By Shawn on Wednesday, May 6th, 2009 at 1:18 PM
In Computer, Game Companies, Game Platforms, Gamer Life, Games, Lord of the Rings, Turbine
The Lord of the Rings Online (LotRO) differs from many of its MMORPG peers in that the game itself is built upon the concept of friends partying together to face the rising tide of evil. While we’ve seen this same reasoning in other Fantasy MMO games there are not any that have as well developed a system of party teamwork.
Sure, various class/race builds make more optimal parties in WoW for grinding or questing or even instances, but one area that The Lord of the Rings Online shines is in encouraging players to band together and then rewarding them with a key party cooperation system during combat.
This system, called Fellowship Maneuvers or Conjunctions, allows players to initiate group only combination attacks against powerful mobs and foes. The official LotRO website has a lengthy article up explaining how the system works and highlighting why certain powers or classes work to trigger these event altering acts and aid groups of players in overcoming normally overwhelming odds. Players can learn how the colored buttons in the Maneuver interface merge in combination to result in special results, how Fellowship Maneuver formulas are created and optimized and get some basic guidelines on when certain moves are best executed.
As a long term LotRO player I know in the heat of battle we’re often calling out the colors based on what result we need, everyone yelling Red or Green seems to be the most common but with properly applied formulas I’m confident we’ll be taking down the Witch King’s henchmen in no time without earning ourselves that dreadful repair bill after falling in battle.
By Ron on Sunday, April 26th, 2009 at 11:11 AM
In Computer, Games, Lord of the Rings, Turbine
I don’t know how many of you have tried out Lord of the Rings Online yet. To be fair, I wasn’t all that impressed with the game when I played it during the beta test. Shortly after Moria came out; however, Shawn coerced me into giving it another chance. I’ve never really thanked him for that.
Besides gaining me as a player, 2008 was an awfully good year for Turbine’s Lord of the Rings Online MMO. It won top honors from sites like MMORPG.com, and its Mines of Moria expansion released to critical and commercial success. Now it’s 2009, and LotRO is celebrating its second anniversary. Turbine is offering up some sweet deals for subscribers to cap this celebration.
Most impressively, new players who want to play LotRO can now pick up a complete copy of the game digitally or delivered for only $9.99. That complete copy includes the full game, the Mines of Moria expansion, a couple of in-game items, and 30 days of game time for about ten bucks.
But that’s not the only thing they’re offering up.
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By Stephany on Tuesday, December 16th, 2008 at 11:54 AM
In Codemasters, Computer, Game Companies, Gamer Life, Games Industry, Lord of the Rings

Turbine has posted a new developer journal over on the official website for Lord of the Rings Online describing the lore of Nimrodel, a well know area for those versed in Tolkien lore; plus it is also a new area which was added to the game’s recent expansion the Mines of Moria.
The river Nimrodel was named after an Elf-maiden of old who once dwelt by a waterfall there, and fell in love with Amroth, the Lord of Lórien. Long ago, they left Lothlórien together for the haven of Edhellond, but Nimrodel disappeared in the White Mountains and her fate remains unknown. In later years, the River Nimrodel served as the site of a watchpost of the Galadhrim, kept by the brothers Haldir, Rúmil, and Orophin.
The waters of Nimrodel are said to bring healing to the weary, and some claim they can hear the voice of the maiden singing in the falls. As the War of the Ring has worsened, the waters have been defiled by the filthy feet of Orcs, and the Elves of Lothlórien seek vengeance.
The river Nimrodel is visited by the Fellowship of the Ring after they escape from Moria in J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings. Players of The Lord of the Rings Online: Mines of Moria may find respite – or danger – near its waters.
Gamers who play LotRO but who have not purchased the expansion yet should go out and get it ASAP because it is not only loads of fun, but gorgeous as well.
Thanks: MMORPG
By Shawn on Tuesday, December 16th, 2008 at 11:41 AM
In Codemasters, Computer, Game Companies, Game Platforms, Games, Lord of the Rings, Videos
Turbine’s Lord of the Rings Online: Mines of Moria team has released videos with a closer look at the two new LOTRO classes included in the expansion, the Warden and the Rune-keeper.
The Warden is based on Haldir, March Warden of Lothlorien. I’m most familiar with this new class as I’m leveling one on Nimrodel. This class strikes a great balance between distance and close combat, and the gambits are a lot of fun to use. They’re chain combos which give you timed combinations to pull off special moves. I actually reminds of the Final Fantasy XI combat mechanics for Cyan.
The video for the Rune-keeper class introduce in the Moria expansion follows the break.
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By Stephany on Thursday, December 11th, 2008 at 5:52 AM
In Codemasters, Computer, Game Companies, Gamer Life, Games Industry, Lord of the Rings

