I just think it would be good if players were given the tools for free somehow - just for the competition - so everyone has a fair chance of making something amazing. It would be more fun, more fair and tbh, more interesting. I mean the prizes are awesome. Would be great if the field was opened up to more people, including a better chance for the console players
My husband is an artist. I lost count how many times I've heard people say - to his face - that if only they had the base materials he uses, they'd be able to create the same things he does.
The base materials he uses? Are made by him. Both him and I taught anyone who asked how to do it. It isn't a secret, it isn't expensive, but it takes time.
And guess what? Even when we give those people the exact same mats he uses, they cannot create the same, or similar things. You know why? Because they lack the skills and the "gift". Not everyone is an artist, different people have different skills and are gifted in different areas.
If anything, supplying people in a contest with items will only showcase the gap between dilettantes and the people who actually have the skills and the gift to make something outstanding.The only reason I suggested the PTR/PTS was to provide a level playing field for everyone, where no one is at a disadvantage because of whats in their bank. And it was just a question/suggestion. If ZOS came up with a different way of doing it, I'd be happy with that.
The PTS is wiped every so often and not all furnishings are available there. This was mentioned before in this and other threads. What wasn't mentioned is the fact that during testing cycles at least, the PTS copies the NA and EU server on different weeks (every two weeks IIRC).
I'm on the NA server and when the PTS has a copy of NA, I have access to all of my characters - with everything I have on live, including furnishings and plans. When the PTS is mirroring the EU server I do not.
You might think your idea creates more inclusion and opens up contests to more people, but it does the opposite. People who don't have access to PTS, be it because they play on console or because their HD isn't big enough to have both live and PT servers, will be excluded.
People who only play in one server (NA or EU) will be in disadvantage depending on when the contest happens and which server the PTS is mirroring at that time.
Independent of what I mentioned above, people who've been playing longer will more likely have access to furnishings that newer players don't have.
As for ZOS supplying the furnishings...that's the most limiting thing I can think of. Ask @JHartEllis . He used to have a competition where he'd supply furnishings to players to create something. He hasn't done that in a long time and I remember him struggling to find people to participate in it.
I just think it would be good if players were given the tools for free somehow - just for the competition - so everyone has a fair chance of making something amazing. It would be more fun, more fair and tbh, more interesting. I mean the prizes are awesome. Would be great if the field was opened up to more people, including a better chance for the console players
My husband is an artist. I lost count how many times I've heard people say - to his face - that if only they had the base materials he uses, they'd be able to create the same things he does.
The base materials he uses? Are made by him. Both him and I taught anyone who asked how to do it. It isn't a secret, it isn't expensive, but it takes time.
And guess what? Even when we give those people the exact same mats he uses, they cannot create the same, or similar things. You know why? Because they lack the skills and the "gift". Not everyone is an artist, different people have different skills and are gifted in different areas.
If anything, supplying people in a contest with items will only showcase the gap between dilettantes and the people who actually have the skills and the gift to make something outstanding.The only reason I suggested the PTR/PTS was to provide a level playing field for everyone, where no one is at a disadvantage because of whats in their bank. And it was just a question/suggestion. If ZOS came up with a different way of doing it, I'd be happy with that.
The PTS is wiped every so often and not all furnishings are available there. This was mentioned before in this and other threads. What wasn't mentioned is the fact that during testing cycles at least, the PTS copies the NA and EU server on different weeks (every two weeks IIRC).
I'm on the NA server and when the PTS has a copy of NA, I have access to all of my characters - with everything I have on live, including furnishings and plans. When the PTS is mirroring the EU server I do not.
You might think your idea creates more inclusion and opens up contests to more people, but it does the opposite. People who don't have access to PTS, be it because they play on console or because their HD isn't big enough to have both live and PT servers, will be excluded.
People who only play in one server (NA or EU) will be in disadvantage depending on when the contest happens and which server the PTS is mirroring at that time.
Independent of what I mentioned above, people who've been playing longer will more likely have access to furnishings that newer players don't have.
As for ZOS supplying the furnishings...that's the most limiting thing I can think of. Ask @JHartEllis . He used to have a competition where he'd supply furnishings to players to create something. He hasn't done that in a long time and I remember him struggling to find people to participate in it.
