While customiseable titles in Black Ops are seeing some creative designs the reward system is surely inferior when it comes to titles and emblems. This has been greatly diminished in Black Ops thanks to fixed rank-related emblems which are too small to see properly. Much as people may roll their eyes at having emblems and titles given out as a reward system, in MW2 they were big, brash and always exciting to unlock - like genuine medals. This is can be refreshing when you're up against players that never fire a bullet. You also now get servers which ban launcher spam (aka n00b tubing) and some other equipment. And admins often now kick players for being unruly. While there are calls of hax on Black Ops, it's not nearly so bad. The anonymity and lack of sanction meant people cut loose all the time. If anyone ever muttered a word, I muted them as it was 99% disgusting. The lack of admin also meant that swearing and abuse became vile. With 99% of hacking accusations proving bogus, it's little wonder that hacker's were punished at all. It got to the point where, if you actually did come across a flagrant hacker (and we're talking about flagrant walling and aim bot in kill cams) you couldn't do anything about it except send a complaint to Steam. This (and the lag) amplified the accusations of 'Hax' which appeared constantly throughout any match. If you disconnected and reconnected IWNet would often dump you back into the same place. You could be waiting many matches for this. If you had been waiting ages to get into a game, only to find you were playing with a flagrant hacker, you'd be stuck with them until they went away. Hax and abuse hugely diminished on Black OpsĪ major, unforseen, downside to IWNet was that the lack of server admin meant that players could never be kicked. Crashes are ironing themselves out, but they still happen too frequently for our liking. You can jump straight into games, and, despite regular calls of lag, it's not nearly as bad as MW2. The return to dedicated servers, where you can easily pick your favourite map, game type and see what your ping is, has caused rejoicing among CoD players. Casual shooters are regularly stuck with interminable IWNet searching and massive pings. Only the Hard Core 'pro' players seem to get regular games nowadays. Now that Black Ops is here and MW2 players have migrated over, it's near impossible to get any game on MW2 at all. After a while you might only play Derail (snowy sniper map) or Rust (tiny spam fest) once every 100 games. And some maps were on much higher rotation than others. Wanted to play on a specific map? Forget it, you got what you were given. There simply weren't enough people to pick from for lesser variants like Search & Destroy and HQ Pro and you couldn't see if anyone else was trying to get a match. Not content with routinely picking hosts that were rubbish and suffering wild ping issues (making it, on occasion, potentially the laggy-est shooter ever), if you lived in Australia, you simply couldn't play many of the game types. ![]() Well, as if we needed telling, Black Ops' return to dedicated servers has highlighted just what a steaming pile of turd IWNet really is. It did this to alleviate lag, simplify match-making and improve stability. You had no choice in the matter, you chose a game type and IWNet would (attempt) to find one for you and set everything up. MW2's IWNet vs Black Ops' dedicated serversĭevelopers, Infinity Ward, introduced us to a peer-to-peer online match-making system called IWNet where one person was made host and other players would connect automatically to their PC. So what's it been like to live with and what are the real differences between the two (three, if we include the occasional Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare ( CoD 4) mention) now that things have started settling down? I've racked up about 40 hours online (PC version) after racking up over 300 hours in its predecessor, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 (MW2). Note too that this deals mainly with the PC version.Ĭall of Duty: Black Ops has been out for just over a month now. Otherwise, I'd be fascinated to see if you agree. This is a bit of a monster post, and if you've no interest in Call of Duty - look away now.
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