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Let us inspect other players equipment

  • Eormenric
    Eormenric
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    It could be helpful in a way and very bad in another.
    There are many wannabe elite players in the game who could simply kick a player from a dungeon/trial because someone does not wear the gear they think is ''best'' for their role.

    I completely agree with this. I do not want to get kicked because my gear isn't what someone else would use--but still performs well beyond the minimum requirements for content.

    The alternative, though--because I do think viewing gear would be helpful beyond anti-meta aggression--is to allow this but also require a reason for kicking someone. E.G. "You've been kicked from the group for harassment." Except, excuse me, I haven't said a word beyond "Hello". I'm going to report this. And now the three elitists get punished for trying to secretly get rid of my anti-meta antics. Because right now, it's really dumb to get abruptly kicked as a tank because dps cries, "Where is my minor courage?!"
  • SilverBride
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    Troodon80 wrote: »
    I haven't seen any good reasons mentioned. Getting unsolicited advice is intrusive, not helpful.

    Strongly disagree. I've seen a few in this topic, as well as others, and even other MMOs.

    Please name some of these good reasons, because I haven't found any.
    Edited by SilverBride on December 6, 2021 8:38PM
    PCNA
  • newtinmpls
    newtinmpls
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    Hard NO.

    people who can see into each others drops were toxic enough...
    Tenesi Faryon of Telvanni - Dunmer Sorceress who deliberately sought sacrifice into Cold Harbor to rescue her beloved.
    Hisa Ni Caemaire - Altmer Sorceress, member of the Order Draconis and Adept of the House of Dibella.
    Broken Branch Toothmaul - goblin (for my goblin characters, I use either orsimer or bosmer templates) Templar, member of the Order Draconis and persistently unskilled pickpocket
    Mol gro Durga - Orsimer Socerer/Battlemage who died the first time when the Nibenay Valley chapterhouse of the Order Draconis was destroyed, then went back to Cold Harbor to rescue his second/partner who was still captive. He overestimated his resistance to the hopelessness of Oblivion, about to give up, and looked up to see the golden glow of atherius surrounding a beautiful young woman who extended her hand to him and said "I can help you". He carried Fianna Kingsley out of Cold Harbor on his shoulder. He carried Alvard Stower under one arm. He also irritated the Prophet who had intended the portal for only Mol and Lyris.
    ***
    Order Draconis - well c'mon there has to be some explanation for all those dragon tattoos.
    House of Dibella - If you have ever seen or read "Memoirs of a Geisha" that's just the beginning...
    Nibenay Valley Chapterhouse - Where now stands only desolate ground and a dolmen there once was a thriving community supporting one of the major chapterhouses of the Order Draconis
  • jaws343
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    Troodon80 wrote: »
    Troodon80 wrote: »
    There are as many reasons for it as there are against it.

    I haven't seen any good reasons mentioned. Getting unsolicited advice is intrusive, not helpful.
    Strongly disagree. I've seen a few in this topic, as well as others, and even other MMOs. Just because you refuse to acknowledge something as good or bad doesn't, objectively, make it so. But then again, this falls outside the purview of discussion on merits and downsides and more into the realm of purely personal opinion.

    I acknowledge there is bad. Games like FFXIV prohibit addons in general (though there are no client side checks for things like external damage sharing, so some can be used on a "don't ask, don't tell" basis), but more specifically stated as things like damage share addons because of potential elitist and toxic behaviour. However, they do allow an Inspect feature. ESO, rather, is the opposite and, in my opinion, has more toxicity because of it; it's much easier to go "Wait... I'm doing 90% of the group DPS..." and kick the other DD for no other reason. In FFXIV, you never really know exactly how much you or the other person is doing. In ESO, they don't need to see your gear to vote kick, they can see their own percentage damage done via addons. If ever there was a reason to kick someone, it's because of their DPS and not simply because of what they're wearing. And even if you're wearing off-meta gear, it doesn't mean your damage has to be abysmal. If DPS is the "issue," it's likely not just your gear that's the "problem."

