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EverQuest II

 
Games: EverQuest II
  • Platform: IBM PC Compatible
  • Release Date: November 08, 2004
  • Genre: Role-Playing
  • Style: Persistent World Online RPG
  • Similar Games: Dark Age of Camelot (IBM PC Compatible), World of WarCraft (Hybrid Windows/Mac)

Game Description

Taking place centuries after the events of the original EverQuest, this second installment introduces fans to a very different Norrath: a planet that in 500 years has endured numerous catastrophes that have changed its nature and altered the destinies of its people. The planet's moon Luclin collided with Norrath, bringing about an entire "Age of Cataclysms" that included not only "The Shattering" (the collision of Luclin with Norrath), but also many other catastrophes such as world wars and divine interference. Now, during Norrath's "Time of Destiny," players will explore through the shadows of these events that Norrath has endured over the past 500 years.

At the beginning, players will start out on Atonica, the original continent of EverQuest. As a result of "The Shattering," Atonica has been broken into multiple, smaller continents. Though only the shattered Atonica is available to explore at first, players can look forward to many developments through live updates and planned expansion pack content. It should be noted, however, that there is plenty to explore here, with the cities Qeynos and Freeport each containing 17 zones.

Improved graphics rendering is apparent through the players' ability to customize their characters' appearances with various attributes: eye and eyebrow shape and color, ears, cheeks, chin, and lips are all customizable. The cycle of day turning to night is nothing new from the original to this latest version of EverQuest, however the visuals of a rotating sky, turning from daylight into a star- and nebula-filled night sky, is. Not just a graphical touch, this progression from day into night also affects gameplay, as certain spells become more or less powerful according to the time of day.

There are a total 16 playable races (four of which are new), along with 100 levels and 48 classes. As players advance and begin to define their characters, they may choose a class using a new branching system, ideal for first time players as it provides an easier understanding of the various abilities attributed to each class and race. An additional area of improvement lies in the players' ability to gradually develop their characters over time, rather than being faced with a number of abstruse or confusing choices from the beginning. To put it simply, starting players will pick a race, choose an appearance, and choose from one of five archetypes: fighter, mage, priest, scout, or artisan. From this point on, it is the players' in-game actions and decisions that will determine which class they eventually fall into.
~ Damian Francis, All Game Guide

