It's easy enough to find more advanced players to PVP against. I'm sure the OP would feel something when picking on someone their own size, perhaps they should give it a try.
Op doesn't like the game. I can sympathise with that. I love the game personally, but I can see how some might not like it. Certain elements of it (powerplay, SCBs, Empire over-power) are pretty bad and need addressing soon. I also wish they'd ditch the MMO thing and give us a proper single player experience, and release mod tools so we could make our own ships, stations, weapons etc.
But if you hate the game you don't go and stomp all over other people trying to play it, you simply move on and find something you do like playing.
It's kind of like going camping for the first time, realizing that you hate being out, hate not having a bathroom, hate not having a mattress, hate not having fluffy pillows, and deciding there and then that camping isn't for you, but on the way out ripping down everyone elses tents. It's just obnoxious, childish and rather pathetic behaviour.
This sort of behaviour is why online gaming is considered as sociopathic as it is.
Ah Elite: Analogies back in effect. It's not anything like that really, is it? What you described would be a violent criminal act, outside the laws of the campsite and the country, which would cause potentially expensive damage to people's real property and quite possibly ruin their holiday and leave them feeling physically threatened. He just blew some people up while staying quite within the rules of the game they were all playing. Cheap, below the belt, one sided? Certainly... but not even close to the type of behaviour you are equating it with.
Op doesn't like the game. I can sympathise with that. I love the game personally, but I can see how some might not like it. Certain elements of it (powerplay, SCBs, Empire over-power) are pretty bad and need addressing soon. I also wish they'd ditch the MMO thing and give us a proper single player experience, and release mod tools so we could make our own ships, stations, weapons etc.
But if you hate the game you don't go and stomp all over other people trying to play it, you simply move on and find something you do like playing.
It's kind of like going camping for the first time, realizing that you hate being out, hate not having a bathroom, hate not having a mattress, hate not having fluffy pillows, and deciding there and then that camping isn't for you, but on the way out ripping down everyone elses tents. It's just obnoxious, childish and rather pathetic behaviour.
This sort of behaviour is why online gaming is considered as sociopathic as it is.
What the OP did is a review on how seriously the game is lacking in certain fundamental features which are essential to be there consequently before release or before one starts to think about building a multiplayer game.
I love rationalization, particularly when it is so spectacularly wrong.
No. The two acts are actually pretty similar. If, on his way out of the campsite, he'd have just pulled peoples pegs up and tossed them to the ground there, he wouldn't have been doing anything illegal at all. Indeed this is the kind of thing unruly children do. He'd have been a nuisance, but the police wouldn't prosecute anyone for that.
The people in those tents are annoyed, and can have their camping experience ruined. They will have to spend some time putting their tents back up, just as those players destroyed will have to spend time recovering what they lost. Unless they pack up and go elsewhere - a distinct possibility.
Unfortunately he did it without his victims' permission, or any regard for their feelings at all. He behaved appallingly. Hence the argument.
I find it odd that these debates are even brought up. I would like to think that when people are socialised as children they usually learn games of "pretend" such as Cops & Robbers, Cowboys & Indians etc which deal with scenarios of fictional death and crime. These childhood games should prepare people to be able to suspend the rules of reality when taking part in a fictional games rule set. I'm flabbergasted that we have adults that cannot apply the same things to Elite.
I find it odd that these debates are even brought up. I would like to think that when people are socialised as children they usually learn....
Yeah, they usually learn to "play nice".
I find it odd that people need to be told this.
You don't have children then.
How convenient that you snipped off the parts about Cops & Robbers. In that scenario one child plays as the bad robber. Both children understand that the robber isn't really a criminal in real life and that it's just a game.
How convenient that you snipped off the parts about Cops & Robbers. In that scenario one child plays as the bad robber. Both children understand that the robber isn't really a criminal in real life and that it's just a game.
'Playing nice' means not breaking the rules, not sulking when you lose or gloating when you win.
Basically what we have here is a scenario where certain people are projecting their own fears and insecurities regarding social interaction onto others.
Have children. Than you can talk about children, and upbringing. And you'll know what you're talking about.
Which is exactly what the Op did by his own admission.
He couldn't enjoy the game, so went to the starting area and targetted easy newcomers, in a sulking fit.
Basically what we have here is people who have read the Op, have seen that by the Ops own admission he was "pathetic", and have enough in the way of social skills to realize that you to talk to people, not at people, as you have just done.![]()
Which is exactly what the Op did by his own admission.
He couldn't enjoy the game, so went to the starting area and targetted easy newcomers, in a sulking fit.
Basically what we have here is people who have read the Op, have seen that by the Ops own admission he was "pathetic", and have enough in the way of social skills to realize that you to talk to people, not at people, as you have just done.![]()
I have never done it myself - but what he did was well within the rules of the game. There is nothing inherently wrong in what he did, regardless of what the OP thinks of his own actions, this is the game the player stepped into. Some players will greet them with open hostility - a lot of the time they will be a better pilot in a better ship. You don't choose the rules of engagement - the game does, and the game says that this is fine.
I have never done it myself - but what he did was well within the rules of the game. There is nothing inherently wrong in what he did, regardless of what the OP thinks of his own actions, this is the game the player stepped into. Some players will greet them with open hostility - a lot of the time they will be a better pilot in a better ship. You don't choose the rules of engagement - the game does, and the game says that this is fine.
For the first half of my rampage, I "advertised" my presence in the system as a "psycho". I warned players I was coming after them by crooning their names and giggling. I did pseudo-Gollum impressions. I stopped in the middle of fights to type out Wham! and Kajagoogoo lyrics.
The science of awkwardness, you'll enjoy it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o268qbb_0BM
There are laws, and then there are rules, and then there are guidelines, and then there are the basic tenets of personal conduct which, while not binding, are the social precepts we tend to adhere to in order to be considered decent people.