Guild Wars 2 is without doubt one of the greatest MMOs going, however it’s a sequel to a sport that is simply barely an MMO—the unique Guild Wars is extra of a mission-based ARPG with shared city hubs that feels like an MMO on account of its enormous roster of character courses and /dance emotes. When a sport like Guild Wars 3 will get introduced, an apparent query follows: will it’s an MMO or not?
In line with a weblog publish from ArenaNet studio head Colin Johanson that went up earlier this week, the reply is sure, however with an asterisk. Within the publish, he lays out the studio’s taxonomy for the primary two video games. The primary Guild Wars sport, Johanson reckons, was a “cooperative on-line RPG,” however when everybody began calling it an MMO, ArenaNet adopted swimsuit. The second is a true-blue MMO that was at all times supposed to toy with the style’s conventions.
As for the third? It “lands close to the center of the MMO spectrum … Whereas it suits the definition of an MMORPG considerably greater than Guild Wars Reforged does, it does not attempt to replicate the large-scale gameplay pillars that so uniquely outline Guild Wars 2.”
“This ensures that each one three of our video games can coexist as totally different experiences on totally different timelines, telling totally different tales concerning the world of Tyria,” the publish explains.
Johanson concedes that this declaration is “broad and obscure,” and it is true that we solely have the roughest concept of what Guild Wars 3 may appear like at this level. That mentioned, social media is ablaze with potential gamers making an attempt to guess at precisely what kind of sport GW3 shall be—hypothesis has ranged from a New World-like to a GW1 successor to a singleplayer sport—which I suppose is what occurs when the one two video games in your sequence hardly play like each other.
If nothing else, we all know it is an MMORPG of a form, or at the least an MMO-like, which one way or the other seems like a aid. It is like stumbling onto an oasis at a time when, as PC Gamer’s Harvey Randall put it, “loving MMOs … is an train in frustration, grief, and transferring on.”