Production Credits

Senior Producer: John R. Blakely; Producer: Andrew J. Sites, Bruce A. Ferguson; Art Director: Joe Shoopack, Stuart Compton; Associate Art Director: Daniel Lewis; Audio Director: Heather Sowards; Design Director: Rich Waters; Technical Director: Scott Hartsman; Community Manager: Steve Danuser; Lead Artist, Characters: Bill Yeatts, Derek Benson; Lead Sound Designer: Mike Smith; Lead Game Designer: Chris Cao; Lead Mechanics Designer: Joe Russo; Lead Programmer, Client: Richard A. Baker; Lead Programmer, Server: Jonathan L. Davis; Associate Producer: Steve George, Jose Araiza, Oliver J. Smith; Assistant Producer: Glenn Snyder; Artist, World Builder and Animator: Sarah Bailey, Francesa Castellanos, Matt Chavis, Brad Constantine, Rosie Cosgrove, Diane Covill, Maria Del Casino, Steven Ekholm, Laurie Fuller, Ryan Gibson, Chad Haley, Kacey Helms, Timothy Heydelaar, Patrick Ho, Richard Johnson, Arash Keissami, Steve Kim, Sung Kim, Benjamin Lazzaro, Kevin Lydy, Joseph Marullo, Amanda McCarter, James McClure, Brandan McDonald, Kelsey McNair, Tom Moon, Vu Nguyen, Tim Petty, Hans Piwenitzky, Richard Randolph, Josh Robinson, Evan Sampson, Forrest Shepard, Rich Sjoberg, Nathan Temple, Ivaylo, Vaklinov, Daniel Valey, Brad White, Dok Whitson, Edwin Williamson; Additional Art: Christian Akesson, Thad Clevenger, Niraj Desai, James Doyle, Lee Harker, Jeff Jonas, Martin Karlsson, Stone Perales, Darren Robb, Rick Scmitz, Tom Tobey, Ian Wall, William Wat, Eric Webster, Ryan Zimmerman; Sound Design: Chad Mossholder, Catherine C. Neri; Copy Editor: Joy Kosenski; Voice Integration Specialist: Fryda Wolff; Audio Apprentice: Ryan Bacalski, Juan Cardenas, Chris Johnson, Jesse Knapp, Suzanne Owen, Michael Wagner; Script Writer: Keith Baker, Brian Quinette, Scott Stein, Anne Waltz; Music Composed, Conducted and Orchestrated By: Laura Karpman; Music Performed By: Prague Symphony Orchestra, Adam Klemens; Orchestral Score Recorded and Mixed By: John Timperley; Electronic Score Mixed By: Greg Townley; Design Supervisor: Jason Roberts, Erik Theisz; Game Designer: Jeremy Albert, Ryan Barnard, Paul Carrico, Peter Chang, Tony Garcia, Jeremy Gess, Matthew Higby, Kyle R. Hill, Steven Kramer, E. J. Moreland, Nels Nelson, Stephen M. Pierce, Shawn Pitman, Mario Rizzo, Tracy A. Seamster, Ben Skelly, Jared Sweatt, Jacob Thornley, W. Roger Uzun, Noel Douglas Walling, Thomas Wells, Joel White, Jason A. Zimmerman; Additional Game Design: Bill Coyle, Steve Danuser, Amanda Flock, Jake Sones, William Trost; Programming: John Abad, Paul Balon, Mark H. Cieslar, Todd Fiala, Robert Hanz, Neil Kettler, Robert Mitchell, Douglas Powers, Ryan Smith, John Tessin, Robert Trickey, Gordon Wrinn; Additional Programming: Nate Bloberg, Mark Botta, Eric Cosky, Christian Ebbecke, Jim Hicke, Don Neufeld, Jeff Petersen; Support Programming: Jordan Albert, Ben Cole, Chad Folz, Steve George, Graeme Ing; Community Representative: Caroline Amiguet, Sherisa Notmeyer, Taskin Sayilir; Vice President, Development: John Donham, Rod Humble; Executive Assistant: Fannie Gunton; Voice Talent: Brad Abrell, Grant Albrecht, Jamie Alcroft, Leigh Allyn Baker, Michelle Arthur, Robin Atkin Downes, Susan Balboni, Nicole Balick, Robert Beckwith, Gregg Berger, Susanne Blakeslee, Steve Blum, Susan Boyd, Amy Brassette, Kimberly Brooks, Julianne Buescher, Scott Bullock, Corey Burton, Joey Camen, TC Carson, Megan Cavanaugh, Larry Cedar, Cam Clarke, Robert Clotworthy, David Cooley, Chris Cox, Stephan Cox, Kat Cressida, Alan Dale, Charles Dennis, Melissa Disney, Sean Donnellan, Christine Dunford, Chris Edgerly, Paul Eiding, Greg Ellis, Gideon Emery, Tom Fahn, Mel Fair, Bill Farmer, Erin Fitzgerald, Qinton Flynn, Nika Futterman, Brian George, David W. Goldstein, Barbara Goodson, Michael Gough, Wayne Grace, Julianne Grossman, Dan Hagan, Heather Halley, Saffron Henderson, Victoria Hoffman, Amber Hood, James Horan, Richard Horvitz, Kim Hoy, Tina Illman, Lara Jill Miller, Bob Joles, Daniel Joseph, Michael Keenan, Jeffery Knight, Wendee Lee, Katie Leigh, David Lodge, Kim Lores, Peter Lurie, Jessica Lynn, Kim Mae Guest, Debi Mae West, Dave Marcus, Susan Marque, Mona Marshall, Vaness Marshall, Bill Martin, Masasa, Drew Massey, Andi Matheny, Dawn Maxey, Anndi McAfee, Michael McConnohie, Joel McCrary, Pam McCullough, Danica McKellar, Aspen Miller, Jamie Mortarello, Mark Mosley, Julie Nathanson, Darran Norris, Nolan North, Colleen O'Shaughnessey, Jentle Phoenix, Pat Pinnery, Renee Raudman, Salli Saffioti, Lloyd Scherr, Liane Schirmer, Charlie Schlatter, Dwight Shultz, Christopher Smith, David Sobolov, Andrew Sogliuzzo, Michael Soritch, Kath Soucie, Pete Spunuk, Stephen Stanton, Mindy Sterling, Terrence Stone, Karen Strassman, Kristoffer Tabori, Fred Tatascoire, Courtenay Taylor, James A. Taylor, Paula Tiso, Brenda Varda, Brett Walter, Jim Ward, Audrey Wasilewski, Wil Wheaton, Mae Whitman, Joe Whyte, Adrianne Wilkinson, Wally Wingert, Jim Wise, Dave Wittenberg; Vice President of Customer Service and Quality Assurance: George Scotto; Director of Quality Assurance: Tony Rado; Quality Assurance Manager: Ed Hocking; Quality Assurance Supervisor: Jason Boone, Rob Thompson; Technical Liaison: Jennifer Gerull; Quality Assurance Lead For EverQuest II: David