AzraelKrieg wrote: »So you made a post about why people act like they do and it mainly comes down to the fact that being in an online community provides some level of anonymity? Can I have the 5 or so minutes that I spent reading this thread and making this comment back at some point because this topic is pointless as anyone that has been in an online game in the last decade knows this already.
G.I.F.T. Definition:
You're gonna have to Google this for yourselves.
AzraelKrieg wrote: »Ah, that makes sense then. ESO is actually the first MMO I've played but coming into it I knew of the inherent issues with online communities as 4chan was a big thing for my friends during my high school days though I didn't actually go on it.
Mephilis78 wrote: »Trololos thinking day smartie like dat in peopleses but scaried by witcher thingey metal sticks dat hurtun.
AzraelKrieg wrote: »Ah, that makes sense then. ESO is actually the first MMO I've played but coming into it I knew of the inherent issues with online communities as 4chan was a big thing for my friends during my high school days though I didn't actually go on it.
Yep. That's why I would snap on so many people who remotely said something close to annoying me. I mean I've played MMO's before like WoW and LoL. But Blizzard and RIOT Games don't take a lot of the stuff as lightly as ZOS does. Or at least those 2 companies appeared to not tolerate it when I played them. I have in the past tried going back then, but couldn't stand an hour due to the toxicity within the playerbase. When I played, there was naming and shaming allowed (to a degree), and the mods there had no problem digging around heavily into situations to resolve them 'fairly'. ZOS doesn't do that. Not even close.
But anyway, that's why I found it to be such a huge discovery. Sorry if I'm late to the party. ._.
Mephilis78 wrote: »Trololos thinking day smartie like dat in peopleses but scaried by witcher thingey metal sticks dat hurtun.
AzraelKrieg wrote: »Ah, that makes sense then. ESO is actually the first MMO I've played but coming into it I knew of the inherent issues with online communities as 4chan was a big thing for my friends during my high school days though I didn't actually go on it.
Yep. That's why I would snap on so many people who remotely said something close to annoying me. I mean I've played MMO's before like WoW and LoL. But Blizzard and RIOT Games don't take a lot of the stuff as lightly as ZOS does. Or at least those 2 companies appeared to not tolerate it when I played them. I have in the past tried going back then, but couldn't stand an hour due to the toxicity within the playerbase. When I played, there was naming and shaming allowed (to a degree), and the mods there had no problem digging around heavily into situations to resolve them 'fairly'. ZOS doesn't do that. Not even close.
But anyway, that's why I found it to be such a huge discovery. Sorry if I'm late to the party. ._.
Ya, I chalk it up to a "laymans" version of a lack consequence or rather the lack of fear of consquence for one's own words and actions. I grew up before interwebs and one had to be careful in word choice, tone and phrasing as there was a real possibility of being punched in the face. Its a shame that's not the case now.
This lack of control extends past the digital realm. Examples such as the New York power outages some years back, the stadium after Katrina, the Vancouver riots, (A hockey game, really...) the LA riots, repeatedly. Etc.. All saw a breakdown in civility, riots, looting, arson, ***, roving bandits, violence. In some cases within hours of the trigger event, all because the authorities were not able to maintain the threat of consequence. The general masses revert to animals when given the choice.
I personally try to tailor my online interactions as if I were in a face to face conversation. This however, doesn't guarantee a lack of salty.
Good read that stuff.
This isn't really anything new though, is it?
TequilaFire wrote: »Or could it be that some of us just don't agree with what you post most of the time.
But hey glad you found a way to rationalize it.
Rohamad_Ali wrote: »I figured it out a long time ago .
"Immaturity"
No Harvard study required , no ask google , no acronym .
Rohamad_Ali wrote: »I figured it out a long time ago .
"Immaturity"
No Harvard study required , no ask google , no acronym .
Lol. You're the best, bruh. Take this awesome.
To be honest, I didn't experience the nonsense like I experienced in ESO as badly in other games. Whenever I had altercations with people, where people made person attacks and made highly racist remarks or anything of the sort that would be classified as "extreme"? It was always in-person, and handled in-person. So when I would see a lot of jokers online acting reckless, or mouthing off I'd take it to heart.
This is due to where I come from and grew-up, there is no cyber bickering. All that exchanging hateful stuff through the Internet is nonexistent, and things are handled with extreme violence if someone violates someone else on a personal level. So when I come to an environment where it's done regularly, and not handled as I previously mentioned — it threw me through a loop. It confused and irked the heck of me.
This is due to where I come from and grew-up, there is no cyber bickering. All that exchanging hateful stuff through the Internet is nonexistent, and things are handled with extreme violence if someone violates someone else on a personal level. So when I come to an environment where it's done regularly, and not handled as I previously mentioned — it threw me through a loop. It confused and irked the heck of me.
nordsavage wrote: »There is also a saying that "If you run into a-holes all day you might be a *ick.".