter's Critical Accuracy I. That particular ability gives a Fighter a better chance to deliver a critical strike when a hit is delivered, doing more damage than an ordinary hit.

Prestige Enhancements (PrE's) are similar to Prestige classes. Instead of Prestige classes in the game, some classes are able to purchase enhancement lines that grant much the same abilities. For instance, a Rogue is able to become an Assassin by purchasing Way of the Assassin, thereby doing greater damage when doing a sneak attack. All PrE's require a prerequisite number of other enhancements and/or Feats to attain.

Updates and modules

Turbine releases major content updates to the game as "modules," named after the module concept in the pen-and-paper version of D&D. Additional content was released between modules as "updates." Starting with Module 5, the development team made the decision to stop releasing interim updates. Responding to the players' feedback that the interim updates do not provide enough new content, the developers instead focused on creating significantly larger modules. However, prior to the launch of DDO: Eberron Unlimited, there was a 10-month content gap.

Module 1: Dragon's Vault

On April 5, 2006, Turbine released its first module. It included a new dungeon, a number of fixes to the combat system and minor tweaks to the user interface. Update 1.1: The Harbor, included changes to the low level harbor quests. Update 1.2: Solo Enhancements, made more changes to the harbor area, including the addition of several solo-only quests.

Module 2: Twilight Forge

Released July 12, 2006, it added a new player race, the Drow, as well as new enhancements, spells, a patron system, in-game mail, and adventures set in the Restless Isles, a new outdoor area. Update 2.1: Litany of the Dead Part 1: The Necropolis, introduced a new quest series. The update had five full quests, culminating in an encounter with a powerful vampire.[3] Update 2.2: Stormreach Under Siege! introduced the first quests above level 10, other than the Twilight Forge raid.

Module 3: Demon Sands

This module was released on October 25, 2006. It introduced explorable areas to the game, consensual PvP (Player vs. Player) elements (in the form of "Tavern Brawl" arenas and objective-based quests; Capture the Flag, Indoor and Outdoor Deathmatch), as well as an auction house. It raised the level-cap from ten to twelve. Update 3.1: Evil Resurgent, included a rework of the social panel, many bug fixes, and six high level quests. Update 3.2: Litany of the Dead Part 2, released new monsters, along with five quests for party levels 8-9. These quests continue the storyline of The Necropolis from Litany of the Dead Part 1. Update 3.3: Academy Training, revamped the Action Point enhancement system. Also, in celebration of DDO's one-year anniversary, all treasure chests were at +1 level, and all XP awarded was +50% from February 28 to March 4.

Module 4: Reaver's Bane

Introduced in April 2007, Reaver's Bane brought the level cap up to 14 from 12 and introduced a new terrain mechanic along with many new spells and abilities for characters of all levels.[4] Two new areas (the Cerulean Hills and Gianthold Ruins) use the new mechanic that includes entrances to traditional quests plus three new types of quests:[5] slayer quests (where you get experience for how many monsters you or your party have killed), explorer quests (where you get experience just for visiting a new part of the area for the first time), and rare encounter quests (where you get experience for killing infrequently spawned named monsters).[6] Update 4.1: Mark of the Dragon, implemented Dragonmarks and the addition of a new encounter area: Ataraxia's Haven.[7] Update 4.2: Searing Heights, revamped the Menechtarun desert landscape and the Waterworks adventure area. There was an added landscape for level 4 characters called Searing Heights, new spells, abilities, and enhancements including Holy Sword and Warchanter. Players get three more weapon set configuration slots for a total of seven. Also fixed were several bugs. Many new spells were added for all spellcasting classes. Extra enhancements were also added. One additional level 4 dungeon was added.[8]

Module 5: The Accursed Ascension

Released in September 2007, this module includes parts 3 and 4 of the Litany of the Dead; by doing so, it doubled the amount of quests in the Necropolis area. It ends with a new high level raid. Apart from the addition of new enhancements and some minor corrections, the metamagic system went through a major revision and the item tooltips were vastly improved. Collectable and gem bags were added, made to reduce the cluttering of inventory space.[9]

Module 6: The Thirteenth Eclipse

The January 2008 update, the Thirteenth Eclipse, raised the level cap from 14 to 16, and opened a previously locked area that was partially accessible by players, The Twelve. Also with this area is a new set of quests and a new raid located in an area connected to The Twelve, called the Vale of Twilight.[10] Included is allowance for subscribers to customize the player interface as is available in Turbine's other MMO "Lord of the Rings Online."[11] Also added with the new area was a new feature of the game, crafting. Crafting requires numerous ingredients which, when put in the Eldritch Devices in a specific combination will produce an item or alter an existing item. Update 6.1 introduced a new, ongoing live event, as well as a slice of anniversary cake. The anniversary cake summons a Djinni that will grant a wish (as the Wish[12] spell)