    Unpopular opinion, at least according to many people in this topic: If someone can help me do better, I'm all for hearing it. Obviously, being able to tell the difference between destructive criticism and constructive criticism goes a long way. If someone is just going to message me saying "You suck" then nothing good comes from that. If someone messages me saying "Hey, I see you are using this, I recommend doing this instead because XYZ reasons," explaining their reasoning and logic, much good can be gained from it.

    The fun part is, you are only describing the behavior of PC players. Because console players have zero way to actually tell how much DPS one another are doing.

    So rather than exacerbate the problem by adding in an intrusive gear check function, maybe remove the ability to tell how much dps other players are doing on PC if it is such a problem.
    Edited by jaws343 on December 6, 2021 7:51PM
  • SydneyGrey
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    Sounds like it would just be used to bully and denigrate people. No thanks.
  • vivisectvib16_ESO
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    This is ridiculous its not in game. It helps alot of new or returning players with what they should wear. I know as returning player... im blindsighted by all the different attributes and stats with new skill tree + combinning with gear sets....

    Why? So I can have some elitist chud tell me what I should and shouldn't be wearing? No thanks.
  • SilverBride
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    spartaxoxo wrote: »
    wolfie1.0. wrote: »
    I have already seen friendships end and at least one guild dissolve over arguments over gear and build choices during what was supposed to have been a set of fun dungeon runs. We don't need pug drama to have this as well.

    I lost a friend in WoW years ago over a build. We were both Rogues and he thought I should be using his build. I said I was happy with mine but he kept pressuring. He got so upset that I wouldn't change that it soon turned into harassment.

    He sent me very offensive tells and in game mails and called me filthy names. This was before you could put an account on ignore, so every time I ignored a character he just created a new one to continue the harassment. I finally submitted a ticket and they read the mails he had sent me. I never saw him in game again.

    Unsolicited "advice" is not helpful and is very likely to create conflict. And I can guarantee it will be used to "help" whether we want it or not.

    WOW, that's insane! I can't imagine how someone can get that worked up over someone else's build. That dude was a creep. I honestly only ever seen it be like a dumb disagreement in a pug group, not something that extreme. That's wild to me.

    Yes it really took me off guard, especially since we had been good friends until then.
    PCNA
  • Harvokaan
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    Just log the run by using /encounterlog and after that post the log as private, you will be able to see gear, buffs and dps comparision between you and the second dd.
    I see nothing toxic in ability to see other ppl gear or dps but I know there are ppl who will be toxic even without those tools and will behave toxic no matter if they can see that stuff or not.
    This should be used as a tool to improve your own gameplay, if we wouldn't implement some functionalities because some toxic players might use it wrong, there would be no chat in the game, lol
  • spartaxoxo
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    spartaxoxo wrote: »
    wolfie1.0. wrote: »
    I have already seen friendships end and at least one guild dissolve over arguments over gear and build choices during what was supposed to have been a set of fun dungeon runs. We don't need pug drama to have this as well.

    I lost a friend in WoW years ago over a build. We were both Rogues and he thought I should be using his build. I said I was happy with mine but he kept pressuring. He got so upset that I wouldn't change that it soon turned into harassment.

    He sent me very offensive tells and in game mails and called me filthy names. This was before you could put an account on ignore, so every time I ignored a character he just created a new one to continue the harassment. I finally submitted a ticket and they read the mails he had sent me. I never saw him in game again.

    Unsolicited "advice" is not helpful and is very likely to create conflict. And I can guarantee it will be used to "help" whether we want it or not.

    WOW, that's insane! I can't imagine how someone can get that worked up over someone else's build. That dude was a creep. I honestly only ever seen it be like a dumb disagreement in a pug group, not something that extreme. That's wild to me.

    Yes it really took me off guard, especially since we had been good friends until then.

    Man, that just makes it so much worse. I'd have been so heated and confused at the same time. Glad that the game took decisive action against that dude. I was mostly just thinking it would be it be nice because I remember playing another MMO that had it. And mostly what it would be used to do is for people trying to improve to kind of be able to do it more quietly, since you wouldn't necessarily know they inspected you. They'd just look at what people who were higher skill but a similar playstyle were wearing and get ideas on what they should wear too. And with so much gear in this game, it seemed like a good idea.

