Star Trek Online Collector's Edition reviews

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"Shaka, when the walls fell."
1 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

(( Be advised I wrote this about six months after the game came out and that it may have changed since then. Probably for the worse. ))

Recently I had the opportunity to purchase a Star Trek badge or ‘pin’ as they like to call them so you don't sound like a seven year old. For a small sum of money, the only downside was that this badge came in the Star Trek Online Collectors boxed set. So why not- thought I, I might as well play it, just to see how bad it is. Well I'll tell you why not, why not is if you are like me and hate having your head stuffed with a paddling pool full of week-old dog-do, wasted time, and broken promises and dreams, then you will hate Star Trek: Online.

Cryptic and I have always had this Love-Hate Relationship, They love my and every other player in the worlds suffering, and I hate the fact their parents met. I want to be perfectly clear on this point, It is my profound belief that Cryptic have no idea how to make a game, City of Heroes has improved by leaps and bounds since Cryptic left, Champions had promise but has continued to sink further into the sickly brown goo of a swamp composed entirely of cancerous diuretic excrement, scrabbling all the while to swim down further unsatisfied with the natural drowning process as they seem to be. And so I was surprised to find out how exactly unchanged this opinion would become after I played Star Wreck'd: Online.

Despite early hints and outright statements that the game would ignore the new wrong Star Trek movie that made every attempt to turn one of the classic “hopeful future” Sci-fi franchises into an angsty emo job, complete with the least threatening and most unbelievable villain/plot in Star Trek History, which is saying things, the games first voice over completely links that film and the game together. Fan-tastic. So I suffer through the bull that they handed Leonard Nimoy to read while he was distracted with a fascinating paint-drying experiment and got to the tutorial. You begin as an ensign, the Borg are attacking again, you easily defeat the borg, but that's no surprise since the writing crew of Voyager did their best to cut the threat of the borg at every opportunity. For your efforts StarFleet decide to give command of your ship to you, an ensign, because you helped stop the borg, and that demonstrates you have what it takes. Because combat is all the matters to StarFleet and the federation, if you can make the weapons go, then you're Captain material.

You have the ability to customise said ship from two classic designs, one slightly more classic than the other, and a new design that looks like something one of the developers kids made out of lego one night. This is a general theme of Starships. You earn XP and level up, eventually gaining new ranks, each rank allows you to ‘buy’ a better class of ship. Because Commander Sisko Traded in the Defiant for the Sovereign when he hit captain, didn't he. Each class of ship (with a few exceptions) has a couple of different designs which are piecemeal so you can mix and match, you could have a Galaxy-class saucer with a Galaxy-X tri-nacelle and a fictional deflector array. A Miranda saucer with centaur pylons and lego nacelles. And so on. You can also paint pretty patterns on your ship in all the colours of the gritty angsty spectrum, Blood red, ashen green, dark angsty night blue, and of course black. Nonetheless I enjoyed taking the ship it gave me and turning it into a classic Miranda Class. Then my next rank ship was converted from the design they wanted me to have into a classic Constitution refit. My next rank was an Excelsior class. Why- Because if I want to play a Star Trek game, I want to be using a Star Trek Ship. Not some Cryptic designers LSD infused brain-fart of what one might look like. I will admit the Cryptic designs are superior to the ‘Enterprise’ in that new wrong movie which looked like someone had over inflated the Enterprise and then stuffed it with suet pudding.

Similarly you can use the costume editor to change your uniform, Wrath of Khan era, Next Generation series and movie, Original Series and a bunch of new Cryptic designed leather outfits from the Gritty Dark Matrix Catalogue. And while I chose to dress myself in TNG Movie uniforms, I think that having everyone in different uniforms is counter-intuitive to the whole concept of ‘Uniforms’

The story line, if you can call it that, is so tired and well trodden it could have been spewed from the pen of the laziest hack, or Cryptic story writer, so it fits with the last two seasons of Enterprise at least. The story writing is everything that playing Champions: Online can lead you to expect, like having your brain pulled out through your eyes each dialogue window. And the mission tree is as dull and repetitive as any Cryptic game, Fly through asteroids and kill dudes by flying around in circles connecting the two ships with coloured lines, is followed obedient schoolboy style with beam down to the planet and kill dudes by following the path and shooting everything that isn't you. Rinse, repeat. Throw in some Fly-around-in-space-until-you-kill-dudes and you have ST:O's mission tre­e.