I'm sort of speechless... 'dilettantes'? Really? So only the 'truly gifted' (extremely subjective btw) should be allowed to create 'beautiful' (also very subjective) things in a GAME? We aren't talking about hanging our works at The Guggenheim, darling.
I know the PTS/PTR gets wiped, so what? If it was free, and just for a competition, who cares? Sandcastles on the beach, right? But as I said, who knows what system ZOS could come up with?
[Post was edited]
My husband is an artist. I lost count how many times I've heard people say - to his face - that if only they had the base materials he uses, they'd be able to create the same things he does.
The base materials he uses? Are made by him. Both him and I taught anyone who asked how to do it. It isn't a secret, it isn't expensive, but it takes time.
And guess what? Even when we give those people the exact same mats he uses, they cannot create the same, or similar things. You know why? Because they lack the skills and the "gift". Not everyone is an artist, different people have different skills and are gifted in different areas.
If anything, supplying people in a contest with items will only showcase the gap between dilettantes and the people who actually have the skills and the gift to make something outstanding.
Hey @StabbityDoom , thanks for the nice words. Indeed, the point about PTS wipes is very valid and a competition based solely on PTS would probably be unwise for that very reason. Plus a competition held exclusively on PTS may be just as excluding to those that don't have PTS for obvious reasons.
I would never suggest how others should run their competitions and it takes a great deal of commitment, time and energy from those great housing supporters that run them. I suppose what I am advocating is that as a community we consider not excluding PTS contributions in general from everything. Its not just a competition issue, its tours, features etc.
The argument I see quite often against PTS participation is that people believe housing should be a platform to show off what you have accumulated and the resources that you have worked for. And that is fine, I completely appreciate and respect the view point of using housing as a platform to showcase achievement. But I also think that this can be very intimidating and can act as a barrier to those starting out in the game and wanting to become part of the community. I also think it serves the community better as a whole to have the diversity of having people who engage with housing purely for creative purposes. For example, if you were to just look at a build solely for its creative merit, should it matter how they acquired the items?
I suppose what I am saying, is that collectively we shape our community by what we support and what we discourage. If we only support activities that require the spending of gold and grinding of mats in order to participate, then that is what housing will become. Whereas if we diverge and offer a platform also for those who solely engage with housing as a creative endeavour, we will not just remove barriers but we will all benefit from the influx and sharing of more ideas.
If I were to run a competition, personally, I would allow the entrant to decide how and where they wanted to build their entry. If they want to use live, they presumably have the advantage of luxury items that they may not have on PTS. If they use PTS they have the advantage of not having to spend gold and grind. If they use PTS, they have to take the risk of an unforeseen wipe. There are pros and cons to both options but ultimately, the choice would be up to the entrant.
I think something like this would open up participation in community events to a wider group, which as I said before, has to be a good thing.
P.S. Yes, I always save all my work. I don't know what I would do without EHT
For me personally, housing is over-priced and excessively grindy.
bayushi2005 wrote: »I will give you an example of how much connections are important for your housing works.
I belong to whole 0 (ZERO) housing guilds.
I have access to DDA's and @StabbityDoom 's discord channel and I am there because I like her very much. Sometimes I help people if they have issues with EHT.
I have ONE friend who tends to help me if I'm entirely broke and need to finish something rather sooner than later.
Zero guilds, one friend, my own effort.
@StabbityDoom I thought it important to clarify just in case there was any doubt, everything after "Thank you Stabby for your kind words" was a completely general statement to the community at large and not you specifically.
I never said only the 'truly gifted' are allowed to create, please don't put words in my mouth. I thought we were talking about contests? Were we not?
I'm sort of speechless... 'dilettantes'? Really? So only the 'truly gifted' (extremely subjective btw) should be allowed to create 'beautiful' (also very subjective) things in a GAME? We aren't talking about hanging our works at The Guggenheim, darling.
