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Crafting (Noob Question)

ProtossOP
ProtossOP
As the title says

How the actual hell do I make stuff...... how do I make it viable as well ?

thanks
  • Ourorboros
    Ourorboros
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    There are crafting guides posted, just search for them. Or try this link for pretty thorough info about ESO:

    http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Online:Online
    PC/NA/DC
    Breton Sorcerer Maester.White - BB meets GoT >Master Crafter< { 9 Traits completed 4/23/15 }
    TANSTAAFL--->There ain't no such thing as a free lunch.....Robert Heinlein
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    ESO: the game you hate to love and love to hate....( >_<) May RNG be with you (*,_,*)
  • ProtossOP
    ProtossOP
    Ourorboros wrote: »
    There are crafting guides posted, just search for them. Or try this link for pretty thorough info about ESO:

    http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Online:Online

    tyty Funny part is I am level 37 only now did I think to look into crafting lol
  • WldKarde
    WldKarde
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    Starting out in crafting is quite painful :(

    Research everything...and as painful as it might seem...it doesn't hurt to spend some skill points in the crafting research times as well. Your bags will be forever overflowing with stuff waiting to be researched...but it does pay off in the end. ;)

    Hang in there...the rewards are worth waiting for!
    PC NA
    Characters formally known as Veteran 16:
    Wldkarde, Sir WldKarde , Lil-Miss WldKarde,
    Dame WldKarde Stamplar "Master Angler" "Main" ,
    Shady WldKarde, WldKarde"s Bacon, Jaded WldKarde,
    River Wldkarde
    18 Master Anglers so far
    "Dames and Sirs, take my advice, pull down your pants...and slide on the ice!" Slightly adjusted quote of Dr. Sidney Friedman from M*A*S*H
  • a1x23
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    ProtossOP wrote: »
    Ourorboros wrote: »
    There are crafting guides posted, just search for them. Or try this link for pretty thorough info about ESO:

    http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Online:Online

    tyty Funny part is I am level 37 only now did I think to look into crafting lol

    I didnt start crafting until i hit veteran rank. You can catch up pretty quickly. I would recommend researching traits asap because those take some time
  • ProtossOP
    ProtossOP
    wldkarde wrote: »
    Starting out in crafting is quite painful :(

    Research everything...and as painful as it might seem...it doesn't hurt to spend some skill points in the crafting research times as well. Your bags will be forever overflowing with stuff waiting to be researched...but it does pay off in the end. ;)

    Hang in there...the rewards are worth waiting for!

    This already sounds painful haha
  • ProtossOP
    ProtossOP
    a1x23 wrote: »
    ProtossOP wrote: »
    Ourorboros wrote: »
    There are crafting guides posted, just search for them. Or try this link for pretty thorough info about ESO:

    http://www.uesp.net/wiki/Online:Online

    tyty Funny part is I am level 37 only now did I think to look into crafting lol

    I didnt start crafting until i hit veteran rank. You can catch up pretty quickly. I would recommend researching traits asap because those take some time

    Cant wait until I hit my Vet level for the first time :)
  • Liptrot
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    Best way to level crafting is deconstructing the intricate gear. I wanted to level blacksmithing faster so I went round all the traders buying intricate weapons and heavy armour. Crafting and deconstructing normal gear is really slow even though you can get mats
  • Xendyn
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    Another tip is that Researching the traits takes more time for each trait. So do the important ones first and leave ones like Well fitted, Sturdy, Training and such for last when it will take almost a month to do.
    Lag is ruinin' my 'mershun!
    A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.
    There is only one good, knowledge, and one evil, ignorance - Socrates
    Member of the Old Guard, keepers of the game's history

    PC/NA
  • ProtossOP
    ProtossOP
    Liptrot wrote: »
    Best way to level crafting is deconstructing the intricate gear. I wanted to level blacksmithing faster so I went round all the traders buying intricate weapons and heavy armour. Crafting and deconstructing normal gear is really slow even though you can get mats
    Xendyn wrote: »
    Another tip is that Researching the traits takes more time for each trait. So do the important ones first and leave ones like Well fitted, Sturdy, Training and such for last when it will take almost a month to do.

