case: (Default)
Case ([personal profile] case) wrote in [community profile] fandomsecrets2013-10-05 03:37 pm

[ SECRET POST #2468 ]


⌈ Secret Post #2468 ⌋

Warning: Some secrets are NOT worksafe and may contain SPOILERS.

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Notes:

Secrets Left to Post: 03 pages, 065 secrets from Secret Submission Post #353.
Secrets Not Posted: [ 0 - broken links ], [ 0 - not!secrets ], [ 0 - not!fandom ], [ 0 - too big ], [ 0 - repeat ].
Current Secret Submissions Post: here.
Suggestions, comments, and concerns should go here.
lyndis: (Default)

[personal profile] lyndis 2013-10-05 11:35 pm (UTC)(link)
Been playing WoW since BC was released and here's my take on it:

1.) To make friends you have to be friendly. Doing nice things for the group honestly isn't enough. You need to interact with them. Talk to them in gchat or on Ventrilo/Teamspeak/Mumble. Offer to do things (don't just do them and then wonder why nobody appreciates it/notices). Someone says, "Man we need some XYZ for raid on Saturday." You could be like, "Oh I'd be happy to farm for that. :D"

2.) While you do dull things like farming TALK TO PEOPLE. Tell jokes, share stories, ask people how they're doing.

3.) Be friendly but don't be annoying. There's always that one whiny bitch in gchat who is like "why won't anyone play with meeee" "why wants to do old raidsssss why won't anyone answerrrrrr" etc. Don't be that person. Be open and friendly but don't pester people incessantly for attention or to do group activities. Ask once, "Anyone want to do ______?" In today's MMO social settings, no response = no. If someone wants to go they will tell you. (Ran into this a few times fairly recently that person wanted decked in the face.)

Now:

Making friends isn't easy. A raid group is the best way but most MMOs are shit and only the really long-standing ones have good end-game. Good endgame = people are actually playing = groups might actually stay together. I know when my brother realized end-game Guild Wars 2 was shit (acc. to him) he and his friends stopped playing. So did my sister and her husband. Etc. that was like a mass guild exodus.

Also if you suck at the game, people probably don't want to befriend you. They take you to a raid and you derp around, you talk more than you help, you argue over loot or you can't fucking heal or whatever--they don't want to bring you with them and they probably don't want to be your friend.

Like it probably makes me an asshole but I don't want to be embarrassed in random groups by your shitty DPS/tanking/healing. (I'm a jerk for that but man you represent the guild and therefore me as well so...)

That said, there's one type of player I can't stand, and it's the "gamer gurl" thing. LOOK AT ME I AM A GURL PLAYIN GAMEZ OMG ^_^ LOL LOL HEEHEE. These people automatically get punted out of sight and out of mind. Some people don't mind interacting and befriending them, but I have better things to do.

Not saying you (OP) are any of the above problems or whatever, but it's something to consider.

As for me, I have very few ingame friends. I started playing with RL friends. Coworkers, my boss, my siblings. All my siblings quit. My boss & coworkers moved servers, I quit my job (this was before realID), blah blah blah. I finally found a raid group with mostly people I liked, but two people had job changes and couldn't make raid anymore so the raid group shut down. Recruitment was impossible on my server so the other raiders stopped logging in. Gleader and his wife stopped logging in. I play alone most of the time now.

Still friends w/ the gleader's wife but outside of the game instead. New games are strong for a while and then gradually fall apart, but World of Warcraft is really bad in that it's REALLY FUCKING BORING so most people are too bored to log in and play for long hours and then without anything to do at endgame but derp around on alts or raid, non-raiders usually end up quitting out of boredom. So then just when you're about to befriend someone...they're gone.

I wish I had advice for you OP but I honestly don't. I think making friends on an MMO is awkward and that's because you have playing a game in common instead of other more concrete things. I don't know. I find most men who play WoW? I have nothing in common with outside of WoW. And women, ehhh, it really depends but there's a good chance I don't have anything in common with them, too.

Let's not forget massive age gaps in players. You might easily befriend the 30+ year old crowd but struggle to fit in with the 13-18s. Sadly the 30+ crowd tends to not log in as often, so less time to make friends.

etc etc I'm rambling now. good luck to you OP.
elialshadowpine: (Default)

[personal profile] elialshadowpine 2013-10-06 12:40 am (UTC)(link)
All of this. Very excellent advice.

I'd especially emphasize the question about whether you're asking people if they want to do stuff. I GL a pan-MMO guild (we are a small group, bouncing between WoW, SWTOR, and GW2... currently on the latter atm), and while if people are on, we're generally talking, we don't always do stuff together. A lot of people like to just do their own thing while having someone to chat to, so if you actually want to group up, make sure people know it. (But don't go overboard, either; I have one guildie who, much as I love her, is somewhat passive aggressive about feeling crappy playing alone but she never asks anyone and it drives us batty).

Finding the right group of people really is key. I run my own guild after far too many instances of crappy leadership, even if it means we're small and flitty and such. Some games, like WoW, have large communities on LJ and such that often have guild recruitment; that might be a place to look. I have had better luck finding guilds on related sites than I have in game itself, tbh.