it was the only one of the series I managed to beat without ever having to resort to a walkthrough.
How did you manage to figure out the puzzles in the last age? I've only recently managed to find out where to look for the symbols I needed to input, and how to look for them.
I remembered the phrases from the book, and I was able to pick out the symbols I needed. Sometimes it seemed to be more order-dependent than others, but everything eventually went through.
BTW, what's the deal with Uru? I know there's an online game (Uru Live), but I've also heard of something called "Uru: Ages Beyond Myst" and it's expansions. Is it integrated into the online game, or is it something else entirely?
To make a (very) long story (rather) short, "Uru: Ages Beyond Myst" was Cyan's original retail release of Uru, which shipped without the multiplayer portion being completed. Cyan had a closed beta of the online game called Prologue running, but Ubisoft (the game's publisher) apparently wasn't happy with the numbers/results, and so they pulled the plug on the online portion, leaving it just a singleplayer game. Cyan later released a few expansion packs for Uru, containing content that was originally meant to be part of the online game, as well as a means for fans to run their own private servers. Sometime down the road, the gaming service GameTap worked with Cyan to get Uru Live up and running again; that partnership lasted for about a year, with some new content added, until it eventually shut down too. About a year ago, Cyan started hosting Uru Live for free themselves, relying on donations to keep the servers running, and it's been that way ever since.
Snip1: weaker but was it still a decent play or plot?
It was still definitely worth a play, at least in my opinion. A few of the puzzles seemed a bit more obscured than in earlier games, but there was still a lot of enjoyment to be had. It was definitely the peak in integrating the live-action sequences into the gameplay.
Snip2: own animal as in kind of re visioned? took its own direction? but, was it a good animal or horrible with rabies?
Myst V sort of ties into the history of Uru that I briefly described above. At the time, Cyan envisioned Myst V as something of a swan song for the series; this was before Uru Live's revival with GameTap. As a result, most of the content in Myst V is comprised of ages that at one point were intended for Uru Live; Cyan pieced a new storyline together for them and released them as their own stand-alone game. (Unfortunately, this wound up hurting Uru Live during its GameTap days, since it meant that Cyan's pipeline of backlogged content was mostly emptied.) As Dragon noted, Myst V is much more of a "sequel" to the singleplayer portion of Uru than anything else...if you haven't played Uru, most of what happens in it wouldn't make sense. In terms of mechanics, it's the only game in the series besides Real Myst that allows for full motion, and it uses a "drawing" mechanic to solve many of its puzzles.
Snip3: in the Wikipedia artical it stated that that MMO was started and canceled, released and canned, time and time again. A valid release is really up?
Yep, as I noted above, Cyan's currently hosting the game for free themselves. You can head
here to create an account and download the game.