Module 7: Way of the Monk

This update, released on 3 June 2008, introduced the Monk class to all servers. It had previously been in testing for a time on the Risia preview server. Included were various city upgrades, bounty subquests that involve collecting remains of monsters, and UI interface tweaks. Other new things added were two new raid quests, located in a massive raid wilderness area, feats and enhancements, and a memorial to the late Gary Gygax.[13]

Module 8: Prisoners of Prophecy

This update, released 6 November 2008, introduced a new low level area called Korthos Island. It replaced the starter area in the Harbor, the tutorial area, as well as updating many of the low (level 1 through 3) quests. Four new wilderness areas were added as high level content. DirectX 10 have been integrated into their graphics as well. NPCs known as hirelings have been integrated into the main game, which are controlled by the player while on quests. The number of character slots available for users has been increased to 10. New spells, Enhancements and UI improvements round out the module.[14]

Eberron Unlimited Re-Launch

The game re-launch, released 9 September 2009, introduced the free to play game system, the DDO Store, many low-level quests, and six new cap-level quests followed by a new raid. The higher-level quests and raid follow onto the story established in the Module 6 and 7 releases and send the player to the plane of Shavarath to battle the invading devils, and included a wilderness area on the plane. The relaunch updated the level cap to 20 and introduced the Favored Soul class. Many new game systems, including the Dungeon Alert system and a system to scale monster difficulty based on party size, were also introduced with the re-release, along with many new UI features, enhancements, and spells. [15]

Update 1

After re-starting their numbering scheme with the re-launch, the first update to Eberron Unlimited was released on 28 October 2009. This update premeired a new dungeon difficulty, epic, re-tuning the adventures of Module 3 to be extremely challenging to high-end level 20 characters. It also introduced a new high-level quest series, the Path of Inspiration, and introduced many new features to the DDO Store. [16]

Update 2

This update, released on 16 December 2009, was entirely a content update, introducing another five-quest, higher level quest chain, the Dreaming Dark. This quest chain follows on to Path of Inspiration from the previous update. [17]

Update 3

This update was released on 3 February 2010.

Beta testing

On August 1, 2005, Turbine sent out invitations to individuals interested in participating in the Public Alpha Test. On November 1, 2005, Turbine announced that the public Beta test was open.[18] On November 22, 2005 Turbine announced that each copy of the January 2006 issue of PC Gamer magazine would contain a "key" to gain access to the beta. Turbine, in association with Fileplanet and IGN, also completed 3 public stress tests of the game, with the most recent ending on February 12, 2006.

Testing for DDO ended on February 19, 2006. The game opened February 28, 2006, after a special head start event that started February 24, 2006 for those who pre-ordered.

In July 2009, DDO re-opened the beta testing, in preparation for their new free-to-play subscription structure.

Eberron Unlimited

On June 9 2009, the official D&D Online website announced that Dungeons & Dragons Online: Stormreach would be converted to a subscriptionless "free to play" game for players in North America, under the new name Dungeons & Dragons Online: Eberron Unlimited. The level cap would be increased to level 20 (also the standard level cap in the tabletop Dungeons & Dragons) and Free users would have access to the majority of game content; some features would have to be purchased with Turbine points or unlocked through play. As for new subscribers or old subscribed players, there would be VIP access that contains additional all-new features available for them as well as free Turbine points. Closed beta registration opened on June 9, 2009 and the game and contents were free to download on September 1 for VIP members and September 9 for the general North American public. [19]

Differences in content available to subscribers and non-subscribers:

Feature DDO VIP (Subscriber) Premium Player Free Player
Turbine Points 500/month included Buy/limited earnings through gameplay Buy/limited earnings through gameplay
Classes All unlockable in game Basic free, pay to unlock Favored Soul and Monk Basic free, pay to unlock Favored Soul and Monk
Races All unlockable in game Basic free, pay/gain favor to unlock Drow and pay to unlock Warforged Basic free, pay/gain favor to unlock Drow and pay to unlock Warforged
Geography All included Stormreach & Vicinity Stormreach & Vicinity
Adventure Packs All included Some free, can purchase others Some free, can purchase others
Character Slots 10 4, can purchase more 2, can purchase more
Shared Bank Slot Included Can purchase Can purchase
Login Queue Priority High Standard
Chat Unlimited Unlimited Limited
Auctions Unlimited Unlimited Limited
Mail Unlimited Unlimited Limited
Gold Storage Unlimited Unlimited Limited
Customer Service Full Full for 45 days Self-service online
Beta Priority High Normal Normal