Bryson; Quality Assurance Analyst: Brian Alesna, Athena Anderson, Ben Babeshkin, Marlon Barroquillo, Charles Bryant, Cavan Bunting, Alan Colon, Ed Concepcion, David Counts, Larry Cummings, Patrick Esteves, Matt Gardiner, Steve Gersztyn, Jason Good, Shaun Greenslade, Heather Guthridge, Shad Halsey, Jay Harrison, Rodney Haza, Ellery Jones, James Karras, Caroline Kingwell, Jay Lauterwasser, Chris Maus, Kevin Moyer, David Nichols, Nathan Rickey, Bethany Rockey, Ryan Shwayder, Eric Simpson, Jason Stone, Matt Sullivan, Shea Takacs, Rian Trost, Ryan Wells, Quinn Zimmerman; Compatibility Lab Supervisor: Ryan Antonelli; Compatibility Lab: Gary Binkley, Chris Johnson, Todd Luttmers; Platform Quality Assurance: Carl Flaherty, Emily Smith, Adam Stevens; Executive Director of In-Game Support: D. Scott Mattson; Customer Service Manager: Richard A. Schmelter; Lead GM and Customer Service Supervisor: Joe Paolinelli; Game Master: Sarah Airington, Ryan Bacalski, Joel Calland, Jesse Knapp, Suzanne Owen; CS and QA Office Manager: Brandie Brody; CS and QA Coordinator: Allison Needham; Training Specialist: Justin Allen, Patrick Horne, Sean Michael, Robert Nelson; Director of Customer Services: Thom Terrazas; Customer Service Manager: Victor Ramirez; Technical Support Supervisor: Gordon Dapkus, Nate Wright; Senior Technical Support Representative: Dan Clifford, Timothy Zarza; Customer Service Localization Manager: Ima Somers; Customer Service Localization Specialist: Ryan Robinson, Douglas Wright; Senior Vice President of Sales: Don Vercelli; Vice President of Marketing: Michael Lustenberger; Director of Public Relations: Chris Kramer; Product Marketing Manager: Laura Naviaux; Public Relations Manager: Sean Kauppinen; Marketing Coordinator: Casey Dickinson; Sales & Marketing Team: Jen Belfield, Christina Greenberg, Kirsten Kinney, Mike Meyer, Brian Patience, Tamara Sanderson, Christopher E. Sturr, Thomas Taylor, Katie Thomas, Lauren Zeiger, Ari Ziegel; Business Development: Cindy Armstrong, Louis Figueroa; Executive Director: Michael Bowen; Project Management: Cameron Enfinger, Marie Harrington; Director of Production Systems: Mark Preston; Production Systems Team: David Corning, Bryan Glogowski, Sid Jaffee, Kirk Lightfoot, Kevin Ying; Director of Network Engineering: Dani Roisman; Network Engineering Team: Brett Hawn, Geoff Wade; Director of SEO Security: Bryan Blank; Manager of Office Operations: Jeff Bolaris; Office Operations Team: Lisa Doleshal, Michael Hardman, Jonathan Rad, Domenico Scaduto, Jeremy Siprelle, Loren G. Skeels; Manager of Operations: Jeremy Johnson; Operations Team Lead: Steven Davis, Thomas Delzer, Greg Herzbrun, Rob Matzker, David Prestin; Operations Team: Ben Cole, Eric Flynn, Anthony Gervais, Rob Matzker, Robert Maul, Chris Richard, Roger Sewell, Chris Trichel, Jesus Zarzosa; Manager of Operational Engineering: Wilson Yeung; Operational Engineering Developer: Jordan Albert, Timothy Arland, Chad Folz, Ted Garrington, Dan Gorman, Jeff Jones, Patrick McCuller, David Taylor, Gordon Tetlow, Matthew Reynolds, Casey Winn; Installer: Patrick McCuller, Casey Winn; Launchpad: Dan Gorman; Vice President of Technology: Christopher Yates; Director of Platform Engineering: David Dhunjishaw; Project Management: Bonnie Davison, Wayne Kao, Jenne McPherson; Manager of Application Engineering: Mick Giles; Application Engineering Team: Pierce Courtney, David Keene, Devon Kim, Duy Le, Grant Olson, Jason Parrott, Michael W. Tucker II, John Van Roekel; Manager of Systems Engineering: Thomas Farthing; Systems Engineering Team: Brian Buhr, Ron Grierson, Pablo Herrero, Graeme Ing, Bob Kline, Tabish Margers, Jose Rodriguez, Chris Rosa, Rick Smith; Creative Director, Web Presence: Nathan Pearce; Director of Operations, Web Presence: Greg Short; Project Manager: Steve Fuller; Content Team: Elliot Feldman, Adam Stevens; Web Production Team: Travis Ball, Tim Cox, Nick Davison, Tim Dunn, Monte Greene, Dan Jones, Jacob Robinson, Paul Tighe; Director of Database Services: Deepak Thapliyal; Database Services Team: Natik Ameen, David Green, John McGovern, Archana Pansuria, Taylor Steil, Aaron Valdes, Stefan Ward; Station Store Management: Bonnie Davison; Director of International Operations: Matt Sivertson; Localization Manager: David Kim, Stacey Sofia-McDaniel; Technical Lead For International Operations: Bill Mauer; Localization Team: Stacy Griebel, Christopher Lee, Robert McEntee, Jason Polk, Steven Riley; Director of Technology: Rich Lawrence; Project Management: Mike Gaylord; Senior Editor: Clayton Kroh; Executive Director, Legal and Business Affairs: Rick Herman; Staff Counsel: Kelly Conway; Legal Administrator: Kate Estok-Wiesman; Company 1: Sony Online Entertainment; Chairman of the Board: Yair Landau; President: John Smedley; Chief Operating Officer: Russell Shanks; Chief Financial Officer: John Needham; Chief Technology Officer: Adam Joffe; Chief Creative Officer: Raph Koster; Senior Vice President of Legal and Business Affairs: Andy Zaffron; Executive Assistant: Krista Benson, Marsha Gygax, Christine Lena
~ Keith Adams, All Game Guide
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Wikipedia: EverQuest II
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EverQuest II
EverQuest II box art.

