Based on others' posts, the level of immersion that UO offers is one of its most attractive features for many. The ability to be walking around the game environment and have the feeling that the characters are walking around in and exploring a living, breathing world.
There are many factors contributing to that feel. One of the most important and yet under-rated contributors is the fictional backdrop. Whether you care about the fictional backdrop or not is a lot less relevant than the fact that it remain a factor in the world, and that it remain consistent. Fiction provides internal continuity to the world, provides the glue for the world, prevents things from becoming silly.
In fantasy, immersion-breaking "silliness" is always hanging just around the corner. It's just a fact. If a fantasy world is consistent with itself, however, silliness can be held off indefinitely. The spell is a lot less likely to break when things are internally consistent.
If you don't care about the game fiction, fine, you don't have to.
But you have excellent reasons for hoping that others do care, even if you don't.
Because odds are, judging by others' posts, that fiction, and its ability to remain internally consistent, is an important ingredient in aspects of the game you care about.
-Galen's player
There are many factors contributing to that feel. One of the most important and yet under-rated contributors is the fictional backdrop. Whether you care about the fictional backdrop or not is a lot less relevant than the fact that it remain a factor in the world, and that it remain consistent. Fiction provides internal continuity to the world, provides the glue for the world, prevents things from becoming silly.
In fantasy, immersion-breaking "silliness" is always hanging just around the corner. It's just a fact. If a fantasy world is consistent with itself, however, silliness can be held off indefinitely. The spell is a lot less likely to break when things are internally consistent.
If you don't care about the game fiction, fine, you don't have to.
But you have excellent reasons for hoping that others do care, even if you don't.
Because odds are, judging by others' posts, that fiction, and its ability to remain internally consistent, is an important ingredient in aspects of the game you care about.
-Galen's player