Fantasy Online
It’s not the first Virtual Reality game and is far from my favorite, but it’s new and unknown, and that’s my job. I play games and write articles and reviews about how good they are. My specialty: Virtual Reality.
I should probably introduce myself. My name is Felix Carlson. I’m 5’8” tall, with short, dark hair and not ‘fat’ per say. Maybe a bit chubby. Definitely not fat (IT CAN’T BE HELPED I HAVE A BIT OF WEIGHT WHEN I SPEND AT LEAST 12 HOURS A DAY IN A VR). Ahem. I am 23, single, and livin’ the dream in a crappy apartment... and i mean that literally. I spend most of my time living in the digital dreams known as Virtual Reality. Either sleeping on my bed with an overly complicated helmet over my face or in the huge capsule that takes up half the room. Whichever convoluted device the developer decided to build the dream in, I would spend many hours inside, even days if they were really good.
Enough about me, back to the game.
Stolen from Royal Road, this story should be reported if encountered on Amazon.
Fantasy Online was marketed as a standard swords and magic RPG with a twist. Advanced AI’s that would make the player feel like they were talking to real people. Until now all of the AI’s could only act within a rigid script unless the creators were really dedicated and made many different dialogue options.
Unfortunately, according to my beta tester friend, James, the whole thing is a scam. The AI’s are only a little better than normal and the quality of nearly everything else suffers for it.
If i wasn’t getting paid to play up it all the way to level 35, i wouldn’t even allow it to be installed in my capsule. That and the hope that things will have improved significantly since the Beta.
Well, the sooner i start this the sooner i can get over with this. after taking care of all my bodies needs, I lay down in the capsule and say
“Log In”