Developer(s) Sony Online Entertainment
Publisher(s) Sony Online Entertainment (US/EU/JP), Gamania (CN/TW/KR) (closed), Akella (RU), Square Enix (JP) (previous publisher), UbiSoft (EU)
Platform(s) Windows
Release date(s) 8 November 2004
Genre(s) MMORPG
Mode(s) Multiplayer
Rating(s) Teen (T)
Media CD, DVD, Download
System requirements

Minimum requirements

Recommended requirements

Input methods Keyboard, Mouse

EverQuest II (EQ2), based upon the popular EverQuest, is a fantasy massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) developed by Sony Online Entertainment (SOE) and shipped on 8 November 2004. It features graphics and gameplay vastly updated from its predecessor.

Contents

Story

EverQuest II is set on the fictional world of Norrath five hundred years after the The Planes of Power storyline of the original EverQuest game. The gods withdrew from the world in retaliation for mortal incursions into their planes. On Norrath itself, Dark Elves and the Orcs destroyed much of Faydwer; while the Ogres, Goblins, Orcs, and Giants ravaged Antonica. Transport and communication to the moon Luclin were cut off.

The storyline says that 100 years ago, the continent of Antonica was ripped apart into smaller islands, which are now called the Shattered Lands. The oceans became impassible, preventing contact between the continents of Norrath. Fifteen years ago, the moon Luclin exploded and parts of the Shattered moon remain in the sky.

EverQuest II takes place in what is called the Age of Destiny. In this setting, Queen Antonia Bayle of Qeynos is a benevolent sorceress who welcomes all goodly races to her city to help rebuild Norrath. The Overlord of Freeport, Lucan D'Lere, a centuries-old fallen paladin, rules the evil races in his plans of conquest.

Gameplay

Within EverQuest II, each player creates a character to interact in the 3-D fictional world of Norrath. Within the game, the character can adventure (complete quests, explore the world, kill monsters and gain treasures and experience) and socialize with other players. The game also has a 'tradeskill' system that allows players to create items for in-game use.

In the creation of a character, the player may choose the character's race and class. Various classes have specialized abilities that are complementary to their class. (Monks will get mainly melee combat abilities that use their fists or fist weapons, or a Warlock will get mainly spell abilities that do large amounts of spike damage but cost a lot of mana.) EverQuest II enables social interaction with other players through grouping and through the creation of guilds. Like players, guilds can gain experience and levels, partially from players completing special tasks called Heritage quests, but primarily from guild-oriented quests and tasks called "writs," and gaining guild experience by killing epic monsters. Higher guild levels open up special rewards unavailable to non-guilded characters, and cause certain other rewards to cost less. These rewards include housing options, mounts, house items, apparel, and special titles.

Although EverQuest II focuses on player versus environment (PvE), dedicated player versus player (PvP) servers were added in February 2006.

One of the available mounts that can be purchased with status points

The Everquest II feature set has expanded since its release in 2004.

