

Assuming you have a PC that meets the game’s system specs ( have a look here to see how your machine stacks up), all you need do is download the game client, sign up for a gratis account and you’re on your way. If all of this has piqued your interest about TERA joining the game is exceedingly easy. A 100-plus percent population increase over the course of a single month would have caught any publisher by surprise, but we’ve yet to hear of massive outages, so propers to Gameforge for weathering this happy storm with aplomb while bigger publishers like EA draw fire for their inability to keep SimCity’s servers online.

According to the publisher, it’s likely that the game will require further expansion in the near future, but Gameforge seems unsure of how quickly and in what numbers it will need to bring new TERA servers online. Granted, this only brings the total playerbase for TERA to a little over a million people, but that’s still an impressive leap no matter how you do the math.Īs an immediate result of the game’s newfound popularity, Gameforge was forced to immediately expand TERA’s server capacity with an additional six servers opening up mere days after the free-to-play switch went into effect. In an announcement issued this morning in its native Deutsche, Gameforge revealed that the number of players enjoying TERA has more than doubled in the month since the free-to-play scheme went into effect. How’s the game doing under its new subscription model? Words like “phenomenally well” spring to mind. That change went into effect in February.


On January 9 we brought you word that TERA, a relatively little-known MMORPG published by Germany’s Gameforge AG, would be switching to a free-to-play subscription model. People love free stuff, and for proof of that you need look no further than the current subscription rates for newly free-to-play MMO TERA.
