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Kyleran
Bitter Vet™
Joined: 9/13/06
Fools find no pleasure in understanding, but delight in airing their own opinions. Pvbs 18:2, NIV |
Back when I first started playing MMORPG's, the guilds I belonged to all had websites/forums, much as they do today. But it seems to me the traffic on them was much greater, with most of the guild members at least stopping by to check them out regularly, even if they didn't post much. (and they were almost always full of new posts on a regular basis) But lately (the last 5 years or so) it seems they sort of are falling out of favor. Every guild has one it seems, but the for the most part my observation is very few people actively use them. I know the (fairly large, long term) guild I'm currently in has a Facebook site the draws away traffic, and of course voice coms helps facilitate daily communications sucha raid info and what not. So, just like the US post office, Why do you suppose this is happening, what's really changed. Is people's attention focused on other communication vehicles or is the written word just falling out of favor.
"What gamers want ... is new game play patterns different from what they've experienced before" - Axehilt |
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7/31/12 12:48:04 PM#2
I'm a big forum user and prefer for my guilds to keep up to date via our guild website. I will NOT invite someone if they give me a hard time over signing up and utilization, honestly. I think it's important for people to be up to date on things and a website is the easiest way to do it. But I've noticed a lot of whiners in this department over the last few years and ... well, I don't like it, honestly. |
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Odinthedark1
Advanced Member
Joined: 10/06/11
"A fool learns from his own mistakes, a wise man learns from the mistakes of others." |
7/31/12 12:48:05 PM#3
Surprisngly i dont think so, almost all hardcore raid/pvp guilds have websites, and even some casual ones do...but its more so for guilds that actually make events for their guild members i would think. a boring guild that does nothing together wouldnt need one. |
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7/31/12 12:49:43 PM#4
Haven't used guild forums / website in a few years. Every game now a days offers a MOTD. If there is a raid or something and you don't mention it on the MOTD then you obviously didn't want me to take part. Doing the whole sign up for slots nonsense is way to convoluted for something like playing a video game. |
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7/31/12 12:51:19 PM#5
Official game forums and later wikis ended up taking a lot of the traffic that would previously have gone to guild forums. There's also the issue that in most games, guilds don't really serve any purpose for most players other than as a chat channel. |
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7/31/12 1:02:46 PM#6
Well they don't really serve a purpose in most mmo's. Voip is a much easier form of communication. Forums become more important in games(or "hardcore" guilds) where you would need to discuss things, but they're usually just decorative. Something to make the guild seem more legit. You can keep people up to date using what vent or teamspeak 3 offers, or even the game itself. |
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Loktofeit
Elite Member
Joined: 1/13/10
EVE in 2013 - DUST 514, CSM8, Fanfest, 10th Anniversary, Uprising, Odyssey. Gonna be a good year :) |
7/31/12 1:09:01 PM#7
GuildPortal, GuildLaunch and Enjin are bigger than they have ever been. While many gamers have taken to individual blogs due to the convenience of Wordpress, Blogger, Flickr, etc, many guilds have moved toward the growing portals as a turnkey solution to setting up and maintaining a fully featured site. Guild sites are alive and well, just more centralized.
In the above graph from Alexa.com, you can see that some of these sites are as popular as some of the biggest gaming news sites in terms of reach. What has declined are, as Quizzical pointed out, the the player created guides, wikis, tutorials, etc as the main sites often offer these. The decline isn't as bad as it might seem, though, as a good portion of it hasn't disappeared but just shifted over into the blogging sites, YouTube and other social media channels. filmoret: One thing I have never figured out is why the game devs hardly ever fix simple problems that arise. It is like they don't care about the pvp community. Nitth: What makes you so sure its a simple fix? filmoret: Because most of them are. Sometimes its just changing a number in a code string other times its creating a few variables. However none of them should take over a few hours of coding. |
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7/31/12 1:14:16 PM#8
Look at the evolution of mmorpgs. Most things are soloable. If you do need a group you never need more than 10 people anymore. What do u need a website for. Text your close friends and get on mumble and down the biggest baddest boss.
I hope the sarcasm is clear.
I loved the 40 man raids and i enjoy playing sandbox games with large groups of people. Looking forward to pvp in gw2. but honestly. What is massive about mmorpgs anymore. Hell what is rpg about them as well. Lol.
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7/31/12 1:21:04 PM#9
The best guilds I've been in all had guild forums. At the very least, if was usefull to openly track DKP for guilds that used that loot system.
It was also a good way for people to discuss things that most guildies would miss in guild/vent chat because they were off-line or busy playing to see guild chat. So there was a game aspect to it as well as a fun social aspect to it as well.
Finally, as a class leader officer, I used our class forum to help keep players in my class up to date on enchants, gear uopgrade, etc.
