nerevarine1138 wrote: »How do you determine when it's fine to dance around in your underwear and when it becomes trolling? What about using the mystery meat to vomit in front of people? Or running around in a goblin costume? Where do we draw the line?
MornaBaine wrote: »The context of the roleplay isn't all that import, what is, is that we instantly had a guy dancing in his perma-underwear in our faces throughout the event and bragging about how he "loves to do this to roleplayers" who are, of course, "ridiculous" and "stupid." So while he was providing me with ample fodder I was reporting him with screenshots. But unlike past events, and believe me, this went on for quite awhile, no GM showed up to deal with the problem. Indeed at one point we thought he had finally gotten bored and gone away but nope, he had just gone to get some friends to join his little party. Further shenanigans ensured and were also reported with screenshots. FINALLY they did get bored and wander off. Probably because the entire event was held in group chat rather than spatial /emote or /say exactly so as to give less food to the trolls.
timidobserver wrote: »If someone sends offensive messages that needs to be stopped immediately, but im not in support of policing where players can stand and what they can wear.
If someone is sending you offensive messages just put them on ignore. The problem is instantly solved. There is no need for GMs to get involved to put a stop to it. Players can do it themselves easily.
As to your second point: I agree. If someone wants to dress in their underwear and dance during a funeral they should be able to. I'm not going to support GMs policing our behavior to safeguard role-players from ridicule. There is something everyone does that offends someone. The players dancing in their underwear could just as easily claim that the role-playing event was annoying them and that action should be taken against the Role-Players.
GMs should be there to fix legitimate problems with the game. I don't think their role should be to tell us how we are suppose to dress or where we can do emotes; what we can or cannot make fun of. No thanks. I rather not Tamriel be turned into a police state.
While I haven't seen that many games utilize it; it's totally possible and ESO's megaserver is already structured to support something like that.MornaBaine wrote: »FadedJeans wrote: »On one hand, it leaves you less exposed so you suffer less the mockery of fools.
On the other hand, it leaves you less exposed so people who might be drawn to RP are denied the opportunity to discover you serendipitously.
Too bad you can't just add another player to an ignore list that phases them out of your instance or simply removes them from your sight and chat.
One of my guildies actually mentioned that there ARE games where you can do exactly that. If you "ignore" another player, not only is their chat gone, THEY are gone in that you no longer see their character. I had no idea this was possible. My gods, this would be AMAZING. I am going to add this suggestion to my OP.
There have been a few debates recently about how problematic something needs to be before it’s reported. But the answer is simple, if you find something offensive or harassing, report it.
It’s true that some of the reports we get in-game (and on the forums) are determined to not break the rules, and are closed without action. However, these determinations are quick to make, and we’d rather have a few unnecessary reports than find out people aren’t reporting content that should be – particularly in-game.
There are two ways to report bad behavior in-game. For chat, right click on the offensive content in the chat window and choose the report option. If someone isn’t in chat, look at them and open the “interact” wheel – one of the options is “report player.”
On the forums, there’s a report button on the bottom right of every post that shows up when you hover your cursor there.
The bold part troubles me, if a player reports something do you not think at that point in time it is problematic enough for you the company to take a look at it. From what i am reading from your statement is that instead of following up on reports or such, you moderate the reports and pick and choose which ones to follow up on instead of following up on everything. That actually answers a lot of questions for me from previous reports that i never heard anything about, it was as if they had just poofed.......
newtinmpls wrote: »nerevarine1138 wrote: »Policing in-game chat is fine, but policing in-game dancing? It's just completely impractical and pointless. How do you determine when it's fine to dance around in your underwear and when it becomes trolling? What about using the mystery meat to vomit in front of people? Or running around in a goblin costume? Where do we draw the line?.
Do you really expect anyone to believe that you cannot ... truly cannot ... tell the difference between "acting weird" and deliberately attempting to sabotage someone else's enjoyment of the game?
Its not "what was done". it's context. Disrespect. Pattern. Does that really truly not make sense to you?
I don't recall seeing anyone in the tavern behind the gate in my alliance zone other than people doing some light looting while picking up/ turning in quests to the fighters guild bounty quest giver, so this may be a good short term workaround. You should probably pick an unpopular campaign though, so the PVPers don't get mad about being pop locked out of the campaign due to too many RPers in the tavern.letohatcheeub17_ESO wrote: »World PvP, problem solved.
May have a point , not world pvp but there are places in Cyrodiil that would be ideal for y'all. Either of the gated areas would be perfect. People only go there to empty rewards/bank or get quests to pass a long to their group other than that the place is empty. They have a tavern and really anything else you would need and little to no danger of getting attacked. (Just don't leave the gated area ) Check it out !
