Saturday, May 20, 2017

The Right to Bear Arms

Demantura exercises her right to bear arms.

If you're looking for information about the Second Amendment, this is not the right place. If you're looking for satire about the Second Amendment, this is still not the right place. [Jedi Mindtrick] The places you're looking for are here or here.

As my readers know, this blog is a place to read about my gaming misadventures, and this past week has been no exception! I have the pleasure of telling you all about my rediscovery of the beorning race-class in LOTRO.

Race-class? What on earth is THAT all about? Well, in Tolkien lore, Beorn (that bearish skinchanger who gave aid to Thorin's company in The Hobbit) was one of the last of his people. He appeared as a huge man, but could shapeshift into the form of a monstrous bear. If you're going to make that kind of powerful creature into something playable for MMO gamers (who are notoriously fickle about balance between races and classes) then you have to make sure you strike that happy balance right from the start. The easiest way for the LOTRO devs to do that was to make the beorning race also their class. Changing into a bear and laying the smackdown is kind of OP, so it's hardly fair to let them also cast rune AOEs or utilize gambits or fire off a dozen arrows in a wide swath against foes.

Man form
Bear form

Now, when beornings first came into play in November of 2014 with Update 15, I was as excited as anyone to play one. I bought the race-class the day it came out and made one. I was captivated by the detail and beauty of the Vale starter area and dove into it with aplomb. Much to my intense dismay, after only a scant few levels I was ported away to Archet in the Bree-lands. Some people might disagree with me, but I happen to feel that the Man starter area is the worst, with the Shire as a close second. Not only is Archet a pain to get to, but there's hardly anything there and the quests are scattered over a large area -- far less linear and flowing than if you started in the Elf or Dwarf areas. As a rule, if I make a Man character, as soon as I'm out of the intro I hoof it to Celondim. Not only is the story more palatable, but it takes less time to level because of the better-organized quest chains.

But then I really started having trouble. The swap between man form and bear form was anything but smooth, and was especially awkward with the different skills on the skill bars. I hadn't quite become accustomed to using my keyboard for the first skill bar (that lessoning would come after playing RIFT for a while and learning how to make the in-game macros), so it was that much harder to keep the skills straight. Disheartened by the struggle that it was to play, I left the character alone at around level 18. Thereafter, I would only run him through the Yule festival for easy XP -- and I did him the favor of putting a Horned Snowbeast Cloak on him as well as giving him a Snowbeast Steed. It completed the rugged look, and that in itself made me satisfied.

My beorning, Hiraeth, on the Arkenstone server.

Fast forward 2 1/2 years to last Friday. I had no idea what character I wanted to play in LOTRO, aside from wanting to play on the Landroval server with my favorite kinship, Away Shall Fade. (You guys are perpetually awesome.) That left me with 7 characters to choose from. Deciding to be arbitrary about it, I asked a friend on Steam to roll a d8 for me, with 8 being a beorning since I hadn't played it in so long and many of my kinmates seemed to enjoy it. Sure enough, his die landed on 8 and I set to work to create a new beorning character.

Demantura seeks out Gandalf in The Prancing Pony.

I ended up with Demantura Vindurel (diamond wind) whose cosmetics ended up looking vaguely like she belonged in Assassin's Creed instead, but still seemed entirely appropriate for a rough and gruff woman who turns into a bear.

Demantura out on the barrow-downs.

The difference in gameplay was amazing.

I learned that Update 16 (if I'd only waited for it!) had brought about an amazing edit to the beorning race-class: an auto-swap of the skill bars when you shifted forms. That in itself made the beorning more enjoyable to play, but it was clear that they had also tweaked a lot of the skills and the trait trees along with it. To anyone who still has gripes about the beorning, you have no idea how good it is now compared to how it was on its first day!

I took to questing with Demantura like a duck takes to water. As soon as they were able to, Away Shall Fade took me into The Great Barrow, a group of instances that are part of one big dungeon. What I hadn't anticipated was that I'd end up being the tank for the group. My usual favorite classes are all ranged dps, support or healing. Tanking was never something I planned on doing -- or rather, I anticipated it with my guardian and possibly my warden, but forgot that the beorning can be a furry bulldozer with the right build.

Beorning trait tree options.

It was a bit awkward at first, especially since I didn't entirely remember how the dungeon instances went, and my healers didn't exactly keep me alive. (It's okay. I forgive you. You know who you are.) We've run it a couple more times since that first time, and I can safely say that I'm very happy with how the race-class plays. I prefer the blue trait line, dabbled with red and didn't care for it, and am trying to learn the yellow. Beorning is hardy, diverse in the way you can damage and heal with the same build, and seems to make a good meat shield for other players. The bear form is very strong (especially if you use the red line), but the man form is just as strong if you use your skills well.

  




So if you stopped playing beorning years ago for the same reasons I did, I encourage you to give it another try. If you've been playing recently and have the notion that it isn't a viable class, I implore you to think about how bad it was when it was first released and appreciate the work the devs have done and all the feedback the community has given. Maybe it still has its issues, but it's come a very long way!

Now I bet someone out there would love a free game. Who doesn't love a free game? My beorning on the Arkenstone server, Hiraeth, was not originally known by that name. I began playing him on Elendilmir before the World Consolidation. Upon transfer, someone else already had his name and I had to rename him. Knowing that I made him in 2014, and that he is a shapeshifter, what popular (and relevant) name from that year did my unoriginal self give him? Comment with your answer! Your chances are pretty good given how few people comment.

And as always...
 

8 comments:

  1. ...okay trying to figure out if you would do a pun name or an actual name because my first thought was Bearack Obama. LOL

    But also thinking maybe Bear Grylls or Grizzly Adams.

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    1. You've forgotten part of my clue!

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    2. P.S. To date, I only have ONE punny name in use in LOTRO. It's a hobbit named Aumai Goodness. She's a farmer/cook trying her hand at burglary. lol

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    3. Popular and relevant from 2014 would seem to indicate a celebrity of some kind but I'm having a hard time placing how the shapeshifter part fits into a name unless either you literally called him Beorn, or there's an Avengers movie that year I'm forgetting that had Loki in it.

      ...or you went with a Transformer name in which case I am gonna have to look stuff up. LOL

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    4. (And since it's a "him" I assume you didn't go Mystique though I suppose it's possible.)

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    5. I'm not giving any more clues! I honestly thought you'd get this one!

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  2. Dvorin here. I'm going to go on a limb and say you called him Diaval.

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    1. Ding ding ding! We have a winner! :D I named him Diaval after the raven in Maleficent which came out earlier that year. Being a popular name, it wasn't available when I had to change servers the following year.

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