Ultima Online



Ultima Online is a massively multiplayer online game set in the Ultima universe (to a greater or lesser extent). It was developed and published by Origin in 1997 for the IBM-PC, in a time when the Internet just started to become popular.

The game is basically a huge online Britannia, where all kinds of players live their digital lives and do whatever they want... as long as it is allowed. It is constantly developed and new versions come into the stores every year.

Ultima Online was a huge success for Origin (although by now it has calmed down somewhat), essentially giving birth to the online MMORPG.

Included with the game
With the first edition of the game came these things:


 * A cloth map of Britannia.
 * A UO Pin.

What the game is about
The basic idea is, that when the Stranger shattered Mondain's Gem of Immortality, each of the fragments of the gem hold a perfect copy of Sosaria in them. In these many Britannias, the people, the players, interact on a daily basis, live their lives and have lots of fun. It is a huge multiverse with countless Britannias, where people act in this world, fight, trade and live.

Expansions
Several expansions were released for Ultima Online, adding new features and areas to be explored.


 * Ultima Online: The Second Age
 * Ultima Online: Renaissance
 * Ultima Online: Third Dawn
 * Ultima Online: Lord Blackthorn's Revenge
 * Ultima Online: Age of Shadows
 * Ultima Online: Samurai Empire
 * Ultima Online: Mondain's Legacy
 * Ultima Online: Kingdom Reborn (expected 2007)
 * Ultima Online: Stygian Abyss (expected 2007)

Other releases
Ultima Online has had several special releases which were not expansions, but came with boxed or in-game extras.


 * Ultima Online: Charter Edition (September 30, 1997) was available to pre-order from Origin Systems at the launch of Ultima Online and in small quantities alongside the standard retail box. It included a signed lithograph of the Ultima Online artwork by the Hilderbrandt brothers, a pewter pin badge bearing the Ultima Online logo and the box was signed by Richard Garriott. The Charter Edition also included the cloth map which was also a feature of the standard box.
 * Ultima Online: 7th Anniversary (September 25, 2004) was a special release of the game to celebrate Ultima Online's seventh birthday. Like all of the items listed in this section, this release did not bring anything new to the game and is not an expansion, although it did include a more recently patched CD; the Age of Shadows was still the most current version at the time. This release was contained in a small cardboard box containing a triple-CD jewel case, featuring Ultima Online: Age of Shadows, but also included Ultima IX: Ascension install and play discs as a special bonus. A glossy booklet showing the history of Ultima Online expansions was included which contained historic art and an interview from the Ultima Online team and community leaders. Also included in the package a code for an in-game gift, one of which was Ultima Online's famous Hilderbrant print, an extra character slot (a total of six characters was now available) and 7 buddy registration codes.
 * Ultima Online: Gold (July 18, 2005) was a special release sold by Wal-Mart and includes the same content as Ultima Online: Samurai Empire. This edition also comes with an Advanced Character token code, and quick-start manual.
 * Ultima Online: The Eighth Age (September 25, 2005) was a boxed game CD with an array of in-game tokens. Though not bringing any new features, the release was to celebrate Ultima Online's eighth birthday. The box included a updated game CD (with more recent patches), a glossy booklet feauring an atlas of Sosaria, in-game tokens for an anniversary gift (choice of 8), a character transfer, an advanced character and a 45-day free trial code. Also a time-limited blue soulstone was included.
 * Ultima Online: 9th Anniversary Collection (October 31, 2006). Formerly known as "Eve of a New Age."

Shard emulation
Fans of Ultima Online have reverse-engineered the game to produce server emulators of the original Electronic Arts servers. With the modern emulation server software available today, it is possible to customize most aspects of the game and support large numbers of concurrent players on a single server. The most beloved player-run shard was In Por Ylem. It was created by the website wtfman and gained popularity extremely fast. The gameplay was almost identical to the gameplay found during the T2A period of Ultima Online. The only big difference was that there were no in-game mounts, in order to reduce lag. After some miscalculations, the shard was closed. Today, the most populated player-run server is UO Gamers: Hybrid. The average user population is around 1000 clients. The server takes UO's most appreciated features and uses them here, the shard is predominantly Renaissance-era based, minus Trammel.

Several Tools exist to connect to these freeshards. The most notable are:
 * ConnectUO
 * Razor
 * UOGateway

Known UO shard(server) emulators are:
 * RunUO
 * POL
 * Sphereserver
 * Wolfpack

Trivia

 * There was an hilarious scene during the Beta-test. A character called "Rainz" used a stolen firewall-scroll while Lord British gave an audience. Richard Garriott, who had forgotten to activate his "Lord British-invincibility" must have looked quite shocked, when his alter ego dropped dead on the spot. (See picture)
 * Additional UO releases have included what could be considered many non-canon worlds and items into the Ultima universe, including a Samurai-based world.
 * Lord British's throne is the top half of the Ultima Online logo.
 * On rare occasions, casting the spell energy vortex will summon a purple llama instead of the cloud-like creature the spell is meant to summon. The purple llama is labeled in-game as "an energy vortex" and has the same powers as the creature the spell is named for.
 * A monster called a slime existed in-game which is a small slithering blob. Some years ago on rare occasions, it was possible to encounter a slime that was renamed a "jwilson," which was purportedly named after magazine editor Johnny Wilson, who had given Ultima Online a bad review and thus earned a derisive place in the game by the developers. "Jwilsons" can still be seen today.
 * Cows may be tipped by clicking on them numerous times.
 * On some occasions, cows would be named "corey johns" and would turn into a blade spirit when clicked on multiple times.