Character development

Everquest II is a class-based MMO. At character creation, players choose one of 19 races and 24 adventure classes. Any race can be any class (with some conditions). Five starting cities are provided, each with its own beginner experience. Hair and facial features are chosen during character creation, but can be changed later by visiting a Barber Shop in the game world.

Each character may advance through 80 levels of experience in his chosen adventure class, and 80 levels in a tradeskill class that is chosen after creation. Characters are customized by earning up to 200 Achievement Points during the course of gameplay, which are used to purchase achievement abilities. Each adventure class has three trees of achievement abilities to invest in.

Each adventure class accumulates more than 20 distinct abilities. A common mechanic is used for physical combat (Combat Arts) and spellcasting (Spells) - all such abilities draw from the character's Power resource, which must be recharged between battles. Most spells and combat arts can be upgraded through eight tiers of improvement, with the lowest tier granted automatically upon gaining each adventure level. Spell upgrades are obtained just like equipment upgrades - as loot, quest rewards, or produced through crafting. An optional system called Heroic Opportunities grants bonus effects when players combine their abilities in specific ways.

Every character can have a Tradeskill Class in addition to their Adventuring Class. The player specializes in one of 9 Tradeskill Classes as his character advances in tradeskill levels. When crafting an item, the player reacts to unanticipated crafting events by using crafting skills, such that the crafting process is superficially similar to combat.

Game content

Everquest II has a heavy focus on quests. More than 6000 quests have been discovered by players as of January 2009.[1] Game rewards are biased toward quests. The Achievement Point system is mainly advanced by completing quests. Much of the game lore is presented through quests, using an interactive dialogue system.

Acquisition of equipment is a major focus of progression. Character inventory consists of 8 armor slots, 8 accessory slots, and 4 weapons-related slots. Most equipment has a minimum adventure level requirement to equip it, and must be permanently attuned to the character before using it. Equipment can be enhanced by applying "augmentations" on a per-item basis.

Equipment and treasure are classified into broad tiers such as "Fabled", "Legendary", and "Treasured". Each quest generally gives an item reward of a tier that reflects its difficulty. Almost all creatures have separate lists of potential loot for each tier, with reduced chances of winning the best (Fabled). Player-crafted items are also divided into tiers, based on the rarity of materials.

Everquest II has no experience loss, corpse runs on death, or lost levels from dying. Upon death, characters respawn with their gear intact at specific revival locations, with a minor experience debt to be repaid. Gear is fully functional until its condition runs out after 10 consecutive deaths, and is repaired to 100% for a fee.

Starting at level 20, players can wear any clothing that's allowed by their class in "appearance slots", overriding the appearance of their functional gear. A Dressing Room feature allows players to see what their character would look like wearing equipment that they do not possess.

Community features

Players can form groups of up to 6 players, or raids of up to 24 players (i.e. four groups). Monster encounters are classified into corresponding categories of difficulty, and tend to drop corresponding tiers of treasure. A monster of a given level may be normal (as strong as a single player), Heroic (as strong as a group of players), or Epic (as strong as a raid force). Each encounter may take the form of a single strong monster, or a group of lesser monsters that must be fought simultaneously.

Player interaction is encouraged by integrated Voice Chat, a built-in mail system, global chat channels, and a global marketplace. A looking-for-group tool is provided for adventurers, and looking-for-work for crafters. Players can view each others' statistics and leveling history on the EQ2Players web site, on which basic features are free, while advanced features require a monthly fee.

A mentoring system allows a higher-level character to pretend to be a lower-level character, when grouped with another player of lower level. All equipment and abilities of the mentor are scaled down appropriately, and a bonus is granted to the lower-level character's rate of advancement.

Everquest II has strong support for guilds. Each guild has an experience bar and earns guild levels (up to 80). The guild gains experience when its members perform tasks that earn city status. Higher guild levels unlock new items, mounts, houses, guild halls, and other privileges for its members. Guilds get hosted website and forum, and a guild bank with officer controls. A guild recruitment tool is integrated into the game.

Player housing is accessible to players from level 1. Furniture is stackable and scalable, and in-house pets are available. House styles are unique to each of six cities, with various sizes and layouts available in each. Player houses can be shared and visited at the owner's discretion, are connected to the player market system. A recent expansion of the housing system provides guilds with guild halls.

A secure commission system allows players to sell their crafting skills to other players, or use the common market system to sell finished items.

Differences from the original

Many gameplay choices were made in order to stop old, sometimes undesirable, tactics that emerged in EQ; a major difference is the concept of "locked encounters". Currently a group or a solo player can set an option to lock encounters. When encounters are locked, only the player or group who becomes linked to that encounter is involved, which stops kill stealing. Other players cannot assist in the encounter unless the player who locked it uses a special "/yell" command for help, after which the encounter rewards neither loot nor experience.

