Tags / MMORPG

"MMORPG"

17 BuzzVerdicts across PC Games (2), Books (5), Mobile Games (10)

Final Fantasy XIV

4.3

2013 · MMORPG · PC / Steam

Final Fantasy XIV is the MMORPG that earned its reputation the hard way, rising from a disastrous 1.0 launch to become one of the most celebrated online games ever made. The story through Shadowbringers and Endwalker represents some of the best narrative work in the Final Fantasy franchise. Dungeon and trial design is excellent, the community is welcoming, and the free trial gives you hundreds of hours before asking for a subscription. The Dawntrail expansion landed with a thud for many players, and the game sits in an uncertain transitional moment. But the core of what makes it special, the story, the fights, and the world, remains intact and still worth experiencing.

Life Reset

4.2

2017 · Shemer Kuznits · 717 pages · LitRPG

Life Reset stands as one of the best settlement-building LitRPGs available, with a protagonist whose forced transformation into a goblin creates deeply compelling survival fiction. The writing is clean, the characters feel real, and the progression from desperate scavenger to community leader provides exactly the kind of satisfying arc that the genre promises. Length may test patience in spots, but the payoff justifies the investment. If base-building scratches your particular itch, this is essential reading.

Guild Wars 2

4.0

2012 · MMORPG · PC

Guild Wars 2 built its reputation by challenging MMORPG conventions, and over a decade later, those foundational decisions still pay off. The buy-to-play model respects your wallet, the horizontal endgame respects your time, and the combat keeps you moving instead of standing in place watching skill bars. Six expansions deep, there's an enormous amount of content here. It won't satisfy players looking for a traditional endgame gear treadmill or polished competitive PvP, but for everyone else, it remains one of the most accessible and rewarding MMOs available.

The Way of the Shaman

3.8

2012 · Vasily Mahanenko · 428 pages · LitRPG

The Way of the Shaman is one of the books that helped define LitRPG as a genre, and its strengths remain clear even as the field has grown around it. The prison-based premise gives the game world actual stakes, the shaman class offers a refreshing departure from standard warrior fantasies, and the progression is satisfying in the way that all good LitRPG should be. Translation roughness and a confined setting limit the first book's range, but readers who click with the premise will find a series that rewards investment.

Toram Online

3.5

2015 · MMORPG

Toram Online delivers one of the deepest character customization systems on mobile and wraps it in a striking anime world. The classless build freedom and cooperative boss fights create something rare for the platform. But the grind eventually dominates everything, the economy is riddled with scam attempts, and new players face a steep climb before the game shows its best side. It rewards patience and friendships more than anything else.

RuneScape (Mobile)

3.5

2018 · MMORPG

RuneScape on mobile is a genuine technical achievement, delivering a full-scale MMO with cross-platform progression to your phone. The depth of content is staggering, with thousands of hours of questing, skilling, and bossing available in a single app. Aggressive monetization and rising subscription costs cast a long shadow over the experience, and the mobile interface struggles with the complexity of a game designed for mouse and keyboard. Players who already love RuneScape will appreciate having it in their pocket, and newcomers with patience for a learning curve will find one of the deepest MMOs ever made, but the cost of entry keeps climbing in ways that frustrate even devoted fans.

Eden's Gate: The Reborn

3.5

2017 · Edward Brody · 460 pages · LitRPG

Eden's Gate: The Reborn is an accessible, fast-paced LitRPG that captures the feel of being dropped into a living MMORPG and having to figure things out. The NPC interactions and world-building carry the book past its rougher edges, and there's a genuine enthusiasm for gaming culture that comes through on every page. The writing has technical stumbles, the protagonist's competence wobbles at inconvenient moments, and the status screens pile up, but readers who enjoy the trapped-in-a-game premise will find this a solid entry point to the subgenre.

Albion Online (Mobile)

3.5

2021 · Sandbox MMORPG

Albion Online on mobile puts a full sandbox MMORPG in your pocket with the same servers, economy, and full-loot PvP as the PC version. The player-driven economy and classless gear system create something impressively ambitious for mobile. But touch controls put you at a real disadvantage in PvP, the grind is substantial, and the game assumes you already know what you're doing. It's best treated as a companion to the PC experience rather than a standalone mobile game.

Reality Benders

3.5

2018 · Michael Atamanov · 460 pages · LitRPG

Reality Benders delivers an addictive blend of LitRPG mechanics and space opera that hits hardest in its early volumes. The concept of a game that turns out to be real galactic warfare is brilliantly clever, and the mix of politics, exploration, and combat gives readers plenty to chew on. Later books struggle with an overpowered protagonist and narrative drift, and the series conclusion left many fans disappointed. But the opening stretch, particularly the first three books, offers some of the most inventive sci-fi LitRPG available.

Old School RuneScape

3.5

2018 · MMORPG

Old School RuneScape on mobile is one of the most faithful MMO ports ever released, giving players the full desktop experience on their phone with cross-platform progression that actually works. The community-driven development model keeps the game evolving in directions players actively choose, and the sandbox freedom is hard to match. But the grind is legendary for a reason, the small screen creates real usability problems, and the free-to-play restrictions make the free version feel more like an extended demo than a complete game. For existing players, the mobile version is a revelation. For newcomers, it's a hard sell without a strong tolerance for old-school design.

MapleStory M

3.0

2018 · MMORPG

MapleStory M delivers the visual charm and nostalgic appeal of the original MapleStory in a mobile package that's easy to pick up and hard to put down in the early hours. The pixel art holds up, the class variety is solid, and regular content updates keep the event calendar busy. The pay-to-win structure becomes impossible to ignore as you progress, with free players hitting walls that paying players vault over effortlessly. Auto-battle convenience comes at the cost of engagement, and endgame content thins out for anyone not spending real money. It's a competent nostalgia trip that eventually asks you to open your wallet more than your imagination.