My last guild didn't think having a forum was nesessary, and it turned out to be the WORST GUILD EVER.... |
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7/31/12 1:22:40 PM#10
Originally posted by gravesworn
I agree, MMOs have lost thier way. The game released recenty are just RPGs with a Lobby and mostly ignored CO-OP mode. |
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7/31/12 1:35:01 PM#11
Interesting responses and I have noticed this trend as well. Yes, part of it is certainly that MMORPG's are not really Massive (nor RPG's lol) and most things are soloable- But also the player base has changed. Maybe I am getting Old (no Maybe about it) but I blame texting and the dumbing down of our language. I even think Forums as a whole seem to be dying . I see more and more 1 word posts and far less thought being put into an attempt to voice an opinion. I am actually quite impressed with this Forum and its people (for the most part) but I think we are a minority. The Forum used to be a large part of the gaming experience and nessasary for organization, Voting and voicing ones opinion. The last Guld I helped to run had a forum and hardly anyone participated. "Just tell s whats going on in chat." seemed to be the thought without taking into consideration that we would have to continue to repeat ourselves to everyone who logged in. Joining the Forum was nessasary to be a part of the Guild but generally people applied for membership, joinedf the Forum and never logged in again. Its actually quite sad but is very much a statement of the times and the games we have availible- Nothing complex enough to need discussion and no organization really needed since everything is soloable (for the most part) and the Guild Forum seems only used by the Hardest of the Hardcore . |
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The1ceQueen
Hard Core Member
Joined: 1/02/08
"Always borrow money from a pessimist. They won't expect it back." |
7/31/12 1:37:01 PM#12
I've been playing mmorpg's since Ultima Online, Honestly, I really don't like using guild websites. In the large guilds I've been in I sign up and never return to the site. My own guild atm, a huge pvp guild and I never visit the site. Any information on events for the guild are usually posted in guild messages and talked about constanly in vent and guild chat. I really don't see the purpose for guild websites other than "Look at how awesome our site is". I've found we have found much better people by grouping up with them instead of just talking to them and making them fill out a questionaire on our website.
What happens when you log off your characters????..... |
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7/31/12 1:38:49 PM#13
Guilds just aren't needed these days, given the soloability of present-day MMOs. Thank god, too! Guilds seem to be full of people constantly whining for someone to power-level them, and pleading for someone to give them gear. Then there's the little cliques and the never-ending, trivial dramas that plague guilds. It's bloody annoying just watching it in Guild Chat, never mind going to a website and having to read all the mindless babble and posturing. Thanks, but no thanks. |
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7/31/12 1:43:32 PM#14
Originally posted by rutaq I agree with this too. There is no sense of community in or out of the games really. Even in guilds in these themepark games, people split off into little cliques and hang out in vent, ignoring the rest of the guild. |
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7/31/12 1:44:37 PM#15
Originally posted by Tayah You are in the majority. The problem (as I see it) is that talking in vent to express your ideas only tells those logged in at that time. In a forum you can post and your post will give your thoughts on X problem/event/whatever for all to see and for a conversation to flow even while you are offline. Only those currently online will know Tayah's opinion on X, where a Forum would allow for everyone to understand your stance without repeating yourself. I understand your reasoning and yes, lately Forums are pretty unimportant due to the complexity (lack thereof) of most games. But even so, not always. But as stated, your feelings are the norm. If it isnt spoken in Vent it must not really matter. |
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7/31/12 1:45:34 PM#16
In theory the guild has/had 200 some members at one point. But from reading the forums you would thnk it was only 5 or 6 people.
Sign up for an event? HAH! Most of these tools can barely ever be bothered to use voice-comm, even if they don't speak they could listen, right? Not a chance... Hard not to cry when they say "Oh do we have a website??" Completely disregarding the MOTD that they see every day. |
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7/31/12 1:46:26 PM#17
Originally posted by SaintPhilip Good post it does cover a decent part of issue but there is still things not mentioned. The gaming/mmo community has changed drastically. Back in EQ1 i would be on forums and be very active trying to do the raid/dungeon stuff. Now a days i don't bother. Simply because the gaming community is becoming more and more full of... i believe the term i read somewhere on here was "Spreadsheet player" if your not X with X you don't get a spot in the dungeon/raid group. Back then you saw another Paladin doing better and you wanted to be better because you saw someone doing very well. The way things are now that doesn't happen because the second your seen for not doing as good you have joe blow X analyzing your gear/skills and telling you your mom slept with mr rogers. TLDR - The communities in mmo's lately are making playing more like a job then a actually "playing" and scold you severly for not being up to there standards. |
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7/31/12 1:50:41 PM#18
Originally posted by Dibdabs The Guild game mechanic is not the reason for these problems. If you ever get a chance to play an MMORPG that has emphasis on community and teamwork, you will quickly notice something. In games like this, you get more mature, intelligent and cooperative players who are looking for a community and team gameplay, and you get a better mix of different types of people rather than just kiddish combat-punks with egos and a sense of entitlement the size of a house. Make no mistake about it. The design and attitude of these modern themeparks attracts the kinds of people who build guilds like the one you described. |
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7/31/12 1:54:03 PM#19
I've been MMOing since Ultima and I gotta tell ya, I never ever made use of guild websites and forums. Ever. That would entail reading what people have to say. That takes time. Time I could be spending killing things and leveling up and/or making money and/or talking to people INGAME during a raid and/or crafting and/or etc etc etc etc. Every guild I've ever belonged to had a site/forum, and I've been a part of some guilds for years at a time. I don't know what any of their websites ever looked like, but we were all plenty familiar with each other ingame, and we had each other's e-mails and skype (when it came to be, obviously). That's always been more than enough for me. "Forums aren't for intelligent discussion; they're for blow-hards with unwavering opinions." |
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7/31/12 1:56:42 PM#20
Originally posted by SaintPhilip
Yeah, repeating things over and over to people who just logged on is a biggie.
I don't think players who have never been officers / raid leader truely understand what it's like to plan and organze a raid (It's easier now that the size have becomne smaller). To them, they only have to show up. They don't need to worry about other people's schedules, making sure there are enough tanks, heals, comsumables, etc. They don't have to worry that Mrbubble the holy paladin won't be on tonight so you'd better get another healer. And they certainly don't need to lern the fight themselves. They just wait for the raid leader to tell them what to do.
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