    thanks guys
  • Shardaxx
    Shardaxx
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    Deconstruct everything you can, do the daily crafting writs, find some friends or a guild with a stash of materials you can use (I leveled provisioning from 1 to 50 in a couple of sessions thanks to our guild bank full of ingredients). For enchanting, work with a friend - give them your rune stones, they craft glyphs (higher potency and green/blue/purple aspect is better) they give you the glyphs to deconstruct, rinse and repeat until you're out of stones.
    PS4 - Europe - Shardaxx - Wood Elf Nightblade - Aldmeri Dominion
  • Volkodav
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    Crafting isnt a "pain" at all.
    It's a lot of fun,if you can be a little patient. Just begin by looting every bit of armor, clothing,weapons you can get hold on.Steal them,or look in any containers for them.Deconstruct them for mats,and use said mats to create your items.Find or buy motifs.It really isnt painful,as some here say.I take one evening and run the beaches in AD,mostly Khenarthi's Roost,and unlock every chest there,..and there are a huge amount of them along the beaches.I also take one alt to gather all the materials available and save them in my bank.Sometimes I seell stacks of them,but I mostly save them for when I need them.
    Go decon the items in my inventory,and craft.Just check out the tabs on top of the window when you click on whichever table you use.
    Dont decon "just" the best stuff,and dont worry about researching anything.I never have researched a thing and I make great stuff.
    Gather all the runes you run across and make your own glyphs.You dont need anyone to help you with them. If you dont do it yourself,you wont learn which go with which.Also there are mods in Minion that you can download to help you with that.
    Edited by Volkodav on February 29, 2016 11:53PM
  • Lysette
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    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.
    Edited by Lysette on March 1, 2016 12:07AM
  • Selstad
    Selstad
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    Crafting, some is a pain in the royal neck, others not so much. For blacksmithing, clothing and woodworking, it's not that difficult. Just deconstruct everyone you come across that isn't traits you need to research, and pay especially close attention to those with the crafting trait on them. This one gives 280% inspiration boost, which is a lot.

    Provisioning, alchemy and enchanting is a royal pain the royal pants to level, especially enchanting. Low amount of inspiration, pain in the beep to find the items necessary and worse still to get even some way on it. Enchanting is in my view the worst of them, low XP for deconstruct in comparison to how rare glyphs are to find. So unless you buy a lot of glyphs from others, you're going to spend some time trying to get this one up.

    Other than that, get your crafting materials by either buying or gathering. Just remember to research traits, if you're to make good set items you need a certain amount of traits to be able to craft those items, and traits can take some time to research. I have 1 trait under research on my clothier now, and it'll be there for 17 more days, for a total of 21 days :smile:
  • Volkodav
    Volkodav
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    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.
  • Lysette
    Lysette
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    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.
  • Volkodav
    Volkodav
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    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.
  • Lysette
    Lysette
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    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    The better motifs require that you have researched a couple of traits or you cannot craft that armor piece. So better you learn this early on or you will be dependent on others to craft that stuff for you.
    Edited by Lysette on March 1, 2016 12:30AM
  • Volkodav
    Volkodav
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    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD
  • Lysette
    Lysette
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    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.
  • Volkodav
    Volkodav
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    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.

    Are you being snarky? If you are,dont be rude for nothing.Find a good reason. XD
    Naah.Didnt get ganked.I just wasnt into the Sci-fi part.It looks like a great game though.Just not my type.This was when I was looking for games to play when the NA server was down.
    :}
  • Lysette
    Lysette
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    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.

    Are you being snarky? If you are,dont be rude for nothing.Find a good reason. XD
    Naah.Didnt get ganked.I just wasnt into the Sci-fi part.It looks like a great game though.Just not my type.This was when I was looking for games to play when the NA server was down.
    :}

    I am sorry, when it seemed that I am in a bad mood. It is actually a reason why a lot of newbies quit in EVE after they were ganked for the first time or are getting ganked a couple of times within a few days. This was more or less a real question and my best first bet for you to quit that fast. EVE online is a great and complex game, but it takes a while to get into it. I am playing it since 2008 - currently I have 7 skills in the skill queue which take about 3.5 months - that is why I mentioned this with all what just takes 2 weeks is fast - later in the game it takes many weeks and months for a skill to advance.
    Edited by Lysette on March 1, 2016 1:02AM
  • Volkodav
    Volkodav
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    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.