With everyone a ‘Captain’ of their own shi…p, the very problem I feared pre-release came frighteningly and stupidly true. Allow me to illustrate by means of a Captain's log…

“Captain's Log, supplemental. I have brought the Agamemnon into orbit above Pyron III where I shall beam down to the surface along with the captains of the Oberon, DeathClaw and Pantyspanker to kill five squads of Klingons.” (The actual names of the ships I was teamed with)

That's right, while teaming one mission was to beam down, kill five squads of klingons. So four ships parked in orbit and the captains beamed down alone to do it. Just like all those exact same times in Star Trek. I don't know about you, but I'm immersed.

The Game engine seems to have been assembled of Corn wafers and glue-stick assuming the wafers are unintuitive and prone to failure and the glue-stick is festering puss. You cannot fly your ship straight up or down, instead having to spiral around like a shark if you want to get at anything directly above you.

I haven't been able to advance very far at all because most of my missions were BROKEN and incomplete-able, and I refuse to just grind space kill quests in the black zones, an activity only slightly less fun than having your teeth drilled.

The game is equipment based, and equipment for surface or space combat is all tiered by rank, so you need to keep upgrading to the next slightly improved gewgaw or winning is next to impossible, and you can never get a real advantage over the npcs, although a tribble in your inventory will consume your food and multiply. Your bridge officers can all be trained to learn special techniques, like learning how to get engineers to do something instead of playing hungry-hungry hippos while the ship is damaged. Although one of these abilities turns my ship bring neon pink while it is active, and let me tell you there is nothing that makes you really feel like you're IN Star Trek like flying a float in the rainbow parade. Space combat is also too fast, Star Trek combat is usually more sweeping amongst the big ships.

Swimming is interesting too. Or at least it would be, if there were any. Instead you run merrily along the bottom happily breathing water as though it were air. Because Star Trek has long been about taking physics and jamming it in a locker until Physics agrees to do Star Treks math homework. As if I needed another sign Cryptic either can't or won't try. It is especially sad as ST:O uses the same engine as Champions: Online which not only includes swimming, but a whole water zone! I know it's a big ask but I'd like those clueless fools at Cryptic to get their act together for once.

Graphically it's very nice, except that I can tell that whoever designed the City of heroes base furniture went with Cryptic to do ST:O. How can I tell- Well the interior of my ship is about 4× over scale. I look like a four year old toddling around daddy’s ship. The engine room alone is big enough to put a Blitzball arena in. And that's on the smallest setting.

If you want to play a Star Trek game, get A Final Unity, the 25th anniversary, Judgement Rites, Elite Forces or Starfleet Command. As for Star Trek: Online, it's story, missions, engine, concept, treatment, and Quality control can best be summed up, along with the game itself with: “Shaka, when the walls fell.”

1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"Words of warning"
2 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

The gameplay wears after a while, with several of the missions continuing to clog up the available missions list long after you've completed them.

One of the missions is quite impossible to complete even with a dozen or more players working in concert, and even when all of them are using ships not available to the rank listed as suitable for said mission.

Also, don't expect to form friendships here, even within a fleet, there is very little interaction between players.

Lastly, and most importantly… STO is NOT the game for you if you have any sort of datacap on your broadband connection. I started playing just as the game was celebrating its first anniversary, but not before I had to wait several hours to complete the download of a 4Gb “patch” (which is 2/3 of the size of the fully installed title). Large patch downloads are, unfortunately, a regular feature

So long as you enjoy having virtually no social interaction, gameplay that is very, very repetitive, missions that are linear and impossible to fail, long waits for patch downloads (forced on you AFTER redeeming your game-time code / paying to use something you've already paid for), and the lag inherent in New Zealand's broadband speeds that were state of the art 15 years ago, then STO might just be for you after all

1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"Don't Judge A Book That's Still Being Written"
4 stars"

I'll admit I'm a bit of a Trek fan so this game had me interested from it's first mention over two years ago. What initially turned me off was the fact that it was a subscription MMO (I don't like paying for a game just to pay more later to keep playing), and that this game got such poor reviews upon release. After the new Star Trek movie released I found myself hungry for some starship action, so seven months after release, I decided to give this a go – and boy was I glad I did. Yeah sure it's a sub MMO but what you have to realise is that your monthly $17-$24 NZD (depending on the exchange rate) actually goes into developing the game further. Content is always being added and Cryptic have worked hard to give fans what they want in a Star Trek game. Look at it this way, if you pay the sub you'll never have to pay for an expansion for STO like some single player games I know of (Sims anyone?) Sure, it's not perfect, but it's leaps and bounds better than it was on release almost a year ago, and Cryptic are continually working on it to make it better. At writing, Cryptic released Season 3 today and I am amazed at all the enhancements that have been added to the game (Season 3 is the third big content update for the game, kind of like an expansion). I challenge all the reviewers that rated the game poorly upon release to revisit it now with all the progress that's been made. A lot of improvements are in the game and best yet, even more are coming in the form of episodic missions, crafting, ability restructuring, ship enhancements, crew enhancements and more. If you are a Trek fan like me you need to pick this up. If you would play it full time from the start there's at least 4 to 5 months of content to get through already, without the additions they're currently working on, which is more than I can say for a lot of games out there.

