For many players, it's comforting to know that Dungeons and Dragons Online's European operations are now safe in the hands of Turbine. As part of the new global service of the game, Turbine's just announced that EU players now can enjoy German and French editions of the game in addition to English.
"We've successfully migrated players from the former European service and we are very excited to begin welcoming thousands more to DDO Unlimited," said Executive Producer Fernando Paiz. "This is going to be another outstanding year for the game as we continue to roll out new content and features for our growing legions of players. We're very excited to begin engaging directly with German and French speaking players and look forward to introducing them to a truly premium free-to-play MMORPG."
Last year, Turbine took over European operations from Codemasters, which had handled the game since launch. In addition to the German and French localizations, Europe can enjoy DDO Unlimited's popular free-to-play format, which is now fully in sync with the North American version.
Reader Comments (4)
Posted: Apr 5th 2011 2:07PM dudes said
Probably the only f2p worth bothering about right now.
Posted: Apr 6th 2011 10:12AM (Unverified) said
it's, "parlez-vous francais."
At least you didn't say le francais 8)
At least you didn't say le francais 8)
Posted: Apr 6th 2011 3:10PM MetaReal said
@ Unverified "Vous parlez français?" is correct too (I'm French). If you want to be really precise there's a space between the last word and the question mark (or any "double signs" punctuations) in French.
That said i generally prefer to play on English speaking EU servers because of the different cultures present on such servers.
That said i generally prefer to play on English speaking EU servers because of the different cultures present on such servers.
Posted: Apr 6th 2011 3:57PM Space Cobra said
Well...that took them long enough!
Really, you should bring these out at launch because many international people are just going to establish on US servers and not bother with the others.
Even new players are not interested in "restricted/language" servers, although there are games that seem to buck this exception.
I just prefer to hear/learn new languages when I can and prefer everyone to be on one server or server-types.
Really, you should bring these out at launch because many international people are just going to establish on US servers and not bother with the others.
Even new players are not interested in "restricted/language" servers, although there are games that seem to buck this exception.
I just prefer to hear/learn new languages when I can and prefer everyone to be on one server or server-types.







