There's also the inclusion of this Solomon Store, OSRS gold the house of micro-transactions in the game. It's possible to spend in-game bonds that are earned through playing the game or use actual cash to purchase items. I am not a fan of this at all, particularly given that this is a paid subscription match for many. (It's free-to-play, but you'll need to fork out to get a subscription to get premium regions of the sport and is completely worth it.)
Considering that which Runescape was, this is incredible development.If that was not sufficient, Jagex additionally implemented a completely different combat system, eliminated the wilderness (WHYYYY!?) I loved how you could actually utilize non-combat skills more frequently in the world to create some of these marginally more useful.
Oddly enough, it seems more like a MMORPG now than previously, even though there are some things I don't enjoy about the fluctuations. Everything type of felt exactly the same, but it was such a departure from the game which I ceased playing back in 2006.
I really like the changes but it is not the game I ever loved. It just didn't supply that much-wanted nostalgia buzz I'd hoped for. This was until I spotted Old School Runescape as part of the subscription membership.
Downloading the committed client for Old School Runescape (I had been shocked to learn you're also required to download software to play this iteration of buy Runescape gold), made my jaw drop. Old School Runescape came about when Jagex asked the community when the programmer should launch a backup copy of the game from 2007 and put it on a different development branch. I am so thankful the community agreed, since this is exactly what I was cravings.