I see what you mean, for me personally, the appeal of Star Trek Online is the ability to create your dream Star Trek crew and ship, and the overall stories are entertaining if not outright fantastic additions to the franchise, the Roman player arc as you mentioned in particular is absolutely great, and the episodes that came with the Dominion Expansion was fantastic.Asvarduil wrote: ↑Sun Nov 15, 2020 10:07 pmFirst - we're all dorks. We're posting about the finer details of Star Trek, and fretting over the details. You're in good company.Link8909 wrote: ↑Sun Nov 15, 2020 8:01 pmAnd on a side note, the 26th century had the Battle of Procyon V, where the Federation and Xindi (with the USS Enterprise-J) defeat the invasion of the Sphere-Builders, and force them back into their own trans-dimensional realm, and in Star Trek Online (while being beta-material) had the Terran Empire (lead by Empress Leeta (yes that Leeta, it's time-travel shenanigans)) allied with the Sphere-Builders.
Also on a side note, I'm a dork.
I've played STO also. I personally think the Romulan intro quest line is friggin' amazing, and the open world of New Romulus/Dewa III was pretty neat too. The Discovery missions had an awful framing device, but the content itself was pretty decent!
Unfortunately, STO is ran by Perfect World Entertainment, and as a result over the years has devolved into merely being a way to separate nerds from their money. The Dominion "expansion" was an embarassment, in particular. The fact that the paid T6 starships are objectively better than everything else helped kill PvP, the economy is outright broken...
In my opinion, of all the MMOs I've played, the brutal truth is that STO has taken the dubious honor of being "the worst 'AAA' MMO on the market." It has so many great and wonderful points, but they're all corrupted by free-to-play BS...exactly as some early members of the community predicted as soon as PWE took over the game.
I also think the crate system is particularly abusive - the game peppers you with crates, which you can open...if only you're willing to throw down some real money. There's no public odds of what you'll win, so it's literally gambling. If I wanted to play slots, I'd go to Vegas, not play a Star Trek game.
However it's hard to argue that the crate and key system isn't gambling, because it is, but its also the big reason that keeps the game afloat and all the good stuff that comes with it, so I see why people wouldn't want to support this business practise, yet others would, personally most of the items from these crates haven't interested me so I've had no reason to spend money on them, plus because of my Lifetime Subscription I've had from when the game launched (with the 500 Zen Coins a month) and the daily grind missions and the large dilithium payout, I've made over £70 in in-game money over the last six or so months.
And going back to Star Trek Discovery, I'd imagine like with the season one starships, well be seeing the new 32nd century Starfleet ships making their way over to Star Trek Online as well.