Awards

  • Freebie Award: Best Free-to-play-MMORPG, 2009 RPGLand.com RPGs of the Year 2009[20]
  • Best Free to Play MMO, 2009 MMORPG.com 2009 Awards[21]
  • Best Free to Play Game, 2009 Tentonhammer.com Best of 2009 Awards[22]
  • Best Multiplayer Game, 2006 British Academy Video Games Awards[23]
  • Most Anticipated Game, 2005 MMORPG.COM Reader's Choice Awards[24]
  • Best Persistent World Game, IGN.com Best of 2006 Awards[25]
  • Nominee, Massively Multiplayer Game of the Year, 10th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards[26]
  • Third Prize, Best Graphics, Les JOL d'Or 2006[27]
  • Third Prize, Public's Award, Les JOL d'Or 2006[27]

External links

Media coverage

Citations

  1. Revised (v.3.5) System Reference Document. Wizards.com. Retrieved on 2009-03-30.
  2. PnP differences. DDOwiki. Retrieved on 2007-02-24.
  3. Dungeons & Dragons Online : Solo Content - Dungeons & Dragons Online for PC at. Mmorpg.com. (2006-06-14). Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  4. In Development: Module 4 spells levels 13-14. DDO.com. (2007-02-14). Retrieved on 2007-02-24.
  5. Solas' Dev Dairy: Wilderness Quests. DDO.com. (2007-02-16). Retrieved on 2007-02-24.
  6. 07:04 AM. Module 4 Reaver's Bane: Final Release Notes - DUNGEONS & DRAGONS ONLINE®: Eberron Unlimited™ Forums. Forums.ddo.com. Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  7. 07:04 AM (2007-05-23). Final Release Notes Update 4.1: Mark of the Dragon - DUNGEONS & DRAGONS ONLINE®: Eberron Unlimited™ Forums. Forums.ddo.com. Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  8. 07:04 AM (2007-07-17). Final Release Notes: Update 4.2: Searing Heights - DUNGEONS & DRAGONS ONLINE®: Eberron Unlimited™ Forums. Forums.ddo.com. Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  9. 07:04 AM (2007-09-27). Final Release Notes: Module 5: The Accursed Ascension - DUNGEONS & DRAGONS ONLINE®: Eberron Unlimited™ Forums. Forums.ddo.com. Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  10. 07:04 AM (2008-01-18). Module 6 Quests Open - DUNGEONS & DRAGONS ONLINE®: Eberron Unlimited™ Forums. Forums.ddo.com. Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  11. Customizable UI Skinning comes to the DDO in Module 6! - DUNGEONS & DRAGONS ONLINE®: Eberron Unlimited™ Forums. Forums.ddo.com. (2008-01-18). Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  12. Wish. d20srd.org. Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  13. Release Notes Module 7 Official - DDO Compendium. Compendium.ddo.com. (2008-06-03). Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  14. Release Notes Module 8 Official - DDO Compendium. Compendium.ddo.com. (2008-10-29). Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  15. Unlimited Launch Release Notes Official. compendium.ddo.com. Retrieved on 2009-12-25.
  16. Update 1 Release Notes Official. compendium.ddo.com. Retrieved on 2009-12-25.
  17. Update 2 Release Notes Official. compendium.ddo.com. Retrieved on 2009-12-25.
  18. Home. Ddo.com. Retrieved on 2009-06-24.
  19. Warcry.com Article. Massively.com. (2009-07-31). Retrieved on 2009-08-03.
  20. RPGLand.com RPGs of the Year 2009. RPGLand.com.
  21. MMORPG Best F2P MMO of 2009. MMORPG.com.
  22. Ten Ton Hammer Best of 2009 Awards. Tentonhammer.com.
  23. British Academy Video Games Awards, Latest Winners and Nominees. British Academy of Film and Television Arts. (2006-10-05). Retrieved on 2007-02-24.
  24. 2005 Reader's Choice Award Winners. MMORPG.com. Retrieved on 2007-02-24.
  25. Best of 2006: PC, Best Persistent World Game. IGN. Retrieved on 2007-02-24.
  26. 10th Annual Interactive Achievement Awards. The Academy of Interactive Arts and Sciences. Retrieved on 2007-03-01.
  27. 27.0 27.1 Les JOL d'Or 2006. JeuxOnline. Retrieved on 2007-03-05.
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