@nerevarine1138 is correct, there have been debates among players here on the forums.The bold part troubles me, if a player reports something do you not think at that point in time it is problematic enough for you the company to take a look at it. From what i am reading from your statement is that instead of following up on reports or such, you moderate the reports and pick and choose which ones to follow up on instead of following up on everything. That actually answers a lot of questions for me from previous reports that i never heard anything about, it was as if they had just poofed.......There have been a few debates recently about how problematic something needs to be before it’s reported. But the answer is simple, if you find something offensive or harassing, report it.
It’s true that some of the reports we get in-game (and on the forums) are determined to not break the rules, and are closed without action. However, these determinations are quick to make, and we’d rather have a few unnecessary reports than find out people aren’t reporting content that should be – particularly in-game.
There are two ways to report bad behavior in-game. For chat, right click on the offensive content in the chat window and choose the report option. If someone isn’t in chat, look at them and open the “interact” wheel – one of the options is “report player.”
On the forums, there’s a report button on the bottom right of every post that shows up when you hover your cursor there.
Jessica Folsom wrote:It's a very grey area.
[That actually answers a lot of questions for me from previous reports that i never heard anything about, it was as if they had just poofed.......
MornaBaine wrote: »timidobserver wrote: »If someone sends offensive messages that needs to be stopped immediately, but im not in support of policing where players can stand and what they can wear.
If someone is sending you offensive messages just put them on ignore. The problem is instantly solved. There is no need for GMs to get involved to put a stop to it. Players can do it themselves easily.
As to your second point: I agree. If someone wants to dress in their underwear and dance during a funeral they should be able to. I'm not going to support GMs policing our behavior to safeguard role-players from ridicule. There is something everyone does that offends someone. The players dancing in their underwear could just as easily claim that the role-playing event was annoying them and that action should be taken against the Role-Players.
GMs should be there to fix legitimate problems with the game. I don't think their role should be to tell us how we are suppose to dress or where we can do emotes; what we can or cannot make fun of. No thanks. I rather not Tamriel be turned into a police state.
This is the reason we can't have nice things. Thank you though, for providing clear and compelling evidence why this game so desperately needs the very tools I, and others, have asked for. NOBODY wants GMs to have to take their time being playground monitors. Unfortunately, that's the only option anyone has under the current system...and it works poorly. All anyone is asking for is the perfectly legitimate right to be left alone and the tools to ensure that happens while, incidentally, having absolutely zero impact on those who seek to cause offense. If I don't have to see you, then a GM doesn't have to come in and censure you and you are perfectly free to go on your merry dancing in your underwear way, none the wiser that no one knows or cares you are doing it.
@Audigy
Don't misunderstand me, I very much agree with what you have written, but that little piece heremade me laugh a bit. You should change it to the intended "mourn". That one gives a completely wrong impression to the casual reader...What Morna does might seem weird for some, but its her right to moan the death of another character or make all those vampire threads(moan = stöhnen, mourn = betrauern)
@Audigy
Don't misunderstand me, I very much agree with what you have written, but that little piece heremade me laugh a bit. You should change it to the intended "mourn". That one gives a completely wrong impression to the casual reader...What Morna does might seem weird for some, but its her right to moan the death of another character or make all those vampire threads(moan = stöhnen, mourn = betrauern)
Haha, thanks a lot
@MornaBaine I hope you didn't mind the tiny typo
nerevarine1138 wrote: »There have been a few debates recently about how problematic something needs to be before it’s reported. But the answer is simple, if you find something offensive or harassing, report it.
It’s true that some of the reports we get in-game (and on the forums) are determined to not break the rules, and are closed without action. However, these determinations are quick to make, and we’d rather have a few unnecessary reports than find out people aren’t reporting content that should be – particularly in-game.
There are two ways to report bad behavior in-game. For chat, right click on the offensive content in the chat window and choose the report option. If someone isn’t in chat, look at them and open the “interact” wheel – one of the options is “report player.”
On the forums, there’s a report button on the bottom right of every post that shows up when you hover your cursor there.
The bold part troubles me, if a player reports something do you not think at that point in time it is problematic enough for you the company to take a look at it. From what i am reading from your statement is that instead of following up on reports or such, you moderate the reports and pick and choose which ones to follow up on instead of following up on everything. That actually answers a lot of questions for me from previous reports that i never heard anything about, it was as if they had just poofed.......
