Everquest Confessions

Cukernaut

Sharpie Markers Aren't Pens
<Gold Donor>
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Lol try playing on live, parcel and full 44 slot bags fills up fast cuh.

Sadly like Bobby I can’t really divulge my worst stuff, maybe when I fully retire from EQ.

I will say so far most of these toxic confessions are still inside the game world; I know of a half dozen or so incidents that spilled outside to real life.


Ill give a pretty wild anonymized one for a friend of mine:

He developed an emotional relationship with a married chick playing online and he convinced her that she needed a divorce -- she has two little kids. She went through with it and he moved out to live near her and is now smashing regularly then raiding. No updates on what the kids call him yet -- this one is a live one in progress. Ill update.


Bobby and Sieger -- spill the beans whenever your ready! This thread will be here waiting for you.
 

Rajaah

Honorable Member
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Lol gfay is as moronic as ec.

North Freeport is the only way. Only Veeshan and maybe 1 other server was smart enough to use North Freeport for trading. I feel bad for all the scrubs that traded in EC back in the day. How awful.

North freeport was vibrant and amazing. It felt like a real city. You had all the evils in the sewers, and they'd crawl through to north freeport from the sewer entrance in west freeport. People loved killing orcs in commonlands for Knights of Truth faction.

There were tons of hangout areas in North Freeport, and there were several static spawn camps for leveling while you were trading too. I got rich while camping the Barb shaman epic spawn in NFP for weeks. Several lowbie/mid level camps as well.

You'd have cliques in back of the Jade Inn, you'd have cliques near the halfling merchant grass area. You'd have Enchanters working in the Jewelcrafting building. You'd have people killing guards and other npc's. You had the cool kids that found ways onto the roofs. You had edgelords training the bankers. And west freeport was super vibrant as a result as well, and you'd have people fighting in the arena all day. It was beautiful. A truly, vibrant city and wonderful trading hub.

Commons and gfay are pure absolute unadulterated trash in comparison. People have nostalgia and fond memories for them for obvious reasons, but you really have no idea how inferior your experience was to trading in North Freeport.

This. Losing North Freeport (and really, losing OG Freeport in general) was one of the worst changes the devs ever made. To a much lesser extent, they also did a terrible remake of Nektulos. At least they ended up revising that one with a re-remake with a layout more like the original. However, Old Freeport is just gone. Too many things are tied into New Freeport from PoR-onward.

Here's a quick, wholesome EQ story: When Kunark came out in 2000 I made an iksar. Even at level 1 I wanted to see Kunark so I ran around through a bunch of different zones without letting any mobs see me. Eventually I reached Skyfire, found Veeshan's Peak (this was before maps, mind you), and managed to stand on top of it. At level 1. There was nobody else around and it was a cool moment.
 
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Sieger

Trakanon Raider
316
364
Ill give a pretty wild anonymized one for a friend of mine:

He developed an emotional relationship with a married chick playing online and he convinced her that she needed a divorce -- she has two little kids. She went through with it and he moved out to live near her and is now smashing regularly then raiding. No updates on what the kids call him yet -- this one is a live one in progress. Ill update.


Bobby and Sieger -- spill the beans whenever your ready! This thread will be here waiting for you.
The number of sordid and often tragic cases of EQ adultery is almost worth its own thread. I do have to say that particular spice of drama seemed way more prevalent 18-20 years ago on retail than it has been on TLP.
 
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Falstaff

Ahn'Qiraj Raider
8,311
3,166
Everquest confessions:

In 1999 I was an immature, 14 year old whiny piece of shit. Sorry to anyone I played with.
 
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Korzax Stonehammer

Blackwing Lair Raider
732
397
Lol try playing on live, parcel and full 44 slot bags fills up fast cuh.

Sadly like Bobby I can’t really divulge my worst stuff, maybe when I fully retire from EQ.

I will say so far most of these toxic confessions are still inside the game world; I know of a half dozen or so incidents that spilled outside to real life.
You fucking tease.
 
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Korzax Stonehammer

Blackwing Lair Raider
732
397
Lol gfay is as moronic as ec.

North Freeport is the only way. Only Veeshan and maybe 1 other server was smart enough to use North Freeport for trading. I feel bad for all the scrubs that traded in EC back in the day. How awful.

North freeport was vibrant and amazing. It felt like a real city. You had all the evils in the sewers, and they'd crawl through to north freeport from the sewer entrance in west freeport. People loved killing orcs in commonlands for Knights of Truth faction.

There were tons of hangout areas in North Freeport, and there were several static spawn camps for leveling while you were trading too. I got rich while camping the Barb shaman epic spawn in NFP for weeks. Several lowbie/mid level camps as well.

You'd have cliques in back of the Jade Inn, you'd have cliques near the halfling merchant grass area. You'd have Enchanters working in the Jewelcrafting building. You'd have people killing guards and other npc's. You had the cool kids that found ways onto the roofs. You had edgelords training the bankers. And west freeport was super vibrant as a result as well, and you'd have people fighting in the arena all day. It was beautiful. A truly, vibrant city and wonderful trading hub.

Commons and gfay are pure absolute unadulterated trash in comparison. People have nostalgia and fond memories for them for obvious reasons, but you really have no idea how inferior your experience was to trading in North Freeport.
Commons or freeport, no one is getting the full nostalgia trip because they changed the zones.
 

