Funcom speaks out openly about Age of Conan criticisms
Filed under: Fantasy, Age of Conan, News items
In an interview with MTV Multiplayer, Funcom’s Jørgen Tharaldsen speaks surprisingly frank about the many criticisms Age of Conan has been dealt. Topics cover everything from the current state of the game to what Funcom is doing to bring back players with a “come back and play for free” invite sometime in 2009, according to Jørgen. The whole read is just generally very interesting and well worth your time if you’ve any interest in Age of Conan and where it’s headed in the coming months.
At the end of the interview, the question of Warhammer Online and Wrath of the Lich King come up in relation to any possibly concerns for Funcom. Jørgen delivers one of his most lucid comments about AoC when he says, “I don’t think anything is easy in the world of MMO’s, and fighting to get new subscribers is a constant challenge. Now it’s ‘WAR’ and ‘Lich King’ - going forward there will be many others.” The list of other contenders is indeed longer than a Dream Theater solo and in a couple of weeks we may have to add yet another large contender to that laundry list.
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Funcom’s product manager speaks out on Gaute Godager’s departure
Filed under: Fantasy, Age of Conan, Interviews, MMO industry
With the recent news of Age of Conan’s Gaute Godager departing Funcom so suddenly, many players want to know what happened exactly. As an original founder of the company and through 16 years of employment at Funcom, one can only wonder what this says about the company. So MTV Multiplayer was able to sit down to a short interview with Funcom’s product manager Jorgen Tharaldsen concerning this sudden departure of Godager.
Tharaldsen is understandably positive about the new direction of the company under replacement game director Craig Morrison. He praises Morrison’s work as a community manager at Funcom and as a game director for Anarchy Online. Yet he also touches on the legacy of Godager and what he has meant to the history of MMOs in general. Not much else is said about the reasoning behind Godager’s departure (besides what Godager has already said himself), but Tharaldsen seems optimistic about the future of the company and Age of Conan.
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