Tuesday, July 18, 2006
WoW Journal - 18-July-2006
I'm writing a bit less often in the next 3 weeks, due to being on holiday. But I'm still playing WoW, on the laptop. Due to the laptop being slower, and probably not able to handle big raids, and due to me needing a break from raids, I'm playing only my low level priest during the holidays. So I got him up to level 37 now, and skilled up his mining to 195. The last couple of days I mostly spent killing yeti and ogres in Alterac Mountains, which is a good place if you want to skill up mining at the same time.
But I also joined one group to Razorfen Kraul, to finish the quest for killing the boss there, and it was a somewhat unpleasant, but memorable experience. The mage in that group was a bit overly obsessed with loot. First we found only random greens, and by some statistical fluke the warrior won 6 or 7 greed rolls in a row. As most people don't understand statistics, some group members started accusing the warrior of using a hack, and were hard to convince that such a hack doesn't exist. Then the druid rolled need on a cloth item "for his healing set", and the warlock rolled need on a blue dagger with stamina and spirit bonus, and the mage became very unpleasant, accusing them of ninjaing items they shouldn't roll for. As if you keep anyone from rolling on anything remotely useful in a pickup group.
Then we killed the rare bat in Razorfen Kraul, and she dropped two necklaces, a blue bind on pickup one, and a green bind on equip one. The mage rolled need on both of them, won *both* rolls, and then refused to reroll on the BoE one, which other people in the group could have needed. Talk about ninjaing. I could have lived with that, but he continued to be very unpleasant about loot distribution, constantly saying how he had another level 60 on the server and that he knew better than us n00bs how loot should be distributed. A real asshole. So when the group leader asked me whether it was okay with me if we kicked the mage, I agreed. We continued to kill the end boss, and do the escort quest for the goblin back out, with just 4 people, and it went just fine without that mage. But he continued to harass us with tells and complain in the global Looking For Group channel about us, until I set him to ignore and stopped listening.
Makes you wonder why some people who can't share play a massively multiplayer online game.
Comments:
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Sadly, This type of person makes up at very least 10% of the WoW community in my experience, Some players have far too much confidence in there abilities and knowledge, and look down there noses at other players. Thus thinking they are being treated unfairly when they lose a roll on an item or are asked to do a specific task.
If I am party leader, I have begun immediatley kicking said individuals, Becuase no matter how hard you try, they still beleive they are God's Gift to this game.
If I am party leader, I have begun immediatley kicking said individuals, Becuase no matter how hard you try, they still beleive they are God's Gift to this game.
The ignore list is a good tool for slowly weeding out bad people to group with. Once they are on "ignore" you won't have to worry about responding to their LFG after your memory of them has faded a bit.
Tide's Horizon Playerep system is nice but it really needs to be implemented inside a game for it to be effective. I hope one day a MMO comes out with a good player reputation system built into it.
relmstein.blogspot.com
Tide's Horizon Playerep system is nice but it really needs to be implemented inside a game for it to be effective. I hope one day a MMO comes out with a good player reputation system built into it.
relmstein.blogspot.com
I'd have to say it's a lot more than 10% =) And it's not just the dreaded PuG's. For purposes of research more than anything, I joined one of the spam guilds with my new priest.
I've been in it a week now and doubt I can survive much longer. Everyone, at least in their opinion, is a WoW demigod of knowledge and has hundreds of 60's on assorted servers. This is why they are constantly begging for gold/items in chat, I suppose. Last night a newly tagged person logged, rolled up a new hunter, hit it tagged, then proceeded to beg in guildchat for 10g for 20 minutes before logging complaining that no one wants to help.
Even someone with assorted 60's has new tricks to learn - both with thier prime character and their alts. There's always something someone else can do that you never thought of that you can pick up on. Know-it-alls wreck the fun quick.
I've been in it a week now and doubt I can survive much longer. Everyone, at least in their opinion, is a WoW demigod of knowledge and has hundreds of 60's on assorted servers. This is why they are constantly begging for gold/items in chat, I suppose. Last night a newly tagged person logged, rolled up a new hunter, hit it tagged, then proceeded to beg in guildchat for 10g for 20 minutes before logging complaining that no one wants to help.
Even someone with assorted 60's has new tricks to learn - both with thier prime character and their alts. There's always something someone else can do that you never thought of that you can pick up on. Know-it-alls wreck the fun quick.
We had a 60 Hunter in our Guild who was annoying the hell out of our GM, and had been doing so for weeks. A week ago he got a /guild invite from an Uber Guild (we're not an Uber Raiding Guild) and I told him to grab it with both hands. After all, how many Hunters get invites from Uber Raiding Guilds? So he /gquit and joined the new guild. A few days ago our GM msgd the GM of the Uber Guild asking how our Hunter was doing. He'd been kicked out already. Then today I saw him spamming in /lfg for 60s for a brand new Guild. I shift-clicked him and he wasn't even in the guild he was spamming.
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