I just feel like pointing out that which is non-existant to the public, so the reasons why CB is better than MB. Why? Because no one else will.
[*]MB had much more graphical lag than CB does. Anyone remembers the 0.1 fps tavern parties?
[*]MB had much smaller area. Only small part of Hydlaa and dungeons.
[*]People were using names that looked more like some sentences.
[*]No surnames. Many people really looked forward to those.
[*]Shout channel (which was global at the time) often consisted of french jabber that happened to annoy everyone. And there was no way of stopping it.
[*]Crystal-hunt. Hardly any newcomer could find anything, due to many hardcore players already knowing most of the spawn points and some players advancing in the cheating area. Fun only for very few.
[*]Trolling was much more visible. If some unwanted person joined the game, you\'ve seen much more vulgar words through the shout (which again, was global) than you can see now. Which brings me to:
[*]No word filter.
[*]Awful guild system. There was only one person with power - the guildleader. All the other members differed only with a fancy rank.
[*]No fighting, no magic, no skill advancing, no way of using any item.
[*]Only two quests, neither of which consisted of anything more than just talking.
[*]Client modders annoying vast number of players.
[*]Role-playing and socialising happening only because there\'s nothing else to do. Much like any chat program. It wasn\'t a result of natural role-playing purpose of the game.
[*]No /help channel, which means you\'d hear a lot of ooc questions during your role-playing session.
[*]Shout channel being global in general. Fancy a soccer discussion heard throughout whole Planeshift area?
[*]Existance of role-playing unfriendly commands. Even though \'/buddy give\' was much needed at the time, it is nothing comapared to nowaday\'s trading function. With \'/buddy give\' you could trade with anyone, from anywhere, to anywhere, and even if that person wasn\'t online.
[*]Lack of many nice functions. /screenshot, using /me in a /tell to point out a few.
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