    Are you being snarky? If you are,dont be rude for nothing.Find a good reason. XD
    Naah.Didnt get ganked.I just wasnt into the Sci-fi part.It looks like a great game though.Just not my type.This was when I was looking for games to play when the NA server was down.
    :}

    I am sorry, when it seemed that I am in a bad mood. It is actually a reason why a lot of newbies quit in EVE after they were ganked for the first time or are getting ganked a couple of times within a few days. This was more or less a real question and my best first bet for you to quit that fast. EVE online is a great and complex game, but it takes a while to get into it. I am playing it since 2008 - currently I have 7 skills in the skill queue which take about 3.5 months - that is why I mentioned this with all what just takes 2 weeks is fast - later in the game it takes many weeks and months for a skill to advance.

    Its ok.That's why I added the funny face after my remark.So you wouldnt think I meant to be mean. :}
    I also didnt realize it was open world PvP until I got into it for that small time.I be a chicken.Hehehe.
    I wouldnt be any good at PvP.I am sure of it.
  • Lysette
    Lysette
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.

    Are you being snarky? If you are,dont be rude for nothing.Find a good reason. XD
    Naah.Didnt get ganked.I just wasnt into the Sci-fi part.It looks like a great game though.Just not my type.This was when I was looking for games to play when the NA server was down.
    :}

    I am sorry, when it seemed that I am in a bad mood. It is actually a reason why a lot of newbies quit in EVE after they were ganked for the first time or are getting ganked a couple of times within a few days. This was more or less a real question and my best first bet for you to quit that fast. EVE online is a great and complex game, but it takes a while to get into it. I am playing it since 2008 - currently I have 7 skills in the skill queue which take about 3.5 months - that is why I mentioned this with all what just takes 2 weeks is fast - later in the game it takes many weeks and months for a skill to advance.

    Its ok.That's why I added the funny face after my remark.So you wouldnt think I meant to be mean. :}
    I also didnt realize it was open world PvP until I got into it for that small time.I be a chicken.Hehehe.
    I wouldnt be any good at PvP.I am sure of it.

    Well, in highsec - high security space - there is a police force called CONCORD, but they are like the police here, they come when someone is already dead. So in highsec you can stay alive, if your defenses last long enough for Concord to arrive, concord will destroy the offender and that was it then. In lowsec ganking is still a crime, but there is no Concord force to take care of the offender and so it is more pvp there. Then there is wormhole space and null sec - where there is no security at all and full pvp. A quite good system IMO.

    Edit. well it might not be clear, where is the difference between lowsec and nullsec - in empire space - high and low sec - criminals cannot use stargates - so once flagged as criminal, they cannot escape through a gate and with it not avoid the gate turrets, which will fire at criminals. in highsec the offender's warp drive is disrupted by concord immedately after the first shot - so they cannot escape, no one can escape concord, they are meant to always win.
    Edited by Lysette on March 1, 2016 1:58AM
  • Volkodav
    Volkodav
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.

    Are you being snarky? If you are,dont be rude for nothing.Find a good reason. XD
    Naah.Didnt get ganked.I just wasnt into the Sci-fi part.It looks like a great game though.Just not my type.This was when I was looking for games to play when the NA server was down.
    :}

    I am sorry, when it seemed that I am in a bad mood. It is actually a reason why a lot of newbies quit in EVE after they were ganked for the first time or are getting ganked a couple of times within a few days. This was more or less a real question and my best first bet for you to quit that fast. EVE online is a great and complex game, but it takes a while to get into it. I am playing it since 2008 - currently I have 7 skills in the skill queue which take about 3.5 months - that is why I mentioned this with all what just takes 2 weeks is fast - later in the game it takes many weeks and months for a skill to advance.

    Its ok.That's why I added the funny face after my remark.So you wouldnt think I meant to be mean. :}
    I also didnt realize it was open world PvP until I got into it for that small time.I be a chicken.Hehehe.
    I wouldnt be any good at PvP.I am sure of it.

    Well, in highsec - high security space - there is a police force called CONCORD, but they are like the police here, they come when someone is already dead. So in highsec you can stay alive, if your defenses last long enough for Concord to arrive, concord will destroy the offender and that was it then. In lowsec ganking is still a crime, but there is no Concord force to take care of the offender and so it is more pvp there. Then there is wormhole space and null sec - where there is no security at all and full pvp. A quite good system IMO.

    Edit. well it might not be clear, where is the difference between lowsec and nullsec - in empire space - high and low sec - criminals cannot use stargates - so once flagged as criminal, they cannot escape through a gate and with it not avoid the gate turrets, which will fire at criminals.