    But I never experienced the harassment involved with that to that degree. I thought it would just be like a dumb argument in like a PUG you'd kick someone over. Like the worst that ever happened to me was someone attempting to inspect my gear in game and then using it to try to say my argument wasn't good on a forum, even though the argument being made had nothing to do with gear or skill. Unfortunately the moron didn't even get my gear and named some other person lol. He ended up getting tore apart for trying to bring someone's ingame stuff into the forums AND got clowned for getting the wrong person.

    But I guess it makes sense that anything that can be used to monitor whatever someone is doing, will also get used for more extreme types of abusive behavior. Such a shame that creeps like that misuse these kinds of things.
    Edited by spartaxoxo on December 6, 2021 9:09PM
  • Troodon80
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    JKorr wrote: »
    Carry that on a bit.... There are ways to provide help if someone asks for it. If they don't ask for advice...well. That's what the Ignore list is for.
    That's exactly what the ignore list is meant for.
    JKorr wrote: »
    If I see you're still using the crappy gear I'll vote to kick in any group you get into.
    This can happen even if they can't see the exact details of your build in-game (especially with ESO Logs now displaying the information). If it's to the extreme that they're going to harass someone like that and vote kick because of a build choice, even if the build works and they can perform adaquately, then they belong on the ignore list and not a person I would spend or waste time talking to. They're not "omnipotent elite," they're just toxic. I've even had people at relatively low levels tell me something is "literally meta" without understanding what meta even is because they read it in a build guide somewhere.

    If people are going to go the route of saying "inspection" will cause greater persecution, then "officially" ZOS should also distance themselves from content creators for endorsing a meta in the first place, because by the same logic it "fosters toxicity." If we didn't have builds guides showing "meta," people wouldn't be able to make assumptions about a builds' effectiveness.

    This patch alone is quite possibly one of the most interesting in terms of builds. We now have magicka DKs using Venomous Smite and Azureblight in trash pulls for AoE damage, for example. While the "meta" is Sul-Xan and Burning Spellweave. People are testing sets that were never considered before and are coming up with incredible combinations to optimise their damage.
    jaws343 wrote: »
    The fun part is, you are only describing the behavior of PC players. Because console players have zero way to actually tell how much DPS one another are doing.

    So rather than exacerbate the problem by adding in an intrusive gear check function, maybe remove the ability to tell how much dps other players are doing on PC if it is such a problem.
    My point is, addons in ESO are going to be more of an issue than an inspection, based on the reasoning of every single other MMO to date who have inspection but disallows addons. FFXIV is also available on console, by the way, has inspection and displays loot drops as a base game feature, and you get a ban if you harass someone about their damage while using an addon to see DPS on PC.

    I don't propose copying every other MMO, however. Quite the opposite. ESO stands on its own and it is one of the reasons why people like it. I'm just stating that "Inspection" is not the issue people are making it out to be, versus the toxicity of someone doing DPS and seeing, with an addon, what % DPS they're doing; and said example has been incredibly rare in my experience. It's a proverbial mountain out of a molehill.
    Please name some of these good reasons, because I haven't found any.
    I already named one good one. It can be used as a means to improve if given advice, or simply to learn from others (that's technically two). Whether or not the advice is accepted or rejected.

    It would also enable you to see at a glance what sort of styles, outfit, costume (including colours), or polymorph someone is using without perstering them. And various other "good" reasons that have been given in the previous pages that people are intent to ignore. If one is so intent to ignore the good, I'm personally content to ignore the "bad." Which doesn't make it much of a discussion now, does it?

    The feature could also be an opt-in and be disabled by default, just as it is with Encounter Logging, as someone else suggested.

