RuneScape is a lot weirder than I remembered

A RuneScape promotional image.
(Image credit: Jagex)

RuneScape launched as a browser game in 2001, and changed so much over time that a version called Old School RuneScape was released in 2013 for players who prefer the MMO's earlier years. For everyone else, the modern version is just called RuneScape, and was recently added to Steam. I've always had the sense that RuneScape is a bit esoteric, but I didn't realize just how weird the free-to-play MMO is until I gave it a try this week. Visiting RuneScape is like entering a PC gaming pocket dimension that split off from our own years ago.

I type in Burrp Bram and the name is accepted. I am now Burrp Bram.

Like any other MMO, RuneScape begins with character creation, and I design a bearded man with a bald-on-top monk cut. I have no name in mind for him, so I opt to let RuneScape generate a random one. I'm expecting it to hit me with something fantasy-ish, like Illhard Earling or Haglbar or Revvyn. It suggests Deathlum1934. I hit the randomize button again. 59Bork2396. Again. Dingo2429. 44slender392. 40rulecolor.

Clearly, randomized names are not RuneScape's strength. No problem: I type in the name of German author WG Sebald. It tells me that someone has already taken the name WG Sebald. Who could possibly be running around RuneScape as WG Sebald? I don't know, but the game's been around for nearly 20 years now, so I should've figured that no niche would be untouched. I type in Burrp Bram and the name is accepted. I am now Burrp Bram.

(Image credit: Jagex)

In the tutorial area, I learn there's a skill called Prayer and that burying the bones of my slaughtered enemies will increase my Prayer skill. Later, those enemies include innocent tutorial bunnies that I stab to death with a dagger and make sandwiches out of, innocent tutorial cows that I pierce with arrows while they helplessly stand in a pen, trolls who live in caves directly beneath the town, gelatinous abominations, and some skeletons, who were presumably buried at one time, and now need to be reburied. I bury all their bones, even the bones of the gelatinous abominations, which somehow have bones. I level up my Prayer skill in the process, although I don't bother to learn what Prayer actually does.

Two deaths

RuneScape through time

January 2001: RuneScape launches.
December 2003: The RuneScape 2 beta begins.
March 2004: RuneScape 2 becomes RuneScape. The old version becomes RuneScape Classic.
February 2013: Old School RuneScape launches, bringing back a version of the game from 2007.
April 2013: The RuneScape 3 beta goes live.
July 2013: RuneScape 3 becomes RuneScape.
April 2016: A new game client is released.
August 2018: RuneScape Classic is closed. Jagex briefly delays the server shutdown to let one player finish the climactic Legends' Quest.
October 2020: RuneScape releases on Steam.
Early 2021: The Steam release window for Old School RuneScape.

When EverQuest launched, my favorite thing to do was explore the world with low-level characters, danger be damned. It was about the adventure, not the grinding, and I'm happy to discover that RuneScape offers the same freedom. I quickly brush aside my tutorial work, despite barely understanding the arcane, semi-automated combat system and spell rune economy (in those respects, RuneScape feels very much like a game that's been under construction for 20 years), and just start walking. 

Almost immediately, I run into Death himself, literally a floating skeleton. He turns out to be a nice guy, though—clearly hanging out as part of a Halloween event—and he informs me that at the beginning of every hour there's a chance it'll become a "spooky hour," which increases XP earned. I think that could be true of life, too. Maybe you're in a spooky hour right now. 

Death also gives me my first real quest, handing me a crystal that he says will guide me to lost souls that need to be defragmented. That's the word he uses: "defragment." Like they're hard drives. I think that souls really ought to be stored on SSDs these days, but I set that thought aside and run off to the Barbarian Village to the north to defragment my first soul. I'm worried the identical blonde barbarians will attack me, but they just mull around with spears while I chase down a glowing soul dot and click on it to heal it. As I do, my mind is "flooded with images of axes, blood, and fists." And then, when I've nearly finished defragmenting the soul, my mind is "filled with pictures of a burial, fires and a trial." This is a game for kids, I guess.

(Image credit: Jagex)

After saving the soul—but not through Prayer, interestingly—I decide to move on from Death's task (clicking on a glowing dot is not all that fun, actually) and go further north. I arrive at the ruins of a wall, and when I try to cross it, RuneScape warns me that I'm entering the Wilderness, where other players can attack me. I have nothing to lose, so I hop on over. I admire a river of lava, and then run further north and get killed by ranged attacks from a beast I hardly get a look at. I nearly survive by devouring all of my rabbit sandwiches as I run away, but not quite.