    There's only two games I know that much about. Morrowind and ESO.
    In the building where I live,we had 5 people playing MW at the same time.Our note books were insane,and we were always knocking on each others doors at different times of night and day to figure something out.We were like this little "Morrowind Club of The Westward ***".
    XD
    3 of us died,one went on to other games,and I am now into ESO.
  • starkerealm
    starkerealm
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ProtossOP wrote: »
    wldkarde wrote: »
    Starting out in crafting is quite painful :(

    Research everything...and as painful as it might seem...it doesn't hurt to spend some skill points in the crafting research times as well. Your bags will be forever overflowing with stuff waiting to be researched...but it does pay off in the end. ;)

    Hang in there...the rewards are worth waiting for!

    This already sounds painful haha

    If you're on PC, one thing that can make this a lot more manageable is the Research Assistant addon. It adds an icon to items if you don't know the trait, and a different color if you have multiple copies of the trait, but still don't know it. So it makes working up research so much easier to manage.
  • Lysette
    Lysette
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.

    Are you being snarky? If you are,dont be rude for nothing.Find a good reason. XD
    Naah.Didnt get ganked.I just wasnt into the Sci-fi part.It looks like a great game though.Just not my type.This was when I was looking for games to play when the NA server was down.
    :}

    I am sorry, when it seemed that I am in a bad mood. It is actually a reason why a lot of newbies quit in EVE after they were ganked for the first time or are getting ganked a couple of times within a few days. This was more or less a real question and my best first bet for you to quit that fast. EVE online is a great and complex game, but it takes a while to get into it. I am playing it since 2008 - currently I have 7 skills in the skill queue which take about 3.5 months - that is why I mentioned this with all what just takes 2 weeks is fast - later in the game it takes many weeks and months for a skill to advance.

    Its ok.That's why I added the funny face after my remark.So you wouldnt think I meant to be mean. :}
    I also didnt realize it was open world PvP until I got into it for that small time.I be a chicken.Hehehe.
    I wouldnt be any good at PvP.I am sure of it.

    Well, in highsec - high security space - there is a police force called CONCORD, but they are like the police here, they come when someone is already dead. So in highsec you can stay alive, if your defenses last long enough for Concord to arrive, concord will destroy the offender and that was it then. In lowsec ganking is still a crime, but there is no Concord force to take care of the offender and so it is more pvp there. Then there is wormhole space and null sec - where there is no security at all and full pvp. A quite good system IMO.

    Edit. well it might not be clear, where is the difference between lowsec and nullsec - in empire space - high and low sec - criminals cannot use stargates - so once flagged as criminal, they cannot escape through a gate and with it not avoid the gate turrets, which will fire at criminals.

    There's only two games I know that much about. Morrowind and ESO.
    In the building where I live,we had 5 people playing MW at the same time.Our note books were insane,and we were always knocking on each others doors at different times of night and day to figure something out.We were like this little "Morrowind Club of The Westward ***".
    XD
    3 of us died,one went on to other games,and I am now into ESO.

    Yes you mentioned that in another thread and I am sorry for your loss. Me and my friend played Morrowind as well a lot, far too much actually for good, I know exactly what you are talking about. We had basically no other talk than Morrowind for quite a while, it consumed our life.
  • Volkodav
    Volkodav
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.

    Are you being snarky? If you are,dont be rude for nothing.Find a good reason. XD
    Naah.Didnt get ganked.I just wasnt into the Sci-fi part.It looks like a great game though.Just not my type.This was when I was looking for games to play when the NA server was down.
    :}

    I am sorry, when it seemed that I am in a bad mood. It is actually a reason why a lot of newbies quit in EVE after they were ganked for the first time or are getting ganked a couple of times within a few days. This was more or less a real question and my best first bet for you to quit that fast. EVE online is a great and complex game, but it takes a while to get into it. I am playing it since 2008 - currently I have 7 skills in the skill queue which take about 3.5 months - that is why I mentioned this with all what just takes 2 weeks is fast - later in the game it takes many weeks and months for a skill to advance.

    Its ok.That's why I added the funny face after my remark.So you wouldnt think I meant to be mean. :}
    I also didnt realize it was open world PvP until I got into it for that small time.I be a chicken.Hehehe.
    I wouldnt be any good at PvP.I am sure of it.

    Well, in highsec - high security space - there is a police force called CONCORD, but they are like the police here, they come when someone is already dead. So in highsec you can stay alive, if your defenses last long enough for Concord to arrive, concord will destroy the offender and that was it then. In lowsec ganking is still a crime, but there is no Concord force to take care of the offender and so it is more pvp there. Then there is wormhole space and null sec - where there is no security at all and full pvp. A quite good system IMO.