    For reference, people already have ESO Logs. Despite people saying it's an "after-the-fact" tool, there's also Live Logging. You can see what a person is using after the first trash mob pull. If this was such a big issue and people were as vile as suggested, we would have many, many, many more people on the forum saying "I got kicked from the group and harassed because someone was logging" and the tool would fade from existance, be condemned by ZOS, and people using it would be banned. We do not, and ESO Logs seems to be here to stay.

    But even with the debate, I don't imagine the feature even happening, nor do I specifically want it to happen. Again, just stating that it's not as big of an issue as people make it out to be.
    @Troodon80 PC | EU
    Guild: N&S
    Hand of Alkosh | Dawnbringer | Immortal Redeemer | Tick Tock Tormentor | Gryphon Heart
    Deep Dive into Dreadsail Reef Mechanics
  • drunkendx
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    Absolute no.

    Stay out of my loot drops, too.

    S.

    100% this

    I' don't wanna some tryhard looking at my gear.

    And then "giving me advice" on how to get better.
  • xclassgaming
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    No, this promotes major toxicity. this happened in wow before and was so toxic. Awful idea.
    Give us clannfear mounts!
  • SilverBride
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    Troodon80 wrote: »
    Please name some of these good reasons, because I haven't found any.

    I already named one good one. It can be used as a means to improve if given advice, or simply to learn from others (that's technically two). Whether or not the advice is accepted or rejected.

    Getting into another player's business and offering unsolicited advice is not a good reason. That comes across as presumptuous rather than helpful.

    If a player wants to improve they can ask for advice, or use one of the many sites dedicated to that purpose.
    Edited by SilverBride on December 7, 2021 1:19AM
    PCNA
  • spartaxoxo
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    Troodon80 wrote: »
    Please name some of these good reasons, because I haven't found any.

    I already named one good one. It can be used as a means to improve if given advice, or simply to learn from others (that's technically two). Whether or not the advice is accepted or rejected.

    Getting into another player's business and offering unsolicited advice is not a good reason. That comes across as presumptuous rather than helpful.

    If a player wants to improve they can ask for advice, or use one of the many sites dedicated to that purpose.

    Yeah. If someone wants the advice, they'll ask and can just link you their gear. Seeing so many people want this because they want to try to give unsolicited advice to random people they don't even know definitely makes me reconsider wanting this idea.
    Edited by spartaxoxo on December 7, 2021 1:19AM
  • SilverBride
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    spartaxoxo wrote: »
    Troodon80 wrote: »
    Please name some of these good reasons, because I haven't found any.

    I already named one good one. It can be used as a means to improve if given advice, or simply to learn from others (that's technically two). Whether or not the advice is accepted or rejected.

    Getting into another player's business and offering unsolicited advice is not a good reason. That comes across as presumptuous rather than helpful.

    If a player wants to improve they can ask for advice, or use one of the many sites dedicated to that purpose.

    Yeah. If someone wants the advice, they'll ask and can just link you their gear. Seeing so many people want this because they want to try to give unsolicited advice to random people they don't even know definitely makes me reconsider wanting this idea.

    If they made a toggle to make your gear visible or not then it would be on the player if others approach them. But it definitely should not be the default.
    PCNA
  • Troodon80
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    Getting into another player's business and offering unsolicited advice is not a good reason. That comes across as presumptuous rather than helpful.

    If a player wants to improve they can ask for advice, or use one of the many sites dedicated to that purpose.
    So you're not addressing anything else in my post? Just the advice aspect? Nothing about it being an opt-in feature? Or about ESO Logs and the fact that we don't have the problem you're stating we would have as though it were an immutable and inevitable fact?

    [snip]
    [edited for baiting]
    Edited by ZOS_Icy on December 7, 2021 12:14PM
    @Troodon80 PC | EU
    Guild: N&S
    Hand of Alkosh | Dawnbringer | Immortal Redeemer | Tick Tock Tormentor | Gryphon Heart
    Deep Dive into Dreadsail Reef Mechanics
  • Sylvermynx
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    Troodon80 wrote: »
    Getting into another player's business and offering unsolicited advice is not a good reason. That comes across as presumptuous rather than helpful.