Yeti trouble

From here on, I feel like I'm undergoing some kind of psychological evaluation.

After I respawn, I figure I'm wasting my time and I ought to just go back to the first town and play the game properly, focusing on leveling. But the big unexplored map calls to me, so I start traveling east and eventually I do discover something: A little girl sitting outside of a portal. When I talk to her, she bolts through the magic gateway. I follow.

The ground on the other side of the portal is covered with untouched snow. A forest of evergreens goes on forever. Violet, the kid, starts rolling Indiana Jones-style balls of snow down a hill at me. I have to run up the slope while avoiding the enormous snowballs, which is difficult because movement is done by clicking on a destination, and my character likes to complete movement one axis at a time rather than taking diagonal paths. After several attempts, I make it to the top and Violet runs away. I'm curious, now. I'd assumed that only high-level players could survive a mysterious portal adventure, so I'd expected to die near instantly at the hands of a yeti or some other monster.

(Image credit: Jagex)

I click on the firefly to catch it in my hands, and then I give it to Violet. She immediately eats it.

It turns out there are two yetis in the snow world, but they don't want to kill me. Not at all: A few minutes later, I'm standing in their house talking with them about what's best for their adopted human daughter, who's now in her room sulking about a yeti festival she's not allowed to attend. Violet's parents are worried the other yeti kids at the festival will make fun of her because she's a human. For some reason, yeti dad will only let her attend if I go with them. Of course I agree. From here on, I feel like I'm undergoing some kind of psychological evaluation.

Our first obstacle is a dark stretch of trees that Violet refuses to traverse due to the possibility it contains monsters. We can't move forward until I find a way to create some light for her. I shake a bush and a firefly emerges. I click on the firefly to catch it in my hands, and then I give it to Violet. She immediately eats it.

According to Violet, fireflies taste like "popping candy" and provide a "warm feeling" in her tummy, and I'm told that any further fireflies I hand to her will instantly be eaten. She is simply unable to square her desire for light with her desire to eat fireflies, so I have to come up with a new solution. It's pretty simple: Just make a spigot, stick it into a maple tree, collect maple syrup in a bucket, spread the syrup on trees along the path, ask Violet's dad for an empty bottle (this took me forever to figure out, but I wonder if a kid would instinctually ask the adult for help?), fill the bottle with fireflies, and then give the bottle to Violet so that she can let the fireflies out as we walk. The theory is that the fireflies will not be eaten by Violet because they are in a bottle, but they will be attracted to the maple syrup on the trees rather than flying away, providing a steady source of light.

After that, we encounter a group of ice elementals, and I think, here we go, a combat encounter that'll surely kill me because I haven't leveled at all, but no, that's not the case. I have to build snowman heads that match Violet's facial expressions and then help her throw them onto the elementals, because they have no heads of their own, and she refuses to leave them headless.

(Image credit: Jagex)

Strange old world

As I continue helping Violet and her yeti dad, who cracks dad jokes along the way, I can see Runescape's charm. It turns out Violet's quest was added as part of the 2018 Christmas event. These things are just left behind for new players to discover—not like Destiny 2 and World of Warcraft and other modern games, which are culled and streamlined. My chance meeting with Death? It turns out his full name is Harold Death, Esq, and he doesn't just show up on the week of Halloween. He lives in a mansion where he frequently kills servants accidentally, due to his touch of death. I said that Runescape's combat systems feel like they've been under construction for 20 years—well, so does the rest of RuneScape. (Except maybe the graphics. Those look about like you'd expect.)

In some ways, RuneScape feels like a precursor to Fortnite—they've both built up a patchwork of lore over time, and being "for kids" hasn't stopped them from being weird, complex, and sometimes unsettling. But Fortnite will be carefully manicured in the way live service games are these days, and I doubt it'll ever be allowed to grow gnarled, tangled fingernails quite like RuneScape, which you'll recall involves performing religious burials of the bones of the dead creatures you've slaughtered. The idea of holding funerals for fallen enemies in Fortnite was a ClickHole joke. Two decades after it launched, RuneScape is still ahead of its time.

Tyler Wilde
Executive Editor

Tyler grew up in Silicon Valley during the '80s and '90s, playing games like Zork and Arkanoid on early PCs. He was later captivated by Myst, SimCity, Civilization, Command & Conquer, all the shooters they call "boomer shooters" now, and PS1 classic Bushido Blade (that's right: he had Bleem!). Tyler joined PC Gamer in 2011, and today he's focused on the site's news coverage. His hobbies include amateur boxing and adding to his 1,200-plus hours in Rocket League.