NoobinAzeroth Guest Post:
If you have ever played an MMO before you would probably be aware of a certain etiquette required while playing. I was playing with several PUGs earlier this week, and I noticed that certain events during the game triggered certain, and specific reactions from the players in the group. It was a trend that interested me, and decided to focus on Azerothean Etiquette, Ethics and a great idea on my part, for this post.
While you do get alot of players who totally disregard etiquette, by either quitting without warning, or thinking they're Bruce Lee and ninja-ing that sweet pair of rare gauntlets from right under you, the majority of players are honest, and polite people. The first thing that got my attention regarding this, was when someone in the party dinged, and regardless it was only level 25, there was congratulations all round, with one or two members of the 5 man group even cheering. I then started to see other trends such as, when someone says something along the lines of "drink" or "mana break" everyone stops what they're doing and wait for that one person to get back to 100%, without question. Why can't the real world be like this?
Think about it for a minute, how great would real life be, if, everytime you succeeded in something, everyone around you clapped and cheered? Or if you could take a "mana-break" from work anytime you needed to? Would Adolf Hitler have done what he did, if someone, even one person, commended him on his artwork as a young Austrian youth? Maybe, but who knows, human kindness only seems to exist on the internet these days.
If there was someway to track the amount of donations to guild banks and low-level characters in World Of Warcraft in a single month, I'm almost positive that the figure would eclipse the entire annual collections of The Red Cross in one year. You may say that this is virtual money versus real money, but I can assure you, that these players worked just as hard for that 100 gold as they did for that €1, dollar or whatever.
Wait. What if charities could exist in a persistant world like World Of Warcraft? What if I could donate 100 gold to a charity of my choice. Sure, what would a charity do with virtual money? Maybe the likes of Blizzard could donate €1/$1/£1 for every 100 gold collected. I can see this as being good for both the charity, and Blizzard, as it would help remove excess money from the in-game economy, and will help Blizzard's public image. There could even be incentives to donate, such as achievements for donation milestones, titles, and even temporary ingame buffs.
But then again, this isn't a perfect World (Of Warcraft)...
Popular Posts
-
Undercutting is an art form in its own right. Some players undercut by 1 copper, others by 10-50% of the original price. Some use the Quick ...
-
Hey Markco, Just wanted to tell you another gold tip. With patch 3.1 the JC pattern Citrine Ring Of Rapid Healing no longer requires 2 eleme...
-
There’s a lot of information to sort through when bidding, buying, or posting items on the auction house. In fact it’s too much for any one ...
-
The large majority of players using the auction house are one time shoppers/sellers who are unaware of the eb and flow of the river they are...
-
What is a blogging Carnival? A blogging Carnival is an event where bloggers of a certain niche, in this case world of wacraft gold, write ...
-
Mommar here. On some servers it was a barren wasteland as players ran to get the first few hits on their new gaming drug. ...
-
I was up late last night working on some unfinished business (which is code word for playing on Farmville 2) when I received an email...
-
I don't post anywhere near the number of thank you's I get but this one made me smile when I was very tired and busy: "The Guid...
-
Tips, tricks and general suggestions are the bread and butter of what I write here. Sometimes they are simple ideas and other times the...
-
Leveling cooking on alternate toons can be tedious. It is exciting with your favorite toon because you get to check out new recipes an...
8 comments: on "Noob In Azeroth - Charities"
Anonymous said... September 7, 2009 at 10:04 AM
You know what, that may be one of the single best ideas I've ever heard.
Players donate to a charity "bank". Blizzard donates $1 for every 100g ( as an example, probably up to a fixed amount).
They can then use it as a tax-deduction, and we get the warm fuzzies.
I'd certainly be up for that.
Anonymous said... September 7, 2009 at 11:20 AM
Yeah, I hear you. People aren't polite these days. I can sort of understand why they're not, in a way, because you can't see the person behind the character and can thus treat it like an NPC. I'd never be impolite though, even to people I just joined up with to do one daily quest. A quick "thanks" and "good bye" goes a long way. :)
Vedast said... September 7, 2009 at 1:53 PM
Nice idea. But I don't think Blizzard wants to relate X gold with N dollars.
Unknown said... September 7, 2009 at 6:58 PM
I too like the idea behind this. Unfortunately it wouldn't be long before you have someone with a 'farmers mindset' setting up a dud charity.
There would have to be a very short list of well known charities you'd be able to donate to, and a ceiling on the $$'s Blizz would be willing to contribute towards this. Easy to abuse the influx of gold.
DarkKnight said... September 8, 2009 at 3:42 AM
@Vedast:
The rumours are still going strong that secretly Blizzard is running some of the goldselling websites.
/equip tinfoilhat
Vedast said... September 8, 2009 at 8:19 AM
O_o
That would be so... sick.
Anonymous said... September 8, 2009 at 10:41 AM
Theres that guy in Ironforge wanting people to help the orphans... I'd offer but he won't take my money.
Anonymous said... May 8, 2011 at 8:18 AM
I agree with the donate gold idea, and blizzard give charities money. But I don't think we should go too far as too buy ingame buffs and items with real money, because it makes some rich people waaay too OP compared to the others who can't afford it, yet deserve the buffs more.
Post a Comment