    If a player wants to improve they can ask for advice, or use one of the many sites dedicated to that purpose.
    So you're not addressing anything else? Just the advice aspect? Nothing about it being an opt-in feature? Or about ESO Logs and the fact that we don't have the problem you're stating we would have?

    [snip]

    If this was implemented here, i wouldn't expect it to be "opt in only". Considering the amount of actual forum outcry it took to get esologs set to off as default....

    Yeah. Opt in would have to be hard fought I think....

    [edited to remove quote]
    Edited by ZOS_Icy on December 7, 2021 12:15PM
  • spartaxoxo
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    spartaxoxo wrote: »
    Troodon80 wrote: »
    Please name some of these good reasons, because I haven't found any.

    I already named one good one. It can be used as a means to improve if given advice, or simply to learn from others (that's technically two). Whether or not the advice is accepted or rejected.

    Getting into another player's business and offering unsolicited advice is not a good reason. That comes across as presumptuous rather than helpful.

    If a player wants to improve they can ask for advice, or use one of the many sites dedicated to that purpose.

    Yeah. If someone wants the advice, they'll ask and can just link you their gear. Seeing so many people want this because they want to try to give unsolicited advice to random people they don't even know definitely makes me reconsider wanting this idea.

    If they made a toggle to make your gear visible or not then it would be on the player if others approach them. But it definitely should not be the default.

    Yeah. That could work. A toggle that's off by default like auto-stealing items.
  • Troodon80
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    Sylvermynx wrote: »
    If this was implemented here, i wouldn't expect it to be "opt in only". Considering the amount of actual forum outcry it took to get esologs set to off as default....

    Yeah. Opt in would have to be hard fought I think....
    Considering what ESO Logs does, it's very easy to see who is doing what. Even with anonymity. There is no opt-in/out feature. There is anonymous and not anonymous. If someone wanted to whisper someone else to "educate" them on their build, they can already do so. It's already a non-issue, and so would it be for an inspect feature. If ZOS did do something like an inspect feature (and I believe they won't, by the way), I would expect it to be "This user is private, you cannot see their gear and cosmetics."
    @Troodon80 PC | EU
    Guild: N&S
    Hand of Alkosh | Dawnbringer | Immortal Redeemer | Tick Tock Tormentor | Gryphon Heart
    Deep Dive into Dreadsail Reef Mechanics
  • dem0n1k
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    I think it would be handy in PVP when I don't recognise the animations/effects from new sets. Sure, I could just ask the enemy player what set it was... that usually has a positive result! omglol XD
    NA Server [PC] -- Mostly Ebonheart Pact, Mostly.
  • M0ntie
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    In PVP you can see from your death recap what killed you.
    Honestly as someone starting out I would not recommend looking at what some random person was running - there are a lot of people who don't know what they are doing, or who are running different load outs for specific reasons. For example when running random normal dungeons I often run a skill or two that needs levelling but which aren't actually useful for the build.

    I agree this would be a bad idea because of the potential for toxicity.

    There are heaps of youtube videos and sites that offer generally well qualified advice and explanations about what setups are good.
  • francesinhalover
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    This is ridiculous its not in game. It helps alot of new or returning players.

    You mean it helps new players lack build diversity and get bullied bacause some old players tell them what to do or kick them instead of letting them play the game.

    Lol GG casual players.

    I understand your point of view however .
    Edited by francesinhalover on December 7, 2021 3:03AM
    I am @fluffypallascat pc eu if someone wants to play together
    Shadow strike is the best cp passive ever!
  • Arrodisia
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    Sylvermynx wrote: »
    Troodon80 wrote: »
    Getting into another player's business and offering unsolicited advice is not a good reason. That comes across as presumptuous rather than helpful.

    If a player wants to improve they can ask for advice, or use one of the many sites dedicated to that purpose.
    So you're not addressing anything else? Just the advice aspect? Nothing about it being an opt-in feature? Or about ESO Logs and the fact that we don't have the problem you're stating we would have?

    [snip]

    If this was implemented here, i wouldn't expect it to be "opt in only". Considering the amount of actual forum outcry it took to get esologs set to off as default....