"Trains" (encounters pursuing fleeing players to a zone line, and then attack uninvolved players), a problem in Everquest, are no longer a problem in EQ2. Encounters will not aggro on (attack) uninvolved players until they first return to their original location. Encounters returning to their spawn point are also immune to attack until they return there.

To stop kiting, players in combat lose all their movement speed enhancements except the special "sprint" ability, which costs a considerable amount of power to use, although some classes have speed debuffs that slow the enemy, thus making kiting a viable option. Because certain player classes such as Rangers and Mages have limited effectiveness in close melee range, many of these players have discovered another method of pseudo-kiting by running backwards and firing a missile weapon at the enemy. The enemy lands fewer attacks, but can take significant damage depending on the type of ammunition or missile weapon used, and the skill level of the user.

The penalization of death has been heavily reduced, instead of a "corpse run" to regain your items and lessen the experience loss, in EQ2 you will only have slight damage on your equipped items which will require mending after 10 deaths, but there are player made items which you can carry with you to mend the items.

Setting

Darathar, a dragon in the world of EverQuest II, is part the "Prismatic" quest series.

EverQuest II is set in what is called the "Age of Destiny" on the world of Norrath, 500 years later than the setting of the original EverQuest. The game world has been drastically affected by several cataclysms (see Story, above) since the original EverQuest. The planes have closed, the gods temporarily left, and the moon Luclin has been destroyed (and partially rained onto the face of Norrath). Remnants from the original EQ's Norrath can be found throughout the Shattered Lands.

Players arrive in one of five tutorial areas: The Queen's Colony, The Outpost of the Overlord, The Nursery in Greater Faydark, Hate's Envy in Darklight Woods, and Timorous Deep in Kunark, and then move to one of five cities, Qeynos or Kelethin (the 'good' cities) or Freeport, Neriak, or Gorowyn (the 'evil' cities). All of the other cities in the world were destroyed, taken over (Ak'anon, Kaladim, and a few others), rendered inaccessible (Halas), or have banished all outsiders (Felwithe and Rivervale) in The Shattering. The original player cities that were present at the game's launch (Qeynos and Freeport) are divided into multiple zones, with the playable races each having their own special section (Village) of these cities. The player cities introduced into the game at later dates (Kelethin and Neriak) are smaller than the original cities, and as such each 'newer' city is completely contained within one zone. Players from Qeynos or Kelethin are not welcome in Freeport or Neriak and vice versa unless they choose to betray their city via the Betrayal Questline. Players are allowed to begin the Betrayal Questline from level 10 onwards.

The game world features wide geographical and ecological variety.

In EQ2, players can ride trained griffons on predetermined routes over the Shattered Lands, or acquire a horse, flying carpet, warg, rhino or a floating disk so that they can travel more swiftly throughout much of the game world. "Mariner's Bells" are scattered across the land allowing instant transportation across various areas of the world. With the inception of the Kingdom of Sky expansion, the Ulteran wizard spires teleport you up into Kingdom of Sky, with spires in different zones taking you to different areas of the expansion. With the Echoes of Faydwer expansion, Wardens and Furies (the Druid classes) gained the ability to teleport individuals to one of five (now eight) druid rings. Likewise, Warlocks and Wizards (the Sorcerer classes) gained the ability to teleport themselves or their groups to one of three (now five) wizard spires.

EverQuest II also includes instanced zones—parallel copies of some zones where characters in one 'instance' of the zone cannot interact with the characters or MOBs of any other 'instance' of that zone.

Character races

Players must choose a 'race' when creating a character. The choice of races include human, ogre, dwarf, wood elf and dark elf (and others which were available in the original EQ) along with new options such as the Kerra (a cat-person similar to the Vah Shir of the original EQ), the Ratonga (a rat-like people) and with the purchase of an expansion, fae and Arasai. The Froglok race was originally locked until a special server-wide quest was completed to make them playable. Some races are restricted to either Qeynos or Freeport, based on their alignment, but can turn traitor and move to the opposing city.

Races by Starting City
(Alignment)
Qeynos
(Good)
Kelethin2
(Good)
Freeport
(Evil)
Neriak3
(Evil)
Gorowyn4
(Evil)
Barbarian
Dwarf
Erudite
Froglok1
Gnome
Half Elf
Halfling
High Elf
Human
Kerra
Wood Elf
Dwarf
Fae2
Gnome
Half Elf
High Elf
Wood Elf
Barbarian
Dark Elf
Erudite
Gnome
Half Elf
Human
Iksar
Kerra
Ogre
Ratonga
Troll
Arasai3
Dark Elf
Iksar
Ogre
Ratonga
Troll
Barbarian
Erudite
Gnome
Half Elf
Human
Kerra
Sarnak4

1 Introduced on 27 May 2005 with a questline that was initially required to unlock the race.
2 Introduced with the release of the Expansion, Echoes of Faydwer.
3 Introduced with Game Update 35. (You must have Echoes of Faydwer to make an Arasai, but you may start in Neriak as another race without it.)
4 Introduced with Rise of Kunark Expansion. Characters created in Timorous Deep are considered evil by other entities in the game, but the city itself is neutral as a mercenary city.

