So this is a weird one. Yes, I know an offline MMORPG is just an RPG, but I’m looking for a specific kind.

I loved FFXIV, but there was always something in the back of my mind that said “I don’t own any of this, it all goes away if I stop paying, and I could be banned tomorrow and lose everything”. I’d love to have a game that plays somewhat similar, but offline and for a single payment, please.

I know about the .hack series and those games seem pretty fun, but don’t scratch the same gathering resources/crafting items/using or selling items cycle. Also they’re apparently grindy as fuck.

Anyone have any suggestions please? Preferably PC please, but Switch and PS1/2/3 also valid suggestions. Thank you.

  • wirelesswire ( wirelesswire@lemmy.zip ) 
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    14
    ·
    2 months ago

    Most of these don’t fit “offline MMO” super closely, but are games I’ve played that share various aspects that I enjoyed in MMOs:

    Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning

    Minecraft with mods

    Hytale

    Various Bethesda games with mods

    Sword Art Online games

    V Rising

    • lath ( lath@piefed.social ) 
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      2 months ago

      V Rising has the option of setting up a local game. I made the mistake of starting a game with default settings and i couldn’t play with the internet connection gone. Had to start anew with the correct selection.

      In a similar vein are Conan Exiles and possibly Dune Awakening (haven’t it).

      What they lack is more neutral or helpful npcs. There’s some merchants and the enslaved pawns, but progression is more automatic through menus rather than quest givers.

      • definitemaybe ( definitemaybe@lemmy.ca ) 
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        3
        ·
        2 months ago

        It has MMORPG vibes, particularly with the gathering/crafting systems and little side quests, but it doesn’t have an “endless endgame” to speak of. It was my first thought, too—if OP isn’t looking for an endless endgame loop, then Amalur is a great suggestion.

        Lots of Diablo clones have endless endgame and single player, but not sure if they’d be what OP is looking for. Last Epoch is the best of them all, imho. I saw Grim Dawn recommended; it’s also great. Torchlight 2 has a WoW-like cartoony aesthetic and is pretty great. Titan Quest is the other obvious req in this genre, and there are many, many Diablo 2 mods that add new systems and end game loops. (Path of Exile 1 & 2 are both great, of course, but they’re online only.)

    • wer2 ( wer2@lemmy.zip ) 
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      2 months ago

      Did KoA change my life with its gameplay or story? No. Did I have fun playing it? Yes. Have I replayed it to try out different builds? Also yes.

      One piece of advice is, don’t worry too much about doing everything because it is easy to out level the game’s curve.

    • discoplasm ( discoplasm@piefed.zip ) 
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      3
      ·
      2 months ago

      seconding this, i use a solo azerothcore build and it’s been great. mine is scaled rather than using playerbots but i experimented with a bot one and it was pretty neat to be able to group up with them.

  • the_korben ( the_korben@feddit.org ) 
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    8
    ·
    2 months ago

    Unfortunately not on PC but the Xenoblade Chronicles games are very MMO-like, in particular Xenoblade Chronicles X which puts less emphasis on the overall story and more on exploration, sidequests, levelling, min-maxing and gameplay systems. You’ll find great worlds to explore and combat that is quite reminiscent of typical cool-down systems in MMOs. XBX does have some online components but you can play the whole game completely offline too.

  • MudMan ( MudMan@fedia.io ) 
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    ·
    2 months ago

    The Xenoblade Chronicles series and maybe FFXII.

    Xenoblade Chronicles X in particular feels like it was meant to be a MMO and then they just kinda… gave up on the multiplayer part.

  • wizardbeard ( wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com ) 
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    3
    ·
    2 months ago

    Surprised that no one has suggested the .hack (dot Hack) game series. They were PS2 era single player RPG games, set in a virtual reality MMO. So it really tries to simulate the MMO experience of that era. There’s even an entire fake computer OS you can explore with news articles, forum posts, email, etc that all contributes to the world building and sometimes unlocks stuff in the “MMO” as you learn stuff ourside of it.

    The plot is… ok. Kind of a tired one now and quite trope-y. Mostly because it came first and a ton of anime since “copied its homework”. The series is one of the first instances of the now semi-common plot of “players get stuck in VR MMO”.

    The first group of games in the series is pretty easily emulatable, and carrying your save across the games lets you keep your progress and unlocks some extra stuff in subsequent games of the first batch.

    The second batch of games in the series (widely believed to be considerably better in gameplay) got an official PC remaster with additional QoL and what amounts to a free story DLC. Probably better to start there, just know there’s some weird plot stuff with a semi-prequel anime. It was the style of the time to make these multimedia projects to try and cross market shit.

    They just announced that the series is going to get a reboot/continuation too.


    It’s also worth noting that there are some “pay once” MMOs like Guild Wars out there which have been running for a decade or more.

  • One suggestion that comes to mind is the elder scroll’s series, morrowind in particular had a good crafting system with poition brewing and stuff like that. Do not know how oblivion is holding up, becauseI never played it much, but scyrim was a lot simpler and might not fit your description.

    Another game that might scratch that itch, although in a completely different setting: the X-series. It is a giant space rpg, where you start with a small ship an can work your way up to a giant space empire (if you put in a lot of time). You can mine asteroids, trade resources, or fight pirates.

  • wraithcoop ( wraithcoop@programming.dev ) 
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    2 months ago

    I played this game with my friend called Wayfinder that was going to be an mmo but I guess at some point in development changed course. The game scratches a kind of itch that I didn’t really need but maybe 10 years ago could have been fun. Might be worth a try.

  • Wheb you say offline, do you mean literally or just not multiplayer?

    Because a ton of F2P games are basicslly that these days. Genshin Impact, Zenless Zone Zero, Arknight: Endfield, etc. They are essentially single player MMORPGs. But they DO need to be connected to the internet despite that so…