Again, there are people who play on console and do not have access to a computer capable or running ESO. There are also people who cannot, due to the size of their HD have both live and PT servers installed.I know the PTS/PTR gets wiped, so what? If it was free, and just for a competition, who cares? Sandcastles on the beach, right? But as I said, who knows what system ZOS could come up with?
@KMarble - I've edited this because I realised I was extremely rude and personal, and I can't apologise enough. Gatekeeping in gaming is a pet peeve of mine and I got cross. So yes, sorry about that.
Put more politely, I just think opening up the competitions to more people won't diminish the amazing work the housing community already creates. Making it easier for players new to the game and new to housing can surely only be a good thing? More attention, more players, means ZOS is more likely to invest time, effort and money into it. Which is great, right? And I do think console players need better treatment with how they're included in many aspects of the game, and housing seems to be one of those.
I suppose I just don't understand why a fairly reasonable (I think anyway) suggestion is met with such hostility.
And I apologise again for being so rude.
Anyway, I seem to have upset people when I didn't really mean to, about a thing I clearly know very little about, so I'm going to stop adding to this thread.
Kind regards and all that
Magenpie
ValkyriesWolf wrote: »
[Snip]
It isn't just haughty and some misplaced elitism, it's just plain wrong. And do you know why? Because art is always 100 percent in the eye of the beholder, 100 percent subjective.
You can't go and say people's work is lesser art than your husband's, just because he might be "gifted" with whatever he does. Hell, probably won't like your husband's work, depending on what he does, and think for myself "what crap is this?". Everyone likes different things, and a great many things are considered art by either people or law. ( if you know Beuys' Fettecke, you know what I mean. If not, Google it...) Yes, putting butter on a chair and in the room's corner is considered art as well. I don't like it, I thankfully don't have to like it, because that's the wonderful thing about art: everyone looks differently at it. And the only true art in it is the fantasy, the imagination and the work someone put into it. That is the only thing you can perhaps put to measure, if at all. I still think you can't measure art against one another. I don't like Kandinsky or Schumacher or Beuys. I think most of their pieces are crap for Me. But for someone else they hold great worth.
Oh and about creating the exact same thing.... That isn't creative at all. It's good people make different stuff and don't all cater to the large majority. Individualism is great.
OH and about dilettante and this crap with gift and stuff... Yeah, there might be individuals who have a knack for lighting, capturing things others don't, catering to a larger group or more elitist or rich group of people. Might be a gift and useful, still doesn't make anyone a bigger or better artist than others. Might help with getting money or attention or even started, but still, art is subject to the sole opinion of the beholder. Some might even like some "dilettante" work here and there, while others like phallic symbols (at least looking close like those) on canvas declared as "doors" or something that looks like poop plastered on a canvas and hung up (both paintings by Schumacher) and consider it great art. To each their own. So calling anyone "gifted" when it comes to art is still a subjective as hell thing. As you can't measure art or gifts at art or anything else in that direction.
And I still think you can do an immense amount of different builds with everyone getting the same items. Because everyone looks at them differently and creates different things from it.
[Edited for bashing]
My husband is an artist. I lost count how many times I've heard people say - to his face - that if only they had the base materials he uses, they'd be able to create the same things he does.
<small snip>
And guess what? Even when we give those people the exact same mats he uses, they cannot create the same, or similar things. <small snip> Not everyone is an artist, different people have different skills and are gifted in different areas.
You just took what people were asking for completely the wrong way, and twisted it.Let me put this in other terms in hopes to make my statement clearer. When you (general) put emphasis on the furnishings used in a contest as a means to justify the reason(s) why certain people were chosen, you (again, general) deny those people their creativity and skills.ValkyriesWolf wrote: »
[Snip]
It isn't just haughty and some misplaced elitism, it's just plain wrong. And do you know why? Because art is always 100 percent in the eye of the beholder, 100 percent subjective.