    Edit. well it might not be clear, where is the difference between lowsec and nullsec - in empire space - high and low sec - criminals cannot use stargates - so once flagged as criminal, they cannot escape through a gate and with it not avoid the gate turrets, which will fire at criminals.

    There's only two games I know that much about. Morrowind and ESO.
    In the building where I live,we had 5 people playing MW at the same time.Our note books were insane,and we were always knocking on each others doors at different times of night and day to figure something out.We were like this little "Morrowind Club of The Westward ***".
    XD
    3 of us died,one went on to other games,and I am now into ESO.

    Yes you mentioned that in another thread and I am sorry for your loss. Me and my friend played Morrowind as well a lot, far too much actually for good, I know exactly what you are talking about. We had basically no other talk than Morrowind for quite a while, it consumed our life.

    Oh,no.I didnt mean to mention it for my loss bit.I was just smiling thinking of how we all went about playing that game.I'm sorry if it seemed I was looking for sympathy.That wasnt the case.
    :}
  • Lysette
    Lysette
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.

    Are you being snarky? If you are,dont be rude for nothing.Find a good reason. XD
    Naah.Didnt get ganked.I just wasnt into the Sci-fi part.It looks like a great game though.Just not my type.This was when I was looking for games to play when the NA server was down.
    :}

    I am sorry, when it seemed that I am in a bad mood. It is actually a reason why a lot of newbies quit in EVE after they were ganked for the first time or are getting ganked a couple of times within a few days. This was more or less a real question and my best first bet for you to quit that fast. EVE online is a great and complex game, but it takes a while to get into it. I am playing it since 2008 - currently I have 7 skills in the skill queue which take about 3.5 months - that is why I mentioned this with all what just takes 2 weeks is fast - later in the game it takes many weeks and months for a skill to advance.

    Its ok.That's why I added the funny face after my remark.So you wouldnt think I meant to be mean. :}
    I also didnt realize it was open world PvP until I got into it for that small time.I be a chicken.Hehehe.
    I wouldnt be any good at PvP.I am sure of it.

    Well, in highsec - high security space - there is a police force called CONCORD, but they are like the police here, they come when someone is already dead. So in highsec you can stay alive, if your defenses last long enough for Concord to arrive, concord will destroy the offender and that was it then. In lowsec ganking is still a crime, but there is no Concord force to take care of the offender and so it is more pvp there. Then there is wormhole space and null sec - where there is no security at all and full pvp. A quite good system IMO.

    Edit. well it might not be clear, where is the difference between lowsec and nullsec - in empire space - high and low sec - criminals cannot use stargates - so once flagged as criminal, they cannot escape through a gate and with it not avoid the gate turrets, which will fire at criminals.

    There's only two games I know that much about. Morrowind and ESO.
    In the building where I live,we had 5 people playing MW at the same time.Our note books were insane,and we were always knocking on each others doors at different times of night and day to figure something out.We were like this little "Morrowind Club of The Westward ***".
    XD
    3 of us died,one went on to other games,and I am now into ESO.

    Yes you mentioned that in another thread and I am sorry for your loss. Me and my friend played Morrowind as well a lot, far too much actually for good, I know exactly what you are talking about. We had basically no other talk than Morrowind for quite a while, it consumed our life.

    Oh,no.I didnt mean to mention it for my loss bit.I was just smiling thinking of how we all went about playing that game.I'm sorry if it seemed I was looking for sympathy.That wasnt the case.
    :}

    Morrowind was basically my first videogame - if Morrowind would not have been such a great and deep RPG, I guess, I would probably not be pulled into gaming at all. It was more by chance, that I got into it. I bought that game for a friend of mine and she did not want to play it and gave it back to me. So I started gaming and am doing it ever since.
  • Volkodav
    Volkodav
    ✭✭✭✭✭
    ✭✭
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Volkodav wrote: »
    Lysette wrote: »
    Research is important though - traits like impenetrable (reduces critical damage taken), divines (enhances the bonus from mundus stones), reinforced (better armor value) and weapon traits like precise, sharpened, weighted (faster attacks) and so are quite helpful and you have access to items with these traits early on. So make use of them and research those traits, then make level 1 items with this trait for any of your alts and let them research those as well.

