Posts Tagged ‘Social’

10 Tips for Finding the Right Guild

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

If you are looking for a guild and are having trouble finding one that just seems “right”, use this guide to help you find the right fit for you. Do not be afraid to try different guilds out. Nobody cares if a new member leaves a couple weeks later. Try them out until you find the guild that you can contribute to and who you get along with. WoW is a social oriented game and you can greatly increase your playing experience if you find the right guild.

Friends

Friends are a great way to find a good guild. Generally, the people that you associate with tend to gather around others of the same type. If you find yourself making a lot of friends in a particular guild, that guild would probably be a great fit for you. It will also help that you already know people when you first join. It also seldom hurts to have a good reference from a friend who is already in the guild.

Progression

Progression is usually a bad sign of how you will like a guild, but there are some major warning signs that can pop up from this. If you are in the latest gear and looking for a guild that is currently running PTR content and you find a guild that is still running heroics for gear, then look somewhere else. Progression may not seem like a huge deal to you, but it can get in the way of having a fun time.

Atmosphere

This is something that you can only find out by joining a guild. It is a great way to tell if you will like the guild or not. Does it bother you when fifty people say “ding” all at once in gchat? Or does it seem like nobody is ever on? Or do you never get an answer to a question or a reply to anything? The atmosphere of a guild should fit your personality and your preference.

Gear

A good telltale sign of how a guild functions as a whole is to compare the gear of top rank members to lower rank members. If a guild leader is sporting full t8 and everyone rank 2 is still working on most of their set, you can see that there is a disconnect there. Also, if nobody in the lower ranks has decent gear, you can pretty much determine that they swap members a lot. This could be a sure sign that you should stay away.

Leadership

The leadership of a guild should be the glue that holds it together. Make sure that you are in agreement with all the guild rules and that you get along with the leader. You shouldn’t join a guild where you question the leadership and their methods.

Timezone

Obviously if you are planning on raiding with a guild but are only available from 2am-4am server, then you need to find that one specific guild that raids during that time. Also, if you are in a guild that has weird hours, you will find yourself logging on during off-peak hours and the guild feels like a ghost town. Make sure to find a guild that sleeps/works/etc around the general time that you do.

Location

If you are lucky enough to find a local guild or a semi-local guild, these can be a great jumping off point.

You can fulfill a need

If a guild is running low on healers and you just happen to love healing, you can be a great fit for the guild. If you are dependable, you will quickly become a trusted member of the guild and will climb the ranks relatively quickly. If you are DPS #500 for the guild, it would be much harder to fit in.

Attitude (serious or not)

A guild’s attitude towards the game should fit yours. If you are very serious about the game and are hardcore, then your guild should reflect it. Same with if you are casual and don’t take it seriously.

Reputation

If the guild is known for harboring ninja looters and jerks, move on. Same with if the guild has a bad reputation. You will immediately pick up that reputation with whatever guild tag you are wearing.

Perceived Experts; Social Experiment

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Perceived Experts

I completed the final part of my honor grind for my battlemaster’s trinket (62,000 honor still makes me wonder why the cap is set to 75,000). I had some really good games and some really frustrating ones. Specifically the WSG where we had 5 players who had under 14k health and the next closest to me was 20k. During the grind this week, I see a type of player starting to crop up everywhere. The player that I would call a “Perceived Expert”.

You know the player. It doesn’t matter if you are winning or losing, this player needs to tell everyone else that they fail. They always share their plan of attack, but feel that nobody ever helps them. They are usually the ones who nerd rage during the final seconds of a loss. They are the ones who crack me up.

For example: I joined an Isle of Conquest match. When I joined, 30/40 of my team was dead and the Alliance were about to break through our walls. I checked the map and we literally had nobody at the Alliance base. It was a ghost town. I started healing the players around me when a ret paladin whispers me, “give me fort”. I usually do not oblige people who ask for buffs, but I was feeling generous. With fort, he had a grand total of 17.7k health (he was wearing 2 pieces of deadly, 1 furious, and the rest were blues). He was quickly stomped by the Alliance presence in our base which apparently made him angry. In the final minutes of the match, he let everyone know that we were scrubs, we didn’t know how to play, Horde always lose, and that he deserves better. It was hilarious.

Another example was in EoTS. We were handily winning the game and I was at BE tower defending with two DK’s. The DK’s were having a discussion on how PvP isn’t fair for them. “Rogues are so simple to play” said one to the other. “Yeah, they don’t even need gear”. I checked their gear and noticed a couple pieces of deadly and mostly PvE epics (Naxx level). Their discussion quickly turned to PvE and how they were experts at PvE. They felt that PvP was worthless and that it took no skill. Their view on how good they were at the game made me laugh.

I see this type of player show up more and more. It is the “expert” player who is very moody and has bad gear. There have always been players like this, but I think it is multiplied by the fact that it is getting late in an expansion and people have probably had time by now to level another 80. It is a big transition from being geared to having no gear.

This ultimately brings up the question, “Who really is an expert?”. Although there are exceptions to the rule, most “experts” in my experience are the unsung heroes. They are the ones who help out random people by answering questions in guild chat or trade chat. They are the ones who give friendly advice at the right times instead of just telling the other player how bad they are. They are the ones who know how to take a loss without whining. They are the ones who have been around a long time and have extensive experience with the game.

I think there is a fine line between “expert” and “elitist” and most WoW players fall in the latter category. I do know that the experts aren’t the ones barking orders in bad gear then nerd raging out of BGs.

Social Experiment

There is a fun social experiment you can try. I had a classmate who used to make up words and then say them over and over. He would say these words so many times around people that they would start to say them without thinking. We had a lot of fun making up new words and seeing who we could get to start saying them. You should do the same in World of Warcraft. Make up a short phrase or take an existing phrase and start using it a lot around guildies or friends. See how many of them you can get to start using that term.

Let me know if you are successful! We’d love to here those stories.