Adventurer classes

There are four "archetypes" in EQ2 - Fighter, Scout, Priest and Mage. When EQ2 was launched, a player chose the character's archetype during the initial character creation and then chose a 'class' at level 10 and a 'sub-class' at level 20. This system was changed in Live Update 19 in January 2006 so that a character's final class is chosen at creation. While archetype>class>sub-class system is no longer explicitly defined in the live game, it still defines the roles of classes. Broadly, in a group situation, any priest can be a healer, any fighter can be a suitable tank, any mage or scout can deal damage, with the mage classes typically being able to deal more damage than a scout class, but being more fragile. Evil classes, such as the Assassin, are only available in Freeport, Neriak, or Gorowyn, while good classes, such as the Paladin, are available in either Qeynos or Kelethin. Neutral classes, such as the Guardians, are available in all cities. Ivory background means the class is available in all cities, light blue background means Qeynos and Kelethin only, reddish background means Freeport, Neriak, and Gorowyn only.

Fighter Warrior Berserker
Guardian
Crusader Paladin
Shadowknight
Brawler Monk
Bruiser
Scout Bard Troubador
Dirge
Predator Ranger
Assassin
Rogue Swashbuckler
Brigand
Priest Druid Fury
Warden
Cleric Templar
Inquisitor
Shaman Mystic
Defiler
Mage Sorcerer Wizard
Warlock
Summoner Conjuror
Necromancer
Enchanter Illusionist
Coercer

Betrayal

Betrayal is a process allowing the player to change from a good or evil alignment to the opposing one, and convert to the good or evil counterpart of their current class. In this manner, one can play a traditionally evil-only race, betray their city of origin in favor of a good-aligned city, and play a good-only class. Naturally, the reverse is also possible-betrayal of a good-aligned city in favor of an evil one in order to access an evil class with a good race.

Artisan classes

A character can also undertake a tradeskill profession, completely separate from his/her adventuring profession. The tradeskill professions branch at levels 10 and 20, just as adventuring classes used to.

The Echoes of Faydwer expansion introduced two secondary tradeskills. These go alongside the primary tradeskills, and a character can switch to the other secondary tradeskill at any time (starting from scratch). Characters do not gain separate experience points for these tradeskills; maximum skill level rises with the primary tradeskill or adventuring level.

Tradeskill Class Tree
Archetype Class Subclass Products
Artisan Craftsman Carpenter furniture (including altars), strongboxes, and repair kits
Provisioner food and drink
Woodworker bows, arrows, throwing weapons, wooden shields, staves, totems, and musical instruments
Outfitter Weaponsmith metal weapons
Armorsmith chainmail and platemail armor, metal shields
Tailor cloth and leather armor, backpacks, thrown-weapon bags, hex dolls, and with the Echoes of Faydwer expansion, cloaks.
Scholar Alchemist potions, poisons, and fighter skill upgrades
Jeweler jewelry and scout skill upgrades
Sage priest and mage spell upgrades
Secondary Tinkerer Tinkered contraptions, such as automated parachutes, environmental suits, summonable robotic pets, mounts, and water-breathing devices.
Transmuter Breaks certain valuable equipment down into in magical components which can be used by artisans to create adornments and some tinkered items.

Voices

The game uses actual voices for NPCs. The actors used for these parts included Hollywood stars such as Heather Graham (as Queen Antonia Bayle) and Christopher Lee (as Overlord Lucan D'Lere). Wil Wheaton, Dwight Schultz and Danica McKellar are also part of the cast. According to SOE in October 2004, EverQuest II featured 130 hours of spoken dialog recorded by 1,700 voice actors.[citation needed] More dialog has been added since release as part of regular game updates. In September 2005, EverQuest II: Desert of Flames added player voice emotes.

Music

The music for the game, over ninety minutes' worth, was composed by Emmy-award winning composer Laura Karpman and recorded by the FILMharmonic Orchestra Prague under her direction. Karpman has said of the music in the game: "Every place has a theme, its own separate, unique feeling - from a quasi-African savanna to a Babylonian city. Every cue in EQ2, with the exception of the attack cues, is like a main title of a movie. A more cinematic experience for the player was one of our goals." [1]. Purchasers of the EverQuest II Collector's Edition received a soundtrack CD as part of the package.