    Research is not a pain, if you have 3 traits in research every day on every character and it is quite useful, because boni are to the most part percentual values and this makes quite a difference later on.

    Well,yeah,if you are really into it that deep.But if you are starting out,learning the basics will do you well further on,and raise those crafting levels to where researching will be of better value in the long run.

    no do this early on, the more traits you have researched the longer it takes - if you do not start early on with it, it will be a pain in the ... later on. Provisioning is quite easy to level, I don't see where there should be a problem with it. Just craft recipes of higher quality and it will go up quite fast - a few skill points invested into this is not the worst choice - good food or good beverage is quite helpful. You will learn over time where to get the ingredients, well if you explore that is. There are plenty in certain locations and if you do provisioning writs every day on every character you have a good supply of ingredients as writ rewards anyway in stock. All my characters craft every writ and they progress in their professions quite well so far.

    I recently started doing Writs.They are fun! I never thought about them before.
    As to the research part.I just find they take too long to be of benefit to me personally.

    Haha, you certainly have never played EVE online - to me something what can be learnt in less than 2 weeks is "fast". andvanced skill levels in EVE online take more than 30 days to learn - for 1 skill level - you really learn patience in EVE online and all what takes just a week or 2 is fast.

    Oh y es I did.,For about two hours and quit. XD

    Let me guess, someone ganked you?- It is not for everyone to have pvp everywhere.

    Are you being snarky? If you are,dont be rude for nothing.Find a good reason. XD
    Naah.Didnt get ganked.I just wasnt into the Sci-fi part.It looks like a great game though.Just not my type.This was when I was looking for games to play when the NA server was down.
    :}

    I am sorry, when it seemed that I am in a bad mood. It is actually a reason why a lot of newbies quit in EVE after they were ganked for the first time or are getting ganked a couple of times within a few days. This was more or less a real question and my best first bet for you to quit that fast. EVE online is a great and complex game, but it takes a while to get into it. I am playing it since 2008 - currently I have 7 skills in the skill queue which take about 3.5 months - that is why I mentioned this with all what just takes 2 weeks is fast - later in the game it takes many weeks and months for a skill to advance.

    Its ok.That's why I added the funny face after my remark.So you wouldnt think I meant to be mean. :}
    I also didnt realize it was open world PvP until I got into it for that small time.I be a chicken.Hehehe.
    I wouldnt be any good at PvP.I am sure of it.

    Well, in highsec - high security space - there is a police force called CONCORD, but they are like the police here, they come when someone is already dead. So in highsec you can stay alive, if your defenses last long enough for Concord to arrive, concord will destroy the offender and that was it then. In lowsec ganking is still a crime, but there is no Concord force to take care of the offender and so it is more pvp there. Then there is wormhole space and null sec - where there is no security at all and full pvp. A quite good system IMO.

    Edit. well it might not be clear, where is the difference between lowsec and nullsec - in empire space - high and low sec - criminals cannot use stargates - so once flagged as criminal, they cannot escape through a gate and with it not avoid the gate turrets, which will fire at criminals.

    There's only two games I know that much about. Morrowind and ESO.
    In the building where I live,we had 5 people playing MW at the same time.Our note books were insane,and we were always knocking on each others doors at different times of night and day to figure something out.We were like this little "Morrowind Club of The Westward ***".
    XD
    3 of us died,one went on to other games,and I am now into ESO.

    Yes you mentioned that in another thread and I am sorry for your loss. Me and my friend played Morrowind as well a lot, far too much actually for good, I know exactly what you are talking about. We had basically no other talk than Morrowind for quite a while, it consumed our life.

    Oh,no.I didnt mean to mention it for my loss bit.I was just smiling thinking of how we all went about playing that game.I'm sorry if it seemed I was looking for sympathy.That wasnt the case.
    :}

    Morrowind was basically my first videogame - if Morrowind would not have been such a great and deep RPG, I guess, I would probably not be pulled into gaming at all. It was more by chance, that I got into it. I bought that game for a friend of mine and she did not want to play it and gave it back to me. So I started gaming and am doing it ever since.

    I remember you mentioning your friend giving the game back to you.Silly person.
    Yes,I too wouldnt have gotten into games sso deeply if not for MW.I had only played Diablo and the battle chest before that.Then,I got the other TES games,those I had missed.Arena and Daggerfall.Then Oblivion,which I didnt care for.Skyrim was inevitable,and now ESO.
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