1 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
"Don't it's a trap"
2 stars"

The idea was what sold me but the actual game it no good it essential a single player game you keep paying to play little talk and interaction with other player buggy game play and missions

1 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
"Star Trek paradise."
5 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

Apparently Star Trek Online was quite nasty at launch.I picked it up after 9 months of developer fixes and it is the ultimate Star Trek experience.The space combat is loads of fun.Finding other people to fight with(or against)is easy and the big space battles ROCK.The other element is the “Away Team” missions where you beam down to planets etc with your bridge crew.Its a fps type of style and very star trekky.If you are a Star Trek fan,play this.If youre sick of WoW,play this.It makes a really nice change from elves and trolls.

0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"Space!!!"
5 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

Even if you are not a big star trek fan this game will be fun for all those space ships lovers out there. Just the subcripstion is a pain. :)

0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"BUY IT"
5 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

I only have one word to say AWSUM!!!!!!!!!­!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"Awesome, if you have the time..."
4 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

I guess it goes without saying that MMORPG's are best if you have the time to play them.

Since buying this i havent had a huge ammount of time to pay it. But from what i have played this is a game with potential to be awesome, particularily if you have a keen interest in the Star Trek universe.

The characted creation is good, with plenty of options to personalise your characted. Graphics cranked up are around 8/10ish and the whole feel of the game is quite nice.

Missions thus far just seem to be the usual go do this or that and bring something back, but that is to be expected.

In summary…havent spent a huge ammount of time on this one yet, but is looking to be a good game.

0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"Trekkies or Space Simmies will love this game!"
4 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

A great game for those who enjoy playing space simulators or avid Star Trek fans.

It's an MMORPG so you can play with friends or against other players. Has a monthly fee (similar to WOW). Great way to spend spare time if you don't have anything else to do. Highly entertaining!

0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"It's only logical that this game is amazing."
4 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

Fantastic game, really good customization and both ship combat and ground combat is exciting. I would recommend this to star trek fans and new fans alike!

0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"Good Fun"
4 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

This game has changed a lot since release, for the better. There's still a lot of work left for Cryptic to do, but the game is a lot of fun to play. Well worth checking out.

0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"Live Long and Prosper- this is fantastic!"
5 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

Not being one for games I found this excellent, great fun, especially with the communicator badge pinned to the chest – congratulations your a trekkie!

0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"Trekkies will love it!"
4 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

I bought this Collector's Edition for my Trekkie friend for Christmas, knowing only a fraction about the fictional universe of the series. So I am only commenting on how impressed we were with the contents of the package.

When my mate opened it up on Christmas day he was absolutely stoked. It comes in a self-contained box that houses everything neatly. Besides the game itself, there are 3 Ten-Day passes which you can share with friends and get them to experience the MMO with you. So even if you are purchasing this for the Collector's items and want to use up the 30 day trial before committing or leaving this MMO aside, you can still have fun alongside your mates for the duration.

Which brings me onto the main things he liked as a Star Trek fan. Which was the Communicator Badge, which is fully die-cast metal and is able to be worn since it is a pin.

Also, it comes with an artbook about the making of the game and rendering new worlds, as well as other staples of the series. Such as the starships and alien races.

As of now, we have yet to go traversing the stars together on the trial passes provided… Going were noone has gone before. facepalm

But if you are a Trekkie fan, this is an awesome way to grab some Collector's items and give this MMO a go. A real must for the hardcore Star Trek fan!

0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
"Ok, but not what I expected"
3 stars"
Purchased on Mighty Ape

The game has ok story line and graphics, but gameplay was nothing like I expected. The only thing you do is take missions to kill, then take a mission to kill, then take a mission to kill.......

So after a while, it's kinda boring. I thought there might have been mining of resources, or taking jobs to help build ships, or actually be able to move about within a ship. But alas, no :-(

So those those who just want a FPS, you'll like it. But I wanted something with more depth.