Aion from a WoW player’s POV

Surprise! Bet you forgot you had me in your feed reader, amirite?? Well, you know I can’t hide from you for very long. It burrrrns!!

I received Aion for my birthday from my most wonderful husband and I’ve been playing it instead of WoW since it launched. (Well, technically, since the day AFTER it launched because the servers were foccacta on launch day. Must have borrowed Blizzard’s IT folks or somethin’. HA!) So, for all my WoW buddies, I decided I’d give you an overview of the game for the next several posts. [Note: click any picture for a super-large version of it with tasty detail!]

Aion exit screen

Summary impression of Aion

Holy cow am I having a ton of fun playing this game! It’s absolutely gorgeous. It’s also a stunning new world with new kinds of creatures that don’t rely on fantasy clichés (no elfs or goblins). The gameplay is fun and exploring is entrancing. If it falls short so far – and I’ve only played to a max level of 13 – it’s in the areas of story and tutorials. But even those shortcomings are not overly bothersome and later I’ll explain why. I have not played any PvP, since I’m still in the starter zones. Once I get there, I’ll let you know if my opinion changes.

Starting an Aion character

The game is pronounced “eye-on,” not “ay-on.” It loads from the main NCSoft launcher, which can also launch Guild Wars, CoH/V, or any other NCSoft online games. Here we get to the biggest beef I have with the game: after you click “Aion” on the launcher, it takes about 5 minutes to load. That sounds like an exaggeration, but it’s not. I click it and then go load up the laundry or scoop the litter box and when I come back it’s usually STILL loading. It takes a crazy long time.

Aion server selection screen

Then you get to the server selection screen. No, your eyes do not deceive you: that’s the ENTIRE list of servers available. Worldwide. When it says “High” population, they are NOT kidding around. I definitely recommend getting on one of the new servers because lag is a definite factor in the starting zones.

Aion factions

Then you choose your faction. I’ve pasted together the screenies above so you can compare the two worlds, but normally you only see one world at a time. That’s because you can only have one faction on each server, just like on a WoW PvP server (in Aion, all servers are PvP). I also added the green labels to the pictures so you know which is which.

Now let me explain what you’re looking at. The lore says that Aion was a god (or energy beam or whatever) that existed like a pole through the axis of the world and protected it. Then, a horrible event occurred called – wait for it – the CATACLYSM (no joke!) and it split the world in half. Imagine breaking an egg in half and holding one half above the other so there’s a space in the middle but it still forms an egg shape. That’s Aion’s world: still rotating, but ripped in half. (Why the god Aion couldn’t stop the cataclysm or even still exists is unknown to me as yet.) The bottom hemisphere is known as Elysia; the top is Asmodae (AZZ-mo-day). Since the planet rotates skewed on its axis, even more so than Earth, the light from the sun comes in at an angle and is only able to light the bottom half, Elysia, leaving Asmodae in permanent darkness.

That’s not as bad as it sounds. Asmodae in practice is actually quite light for game play purposes. (It’s not like Bioshock or the caves of Oblivion or anything.) You’d probably never know it was the “dark” half of the world if they didn’t tell you that. Think of it as Netherstorm. On the other hand, Elysia is very bright-eyed and bushy-tailed during the day, along the order of Elwyn Forest.

Classes

Aion class selection screen

You have only 1 of 4 classes to choose from at first: Warrior, Scout, Mage, and Priest. The selection screen is cool because it shows you what the class looks like in max level-capped gear, so you know just how awesome you will look. (You look pretty cool at lower levels too, actually.)

Those classes do exactly what you think they do from their names. At level 10, each class breaks into 2 subclasses and you can only choose one.

Subclass 1 Subclass 2
Warrior Templar Gladiator
Mage Sorcerer Spiritmaster
Scout Assassin Ranger
Priest Cleric Chanter

There is only one main healing class in the game (Cleric) and there is only one tanking class (Templar). There are no hybrids (Chanter is the possible exception). Only one class has pets (Spiritmaster) and they are more like ghouls/minions than hunter pets. Here are your WoW equivalents:

Aion Subclass WoW Equivalent
Templar Warrior Tank
Gladiator DPS Warrior
Sorcerer Mage
Spiritmaster Warlock (without the evil)
Assassin Rogue
Ranger Hunter (without a pet)
Cleric Priest
Chanter Disc Priest / Enh Shaman

Customization

Now you can go completely nuts. Customization is way beyond anything you can do in WoW. There are literally so many options that I don’t think there could possibly be two characters exactly alike in Aion. Lemme show you…

Aion character customization

Above is your basic screen. (Note that the “Basic” tab on the right side is selected.) There are about 50 hairstyles per gender. You can see the color combinations.

And now I’m gonna blow your mind…

customization2

If you click the “Advanced” tab, you get sliders to monkey with every single aspect of your appearance. EVERYTHING. You even get to choose the type of voice your character has!

Keep in mind that those screenshots are ONLY of the appearance choices. I didn’t even show you the character size options. You can be as huge as a Tauren (and fat or skinny) or tinier than the smallest Gnome you’ve ever seen. You can even make your head large or small, regardless of body size.

More in this series!

In the next post, I’ll talk about entering the world, the graphics, and the gameplay, including the UI, combat, flight (you can fly at level 10!), and other goodies. With screencasts! ZOMG!

7 Responses to “Aion from a WoW player’s POV”

  1. Call me another convert…I am having a ton of fun playing my templar. I may never go back.

    Another observation though- and maybe you will get to this in your next article- but the (lack of) GM support in Aion really makes you appreciate just how much Blizzard actually DOES put into this aspect of their game, even when it felt like they were doing nothing. General chat in WoW never reached the point of being completely unuseable due to goldspam, for instance.

    Also, if you haven’t discovered it yet, you can change channels to escape a crowded starter area. This is like phasing in WoW- if your channel is too crowded, you can move to another instance of the same zone, essentially.

  2. Wow, thanks Lilivati, I didn’t know that. )Now I just have to figure out how to change channels!) Agreed also about the support. I’m going to get to that later, but it should be on my list of things that fall short on this game.

    Another thing I forgot to mention for WoW players is that the classes are not faction-specific. You can be any class on either faction.

  3. I played a bit in the “beta” (It was already live in Korea, afaik), and was also impressed by the graphics. Unfortunately it became a grind some where around the 20s. I really dislike not having quests in order to level. It got to the point of grind out a level, have 3 quests that opened up that give 10-15% of the next level, then grind again.

    But that was just my experience. Perhaps more quests were added since then, but for now I’m going to be sticking with WoW. Hope you have fun. :)

  4. @Crofe: I would hate grinding instead of questing also. I’ll definitely post about that if it happens in the live version.

  5. [...] my previous post I told you about character creation in Aion and today I’ll continue describing my experiences with the Aion UI in terms of how  it compares [...]

  6. [...] is interesting learning about Aion, but I’m not sure about when I’ll go back to playing that either. It’s also very [...]

  7. Enjoyed reading this post, thanks.

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