No, seriously…shoot them
In my last entry I suggested that the gaming world might be a better place if we simply removed the hardcore gamers from the gene pool. Let’s visit the wonderful world of hardcore gamer angst once again and see how our intrepid adventurers are surviving on server maintenance day.
Here we find the hardcore gamer hard at work trying to bring down the World of Warcraft forums with inane chatter while Blizzard performs its weekly scheduled server maintenance. This week is especially interesting in WoW-land because there is a reputed item duplication bug that Blizzard now has to track down and investigate, thus causing an extended downtime for the servers.

Now, let me try to set the picture for you here and make sure that you understand the context in which I am posting this picture. Every week when Blizzard performs the server maintenance, without exception, you will see umpteen thousand post on the WoW forums from the ne’er-do-well hardcore gamer asking when the servers will be back up.
Every. Single. Week.
This is due to the widely known, yet underreported iliveandbreathethis virus that afflicts untold numbers of hardcore gamers. The only known cure for these poor unfortunate souls is to allow them access to a public forum where they can pound unmercifully on their keyboards for hours on end in a vain attempt to convince Blizzard to “bring up the gawd-damned servers NOW or they will cancel their eight accounts!!!!1!!one!!”.
So, when Blizzard announces that there is going to now be *extended* downtime… well, let’s just say that it is not a pleasant day to be visiting the WoW forums and leave it at that, shall we?
Let’s take a look at some of the juiciest subjects on the forums in that picture. There are those that feel that the item duplication bug will cause a rollback of the servers, which would mean players losing untold hours worth of work (”no choice but to rollback”). Then there are those that think those people are idiots and should die a horrible death for even proposing that a rollback is imminent (”to the idiots saying rollback + rested exp”). Of course, there are the occasional clueless newbs who only wish that they could be as elite as the hardcore gamers who are chatting about a rollback (”whats rollback? can someone please tell me?”). And then you have your sleepy-eyed hardcore gamer who likely just woke up from a marathon 96-hour play session during which he did not move once from his chair, instead choosing to simply eat, drink, and shit where he sat while he simultaneously ran three different characters on three different computers. And then of course chose to post a whole new topic in the forums rather than fucking read the forums (”i just got on… what the heck is going on??”).
Then you have your plain and simple angry gamers. Life is not fair, and these folks pull no punches in making sure that Blizzard (and everyone else) fucking knows it (”fix the god damned servers”, “rollback?! … then rollback my money too !”, and “Blizzards Customer support…s nothing?”). And last, but not least for certain, you have the sad and lonely hardcore gamer who just wants everyone to get along (”i just want to play”).
Well, there you have it folks. It’s a sad day for gamers everywhere, or as we in the real world like to say, “It’s Tuesday”.




on July 20th, 2005 at 5:33 pm
Preech on Brother Dave you have summed up my thoughts on this crap exactly.
So called “hardcore” games are a bane to game developers. Why? Because these guys bitch and bemoan things the loudest in order to get things the way they want them, not for what would be best for the game or the community.
In a mystery novel they would be dubbed “Red Herrings” since that is what they are an unnecessary distraction that takes you down the wrong path if you follow it. But unfortunately with games, developers cannot unfortunately say “So sod off and self improve yourself a few hours earlier than normal with porn” because that is bad PR. We have to coddle and calm down the peanut gallery, assure them that everything will be OK, quash their bullshit rumors and suggestions and then finally when all that is done we can actually get to work at fixing the very issues that need to be addressed.