It’s Friday morning and that means that there’s a new episode of your favourite MMO podcast available. Are you ready to Ding?
On the 28th episode of Ding!, we join Calvin, Martin and friend of the family – and series regular – Trey Douglas (of Geeky.ly fame) as they talk about Project Copernicus, the game that could have been the Kingdoms of Amalur MMO from 38 Studios, which would have been the first AAA game built from the ground up to use the free-to-play model. Conversation then moved on to DayZ, with Calvin talking about whether or not the game can be considered a “game”. Finally, the talking degrades a little as the trio talk about the nude patch for Star Trek Online as it becomes the topic of discussion.
If you want to get in on the discussion, or just leave us some questions to talk about on next week’s show, then comment in the box below, and don’t forget to rate and review the podcast in iTunes!
See you next week!
You can subscribe to Ding! on iTunes and Feedburner, Stitcher or follow the show on Twitter, @DingPodcast. If you just want a simple download of the show to put onto whichever MP3 device you own, right click here and choose ‘Save as’.
Ding! is a part of the GodisaGeek Podcast Network. Every Friday there will be a new episode.
By day I play video games, test video games or just simply write about them. By night I fight crime on the streets of London as a masked vigilante known only to a select few ... damn SECRET identity. Could never get the hang of that.
I've been writing about video games for about 10 years now, and playing them for even longer, starting off with a Spectrum ZX passed down to me in about 1988. Yes, I used to play games that came on cassettes. Yes, they were AWESOME!
I've been writing for God is a Geek since October 2010 and loving every minute of it, aside from that I write for my own website and work as a video game tester for Testology. So, yeah, I'm pretty much living the life of a gamer, and I don't intend stopping anytime soon thank you very much.
Unless I run out of money, then we might have a problem.