Until tomorrow, gamers who are currently rampaging through Middle-earth can get a limited glimpse of Turbine’s newest social network for those who play The Lord of the Rings Online. Currently in Beta, this preview closes tomorrow, December 12, so if you want to see what it entails you better go check it out.
Currently, this Beta is only open to North American users which is the section of the world whose servers are maintained by Turbine. Codemasters Online services the game servers in Europe, and while unfortunately there is not a preview Beta available for them, they can still check out the My LOTRO page to see what will be in store for them as well.
My LOTRO was announced back in October of this year and was promised by the end of the year, so they are cutting it pretty close. Kind of like a MySpace page, it is free for subscribers of the game, and has a searchable database of players, characters, monster characters, Kinships, and tribes. You can start your own blog (like we all need more of those), make a custom profile, and maintain a friend’s list. This will be a great way to stay in touch with friends who play but who are not on the same server as you (ahem, Shawn) and allow you to check out what sort of gear your buddies have accumulated.
What I am finding very cool about it, are the Kinship updates. When using the search engine, I was easily able to find my Kinship and while perusing through the list, I noticed that my character was already updated. It showed my latest deed accomplishment, when I leveled last, what my PvP stats are, and will eventually show off all my gear, and morale, power and armor stats along with my bio.
While all functions will be live throughout tomorrow, pages created will not be linked to your character(s) by default. So far, it is pretty fun to play around with, but if it’s even half as addicting as Facebook can be, then I am personally in serious trouble.
By Shawn on Wednesday, December 10th, 2008 at 12:16 PM
In Codemasters, Computer, Game Companies, Game Platforms, Gamer Life, Games, Lord of the Rings
The Turbine developers have put a new guide up on the Lord of the Rings Online: Mines of Moria website. This feature article is a Hero’s Guide to the Foundations of Stone.
The dev article offers an extensive look at the darkest pits of Middle-earth, offering players suggestions on what to expect and how to survive. In this the final resting place of the Bridge of Khazad-dûm, the Shadow Refuge is the last safe haven. Even the places to which heroes retreat to nurse their wounds when defeated are perilous.
Study the Hero’s Guide to the Foundations of Stone on the Lord of the Rings Online: Mines of Moria website and prepare for a truly heroic adventure.
By Shawn on Tuesday, December 9th, 2008 at 10:24 AM
In Codemasters, Computer, Game Companies, Game Platforms, Gamer Life, Games, Lord of the Rings, Midway
Lord of the Rings Online players that seem to constantly broke can get some advice on saving some silver in those awkward 20 something levels. MMORPG.com has a guide with some straight talk on making and keeping money. Some suggestions like don’t keep hiring horses at 20 silver a pop one way are common sense. There are a few suggestions that may not have occurred to you and are worth checking out.
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By Stephany on Thursday, December 4th, 2008 at 10:17 AM
In Codemasters, Computer, Games, Lord of the Rings

The Mines of Moria expansion for The Lord of the Rings online has been out for close to a month now, and the content included in the expansion just keeps getting more and more interesting. This week, Turbine has released a Hero’s Guide to the Silvertine Lodes and here is a excerpt from the post:
Deep in the belly of the great Misty Mountain peak called Celebdil by the Elves, Zirak-zigil by the Dwarves, and Silvertine by Men, one of the great quarries of Khazad-dûm lays in shadow and dust, waiting for its restoration, waiting for the echoes of pick-axes and miners’ songs to fill its empty caverns and tunnels once more. This deep place, known as the Silvertine Lodes, once glittered with ore and shone with the light of crystal lamps glinting off raw mithril. Now it gapes like a hole not just in the earth but in the image of Khazad-dûm.
Once, many long centuries ago, this hole was begun beneath the mountain to supply stone for great palaces and castles in Khazad-dûm and in far-off kingdoms beyond. But the Dwarves of Moria kept digging, beyond caution or reason, mad in their pursuit of mithril, until the Silvertine Lodes were all but exhausted. They scratched away at the dignity of the mines until little was left but a pit in the earth.
Sounds like a neat game area to me, and I have not even gotten finished with the Mirobel quests yet. There is so much to see and do in the new expansion and it seems that I am learning about another cool new area each week. This is thanks to the folks over at Turbine constantly updating the guides which are full of lore and mysterious creatures you will encounter. My only worry about all these cool new areas is that I will be a lvl 60 before I even get there because I have not finished Book 9 yet for crying out loud.
Anyway, enjoy the newest edition to the lore book, and a hearty thanks goes out to MMORPG for the heads up. Also, in case you were wondering, the screen above is my in-game character with a redhorn goat. Those things are so damn cute!
By Shawn on Monday, November 24th, 2008 at 4:27 PM
In Codemasters, Game Companies, Uncategorized
Heads up all of you Lord of the Rings Online. Turbine has sent out word that it’ll be bringing down servers for rolling restarts daily starting November 25 and running until November 30. Fortunately servers should only be down one hour in the mornings when traffic is lower. The schedules for specific servers follow the break.
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By Stephany on Friday, November 21st, 2008 at 11:55 AM
In Codemasters, Computer, Gamer Life, Lord of the Rings, Videos
Turbine has unveiled yet another new video for The Lord of the Rings Online: Mines of Moria. This new video depicts an epic raid on the Watcher, an encounter that players can experience with the new expansion.
In Mines of Moria, Volume 2: Book 1, Chapter 8, an in-game cut-scene will introduce you to the nasty tentacled kraken-type creature you may remember from the movie The Two Towers. The Watcher in the Water resides just outside of the door to Moria in a lake, and should you survive–this will not be your last encounter with the Watcher–you will need to come back with better weapons, and begin a 12-man instance (raid). Trust me, you will need all the help you can get in defeating this monstrous behemoth.
It sounds challenging just like everything is thus far in the new expansion, but no matter how hard or frustrating it gets, the rewards and enjoyment you take away from the game are sweet indeed.
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