Aion’ing Out The Details DateTime:8/18/2010 5:52:58 PM
If you want to level fast you'd better use your aion lycan and then buy some powerful equipment , this will help you a lot . Happy hunting ! This past weekend was the last closed beta weekend for upcoming fantasy-based MMO Aion, and due to the spidery tendrils I have in the gaming industry I was able to secure a closed beta key for myself and fire up the old NCSoft account to check it out. As I am wont to do with MMOs, I immediately drifted towards the support class, which for my faction was the Priest, and proceeded to get to around level 15. You’d think that somewhat mundane things like server stability and basic questing and leveling are not items that are of great import to an MMO player. You might even think that on many levels, Aion is “more of the same”. You might just be right. But having the basics down is something that players have moved, in the last couple of years, from taking for granted to expecting to work. If you don’t have the stuff that should simply just work down pat, it’s going to be a hard sell down the line to make sure that the things that are more complex and unique in your design will be fixed in a timely manner. It’s a problem that has plagued a lot of recent MMO releases, but from all signs, will not be an issue with Aion.
If you are still in search of cheap aion Golden Medal and Aion powerleveling, you can come here and enjoy the best service, we are serveing you 24 hours everyday. No, Aion is probably going to be around for a while because it’s like cement – practical, smooth, and over time, rock solid. Playing Aion, as I did over the weekend, I had only a single crash to desktop, little to no lag, and loading screens that did not allow me time to get up, go to the bathroom, make a microwave dinner, and do my dishes. Monsters did not teleport towards me, they actually walked, and the number of players hunting up newbie monsters never crippled my performance. So Aion’s vaunted stability, with the exception of a bug plaguing 32-bit clients and the game’s anti-cheat software, is well deserved. Then there’s the gameplay. Aion’s got the basic moving parts and gears of your regular neighborhood MMO. It has quests, it has a ton of grind, it has a straightforward skills learning system, and it has specialization – for example, I could take the path of a Chanter, who had melee and buffing abilities, or one of Cleric, more of a pure healer type (I chose the latter). All the things that you’ve come to know and love (maybe love to hate) about MMOs are in Aion, even right down to the fact that Kobolds exist in some form as low level monsters.
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