You misunderstood. Alan wasn't referring to debates within the moderation team but about the debates that have been coming up on this forum between players (i.e. this thread). The moderators are not picking and choosing which tickets get followed up on, but as stated, they may not always find someone in violation of the rules.newtinmpls wrote: »nerevarine1138 wrote: »Policing in-game chat is fine, but policing in-game dancing? It's just completely impractical and pointless. How do you determine when it's fine to dance around in your underwear and when it becomes trolling? What about using the mystery meat to vomit in front of people? Or running around in a goblin costume? Where do we draw the line?.
Do you really expect anyone to believe that you cannot ... truly cannot ... tell the difference between "acting weird" and deliberately attempting to sabotage someone else's enjoyment of the game?
Its not "what was done". it's context. Disrespect. Pattern. Does that really truly not make sense to you?
Well, again, I have to respectfully disagree.
Sometimes I ride naked on my guar through Argonian temples. At what point do we believe that behavior constitutes trolling? More importantly, how will a GM looking through game logs be able to make any kind of objective determination about that?
MornaBaine wrote: »We shouldn't have to play unpaid shrink to people who are clearly suffering from antisocial personality disorders in the game. This is where we go to have fun and relax.
That's the problem.
For every person who is disciplined for actually intending to offend someone it is likely two people will be disciplined for having some light-hearted fun or some misinterpreted gesture taken the wrong way.
phreatophile wrote: »That's the problem.
For every person who is disciplined for actually intending to offend someone it is likely two people will be disciplined for having some light-hearted fun or some misinterpreted gesture taken the wrong way.
If you said "For every person who is reported for actually intending to offend someone...", you might be correct. Since, in Morna's example and so many like it, nothing was done, I think you have little to worry about.
This is the #1 reason why megaservers just can't work for RP. They should have added one just for that and I bet it could of brought more people to the game (well after the bots and big bugs were fixed) which means more money. Hope you find a way to fix it.
"Players will fill out a questionnaire that describes their own preferred playstyle to assist the megaserver in allocating similar players to their game space. You can specify preferences for roleplaying, age groups, and degree of socialization." (source)
Op, I am sorry you feel you were trolled. I was in Dresan Keep for the first time two days ago, right at the start in the area below the well and up the hill before the first room was group of 13 people all from the same guild RPing. They were RPing in local chat. The things they were RPing about had nothing to do with Tamriel or ESO (they were pot merchants). Another 5 of them from the same guild, kept killing all the mobs as soon as they spawned. Now I did find it irritating that I basically had to ignore chat and their infantile emotes all while playing the two quests in there. I did ask the 5 that were killing the mobs to allow me to kill a few on my own. They did not bother to reply to my request. Personally I try to go by a live/let live mentality. I was originally going to report the lot of them, but decided that it took all of 27 minutes to do the quests in there and move on and I figured it was better in a low level public dungeon then add to the shenanigans that go on in the major hubs. Once I left the Dresan Keep, I did not have to deal with it any longer.
RPers need a private instance to go to so they can do their thing with out being bothered or bothering anyone else.
Cirran
Huckdabuck wrote: »Isn't it obvious.....the guy in his underwear was also RP'ing. He really didn't like that guy so he did what so many others would do if they had the stones.....he showed up and danced in his underwear on the hated persons grave. Sounds legit!
civilizedsavage wrote: »Would it work to group and then enter an instanced vet dungeon with lots of non-mobbed space... Like Selene's Web?
Not that you should have to... but this should work no?
It works, but it only supports 4 players, which isn't always enough...and then there's always levels to consider when clearing the spaces to RP in. The group leader is the deciding factor for the level of the mobs, so if you want some 1 on 1 time with lowbies, for example, you may have to do some shuffling around with alts that can clear to wherever you want in the zone and it just turns into a logistic nightmare...but yes...we adapt and jump through flaming hoops to do so.
deepseamk20b14_ESO wrote: »I'm no fan of role playing and see no point in it, however, you won't catch me interfering with other people doing what they want. A person trolling you apparently stinks at the game because they are wasting time trolling instead of playing. It does beg the question however, what puts your rights to play the game how you want above theirs? Maybe they like trolling, it makes the game for them. It's stupid IMO, but maybe that's what get's them off. My answer to this question however is this: both parties have the right to play how they want but the trolling party negatively affects the other party where as the role playing party does not negatively affect the trolling party. So there is the reason why trolls are the A-holes and not the role players, in case someone was wondering why role players should have the right to complain. So I say let the role players role play....as ridiculous as it is ;-)
newtinmpls wrote: »Huckdabuck wrote: »Isn't it obvious.....the guy in his underwear was also RP'ing. He really didn't like that guy so he did what so many others would do if they had the stones.....he showed up and danced in his underwear on the hated persons grave. Sounds legit!
Do you seriously believe that...?