The most recent expansions, Echoes of Faydwer and Rise of Kunark, included many themes from the corresponding zones in the original EverQuest, arranged by Inon Zur.

With the recent Rise of Kunark expansion came a major update to the combat music. A new system was added with 14 contextual combat themes. The strength of the enemy or enemies and tide of the battle determine the tone of the combat music. The previous combat music consisted of just a few linear pieces.

Business

SOE is marketing EverQuest II not as a direct sequel, but as a "parallel universe" to the original EverQuest. It is set in an alternate future of the original game's setting, having diverged at the conclusion of the Planes of Power expansion (the lore is explained in an in-game book). This allows both development teams to pursue whatever direction they want to take without impacting the other, and allows players of the original EverQuest to continue receiving updates without forcing players down a specific path. In that sense, they are two completely separate games bound together by name only. Players of the old EQ will find many familiar places and characters, as well as "heritage items" that are similar in name and function to items known from EQ and can be gained via heritage quests.

Like the original and other commercial MMORPGs, EQ2 requires a monthly fee (as of January 2008, US$14.99/month) to play the game. A free play period of 30 days are included with the purchase price of the game. Subscribers can opt to pay an additional monthly fee for extended services, such as an online item database or hosting of guild websites. Players can also download and play the game for free as part of a free trial. Prior free trial programs, known as the Trial of the Isle and Play the Fae, allowed players to experience the beginning steps of the game for free before dedicating themselves to a monthly subscription fee. The current free trial allows players full use of the game environment, but it is limited to 14 days and prevents characters from exceeding level 20.

In Europe, the game is published by KOCH Media.

Advertisement of the Pizza Hut and EverQuest II promotion.

In February 2005, EverQuest II began allowing players to place an order for pizza delivery from within the game, with a simple and easy command typed into the chat bar, "/pizza".[2] This promotion has since ended, but generated significant press for the game.

In June 2005, SOE introduced Station Exchange to EverQuest II. Station Exchange is an official auction system—only on designated servers—allowing real money to be transferred for in-game money, items or characters.

In March 2006, SOE announced that it would end its Chinese/Korean operations for EverQuest II, which were being supported in the region by Gamania. The beta period for the game in China/Korea ended on 29 March, and on 30 March, all Chinese/Korean accounts were moved to the US servers of the game.

In July 2007, SOE introduced magazine EQuinox, which is the official magazine of EverQuest II. The release date of this magazine was 9 August 2007.

In December 2008, SOE introduced Station Cash, a real-money trading (RMT) feature.[citation needed]

in January 2009, SOE together with Valve made Everquest II available on Steam[3].

Expansions and Adventure Packs

Title Type Released Date
The Bloodline Chronicles Adventure Pack 21 March 2005
The Splitpaw Saga Adventure Pack 28 June 2005
Desert of Flames Expansion 13 September 2005
Kingdom of Sky Expansion 21 February 2006
The Fallen Dynasty Adventure Pack 14 June 2006
Echoes of Faydwer Expansion 14 November 2006
Rise of Kunark Expansion 13 November 2007
The Shadow Odyssey[4] Expansion 18 November 2008
Sentinel's Fate[5] Expansion February 2010

With Everquest II, Sony Online Entertainment introduced the concept of Adventure Packs. Adventure Packs are meant to be smaller "mini-expansions" to the game, adding a plot line with several zones, new creatures and items to the game via digital download. These smaller Adventure Packs come with a smaller fee ranging from US$4.99 to US$7.99. However, recently the development team has decided to release free zones and content instead of making adventure packs. Some recent releases include a new starting city, Neriak, with a new starting race, Arasai;[6] and new high level dungeons The Throne of New Tunaria[7] and the Estate of Unrest.[8]

Expansions usually cost in the range of US$29.99 to US$39.99 and are shipped in boxes to stores, but can also be downloaded through a digital service. The retail versions often come packaged with a bonus feature such as a creature that the player can put in their in-game house. Expansions generally introduce many new zones with many plot lines, new features, many new creatures and items, new cities, and often come with a boost in the level cap or a new player race. While it may be easier to download the expansions digitally, traditional retail offers more content.

Alternate versions

  • EverQuest II: East was created for the East Asian market (mainland China, Taiwan, South Korea) but it was terminated as a separate edition on 29 March 2006. EverQuest II: East players were moved to standard servers. The special character models created for the game had already been included in the standard edition as a client-side option since 2005.

References

External links

SOE websites

Wikis


 
 

 

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