Quote Originally Posted by Xanikk999 View Post
What do you mean? There isn't a single craft that doesn't required materials made by other professions. With leatherworking many recipes require weaving. Many weaving recipes also require leatherworking still contrary to what you are saying. Maybe you could elaborate?
Probably a reference to the FFXI crafting system. You not only required the right ingredients, but you would also require levels in another craft to successfully make the item. Having no, or reduced, levels in a particular craft exponentially raised the chance of it breaking and making you lose every material used in the synthesis.

While all this 1.0 nostalgia is great, let's not forget how much of a buggy, slow game it was. Lands were only sparsely populated with enemies, despite their size and copy-paste. The interface was a hodgepodge which needed server confirmation for literally everything, making it slow to use. Physical levels were as baffling as they were superfluous.

There are a lot of things that 2.0 did away with which needed to stay, however. Limitations on teleporting meant people would actually go out into the wilderness to get from place to place. Elemental weakness and resistance meant that there was actually a purpose to having them in the game (seriously, no one cares about elements in 2.0, like ever), and led to some more tactical combat at times. Having genuinely tough monsters in the field, gave it a sense of danger and meant players would band together to fight them.

This game gained a lot when it transitioned to 2.0, but it also lost a bit. It's a shame they threw out the baby with the bath water though, and ditched Final Fantasy staple elements in favour of muddying the waters with flavours of other 'successful' MMO's. Never were these elements so keenly missed on my part than recently, when it was revealed we'd be seeing the same update pattern for the next ten years.

Still, the fatigue system sucked. I think most sane, rational thinking people will at least agree on that much, and I don't lament its passing.