You can't go and say people's work is lesser art than your husband's, just because he might be "gifted" with whatever he does. Hell, probably won't like your husband's work, depending on what he does, and think for myself "what crap is this?". Everyone likes different things, and a great many things are considered art by either people or law. ( if you know Beuys' Fettecke, you know what I mean. If not, Google it...) Yes, putting butter on a chair and in the room's corner is considered art as well. I don't like it, I thankfully don't have to like it, because that's the wonderful thing about art: everyone looks differently at it. And the only true art in it is the fantasy, the imagination and the work someone put into it. That is the only thing you can perhaps put to measure, if at all. I still think you can't measure art against one another. I don't like Kandinsky or Schumacher or Beuys. I think most of their pieces are crap for Me. But for someone else they hold great worth.
Oh and about creating the exact same thing.... That isn't creative at all. It's good people make different stuff and don't all cater to the large majority. Individualism is great.
OH and about dilettante and this crap with gift and stuff... Yeah, there might be individuals who have a knack for lighting, capturing things others don't, catering to a larger group or more elitist or rich group of people. Might be a gift and useful, still doesn't make anyone a bigger or better artist than others. Might help with getting money or attention or even started, but still, art is subject to the sole opinion of the beholder. Some might even like some "dilettante" work here and there, while others like phallic symbols (at least looking close like those) on canvas declared as "doors" or something that looks like poop plastered on a canvas and hung up (both paintings by Schumacher) and consider it great art. To each their own. So calling anyone "gifted" when it comes to art is still a subjective as hell thing. As you can't measure art or gifts at art or anything else in that direction.
And I still think you can do an immense amount of different builds with everyone getting the same items. Because everyone looks at them differently and creates different things from it.
[Edited for bashing]
Kittytravel wrote: »I know this will likely be met an unpopular view; but there is something to be said about housing contests and the pursuit of the work people put into not just the build itself but the gathering of the items to create said build. You are correct in that anyone could likely put together 100 of the Font of Auri-el and make it look grand and beautiful but the question there is "Are they willing to do so?"
Kittytravel wrote: »"Oh the winner used X house and that's not available on PTS right now.",
"The winner had luxury furniture that wasn't available."
"Well the winner had addons."
Nobody was saying that a less creative person and a more creative person will build something equally creative given the same materials; people were saying that an equally creative person with more materials clearly has more chance to build something more creative than the equally creative person with only a fraction of those materials.
ValkyriesWolf wrote: »Yeah, there might be individuals who have a knack for lighting, capturing things others don't, <snipped>. Might be a gift and useful, still doesn't make anyone a bigger or better artist than others. <snip> art is subject to the sole opinion of the beholder. <snip> As you can't measure art or gifts at art or anything else in that direction.
ValkyriesWolf wrote: »And I still think you can do an immense amount of different builds with everyone getting the same items. Because everyone looks at them differently and creates different things from it.
newtinmpls wrote: »Now I''m imagining a contest restricted to "100 of anything" ... be interesting to see 1-what was used, and 2-what was done.
I really only decorate for myself and if others enjoy it, great! I have entered a few contests, but only from work I already had or intended on doing anyway.
newtinmpls wrote: »I really only decorate for myself and if others enjoy it, great! I have entered a few contests, but only from work I already had or intended on doing anyway.
I have only entered a very few contests, but I do like to hear about and maybe look at some of the entries.
I would say the most fun contests are the ones that I didn't think of/expect and then hearing the suggestion/inspiration I thought "hey, I could do .... THIS"
And again, it's not so much about winning as about hoping that my weird mind will come up with something that is entertaining for both myself and anyone who cares to take a look.
StabbityDoom wrote: »
StabbityDoom wrote: »
It is and it isn't...
I'm sure we have almost all had our fair share of rather snide comments.
StabbityDoom wrote: »StabbityDoom wrote: »
It is and it isn't...
I'm sure we have almost all had our fair share of rather snide comments.
Honestly, no. I'm aware some people do it, but I've been lucky to avoid them. I have mostly seen, when it happens, people react poorly but then try to make up for it. I think a lot of us get that insta-hurt-upset-whathaveyou and then try to tone it down.
But really, Look at the forums before this debacle. Look at people posting their homes. You'll see nothing but support. People on discords (and I'm in a lot) are supportive and kind. Watch Jhart's contest streams, I don't think I've ever seen a nasty comment even once in twitch chat in the hours I've watched. Certainly I've never come across one in my stream. It's just overall the nicest community i've ever been in.