    Yeah. Opt in would have to be hard fought I think....

    Yes this could be a possible problem. Even as a toggle feature, imho, it shouldn't be in the game. There's way too much potential for it to be abused like the dps meters and champ points and effectively could be used to further exclude players who are learning rather than help them. Btw, they can already get their build advice from friends and websites where builds are tested and proven to function at "ab and c" levels with "xy and z" content and even have a lot of hints and advice to use them efficiently. oh and guess what? The authors of those builds encourage players to pick or create a build that matches their play style rather than only be told what's BIS, since BIS is useless if you don't like or can't replicate that playstyle.

    If it's available at all guilds and groups would insist it's turned on in order to join groups and guilds.Therefore, it would still be invading a player's privacy and is exactly why dps meters should be removed. Players should only be able to see their own dps and no other player's DPS. It would add to toxicity and divide players even more. Multiple games have gone down that road only to alienate and lose casual players, which is something ZOS can't afford to do right now.

    [edited to remove quote]
    Edited by ZOS_Icy on December 7, 2021 12:16PM
  • Hapexamendios
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    A discreet vote for hell no.
  • SilverBride
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    If it's available at all guilds and groups would insist it's turned on in order to join groups and guilds.

    That's a very good point I hadn't considered when I mentioned a toggle. Consider that idea retracted. 😳
    PCNA
  • AlnilamE
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    This is ridiculous its not in game. It helps alot of new or returning players with what they should wear. I know as returning player... im blindsighted by all the different attributes and stats with new skill tree + combinning with gear sets....

    And how exactly would looking at my gear while I'm at the crafting station or the bank help you? My main character has at least 4 different set-ups for different things and you wouldn't know one from the other.
    dem0n1k wrote: »
    I think it would be handy in PVP when I don't recognise the animations/effects from new sets. Sure, I could just ask the enemy player what set it was... that usually has a positive result! omglol XD

    The death recap will usually tell you. If not, then players in your own alliance will.
    Troodon80 wrote: »
    Sylvermynx wrote: »
    If this was implemented here, i wouldn't expect it to be "opt in only". Considering the amount of actual forum outcry it took to get esologs set to off as default....

    Yeah. Opt in would have to be hard fought I think....
    Considering what ESO Logs does, it's very easy to see who is doing what. Even with anonymity. There is no opt-in/out feature. There is anonymous and not anonymous. If someone wanted to whisper someone else to "educate" them on their build, they can already do so. It's already a non-issue, and so would it be for an inspect feature. If ZOS did do something like an inspect feature (and I believe they won't, by the way), I would expect it to be "This user is private, you cannot see their gear and cosmetics."

    Yeah, but you have to turn on ESO Logs at the beginning of the encounter, and then remember the username of the "anonymous" that was in your PUG so you can whisper them about their build.



    The Moot Councillor
  • Oreyn_Bearclaw
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    I would add something to the interaction wheel. Request to inspect gear. If accepted, it shows their loadout. If denied, it does not.

    Also, cant this be done with logs if you really want, assuming you run with a group? Even if they aren't signed up for logs, I think it shows as anonymous or something. Not hard to figure out who is who.
  • TheImperfect
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    He sent me very offensive tells and in game mails and called me filthy names. This was before you could put an account on ignore, so every time I ignored a character he just created a new one to continue the harassment. I finally submitted a ticket and they read the mails he had sent me. I never saw him in game again./quote]

    Wow that is next level toxic.
  • edward_frigidhands
    edward_frigidhands
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    This is ridiculous its not in game. It helps alot of new or returning players with what they should wear. I know as returning player... im blindsighted by all the different attributes and stats with new skill tree + combinning with gear sets....

    No player is obligated to reveal to you their gear or build.

    There are tons of resources online as well as a very active community that can help you get setup with this information.

    You can assess player performance via meters and parses.
    Edited by edward_frigidhands on December 7, 2021 9:40PM
  • LalMirchi
    LalMirchi
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    Once again, IMHO - Please NO
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