Morrow

Trakanon Raider
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Commons or freeport, no one is getting the full nostalgia trip because they changed the zones.
It isn't just specific nostalgia vs specific nostalgia. If you traded in North Freeport you had a far superior experience and superior memories. That just how it be.
 
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Big Phoenix

Pronouns: zie/zhem/zer
<Gold Donor>
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The best part of showeq is seeing all the fellow cheaters.

When I played on Vulak the gl of the "top" guild loved to cheat all the damn time and had no qualms about fucking other people over all the while bragging about how awesome he and his guild was. I remember when time we where racing Zaide Zaide guild for Vox and he wiped them by jumping down into the pit and pulling all the spiders/bears then warping back up onto their raid. Another time was when Kunark was released he warped a bunch of SKs straight to KC and then to VS and insta killed him with harmtouch. He had no shame too seeing as how the first kill on VS resulted in a serverwide message on death and it happened literally 2-3 minutes from when Kunark went live making it obvious it was not a legit kill.

Showeq/macroquest was also incredibly prevalent back in original EQ too. My brother and I both played on the same server but where in different guilds that quasi hated each other due to the competition between them. Well eventually the leadership of my guild starts viewing me with suspicion and talks with me about an unknown/unfair advantage my brothers guild has over ours. Basically accusing me of being a spy because some how theyre beating us to spawns and what not. 14-15 year old me couldnt really process such a thing so it flew over my head then. Come to find out numerous people in my brothers guild all used showeq/macroquest and thats why they would "outplay" us.

Really makes you appreciate how common shit behavior and underhanded tactics are in the world.
 
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RobXIII

Urinal Cake Consumption King
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The best part of showeq is seeing all the fellow cheaters.

When I played on Vulak the gl of the "top" guild loved to cheat all the damn time and had no qualms about fucking other people over all the while bragging about how awesome he and his guild was. I remember when time we where racing Zaide Zaide guild for Vox and he wiped them by jumping down into the pit and pulling all the spiders/bears then warping back up onto their raid. Another time was when Kunark was released he warped a bunch of SKs straight to KC and then to VS and insta killed him with harmtouch. He had no shame too seeing as how the first kill on VS resulted in a serverwide message on death and it happened literally 2-3 minutes from when Kunark went live making it obvious it was not a legit kill.

Showeq/macroquest was also incredibly prevalent back in original EQ too. My brother and I both played on the same server but where in different guilds that quasi hated each other due to the competition between them. Well eventually the leadership of my guild starts viewing me with suspicion and talks with me about an unknown/unfair advantage my brothers guild has over ours. Basically accusing me of being a spy because some how theyre beating us to spawns and what not. 14-15 year old me couldnt really process such a thing so it flew over my head then. Come to find out numerous people in my brothers guild all used showeq/macroquest and thats why they would "outplay" us.

Really makes you appreciate how common shit behavior and underhanded tactics are in the world.

Even the filthiest of casuals seems to be using ShowEQ, or at least the windows version on every TLE. I don't play EQ, but got it to compile fine while playing one of the last TLE server launches. It really surprised me how many people still use it, and don't care that the Win version is super detectable.
 

Louis

Trakanon Raider
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Even the filthiest of casuals seems to be using ShowEQ, or at least the windows version on every TLE. I don't play EQ, but got it to compile fine while playing one of the last TLE server launches. It really surprised me how many people still use it, and don't care that the Win version is super detectable.
People do not care because they will never ever do anything about it. They put minimal effort in even dealing with mq2 and everhack muchless that.

To get a good sense of how many people seq. Go to the VP ground spawns and drop a mage orb around spawn time. It's a herd of morons chasing after it. The "smarter" ones think they catch on and don't move if they see it pop right on top of a mage, so I up my game and drop it a quarter of a second before my gate ports me across zone. By the time they see it on the screen it looks like a legit spawn and they barrel towards it.
 

Cybsled

Avatar of War Slayer
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You didn’t even need showeq early on. You just typed /target mobname and if they were up, you had them targeted
 
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Mrniceguy

Trakanon Raider
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I mained an SK on Solusek Ro server when PoP was current content. It was common on that server for Pugs to NBG group loot. Ornate Bracer Molds were worth a lot of money, like 40-50k because they're FT2 for Clerics.

I would create pug groups for MS BoT with a Druid/Shaman healer and zero other plate classes. I would unequip my Umbracite/EP Bracers and wear Silver Chitin or some other garbage instead. That way when the Wolf Named dropped his Ornate Bracer molds i would automatically win it.

I must have made half a million plat doing this shit.
 
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Xevy

Log Wizard
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I was once in the Bazaar during, I don't know, either PoP or Luclin, and I was just checking the bazaar for siqqq sales on my poor ass lvl 53 warrior or whatever and I saw some weird shit going down. I saw 4-5 of the people in one of the top guild moving REALLY weirdly and facing a wall sitting down. So I followed them and the guy they were trading with to the stall then checked the trader. Dude was selling pre-woke sleeper loot and other insane shit. He had an AoN, Gnome mask, and two other items that were BIG money prizes and he was selling them for nearly affordable prices. I yelled at my brother, who was one of the top blacksmiths and the only High Elf blacksmith to make cultural (so he had big $$$) to get the fuck on. He reluctantly did and I told him to buy all that shit. He didn't even know how good it was, but my Allakhazam loving 13 year old ass knew that shit was gold. So he bought it all for like 160k or something.

Basically it comes out a day or two later that Ezboards had some big flaw in them and some dude had hacked that guild, The Companions, message board and got all the officers account information from a shared pool of passwords and logins. It was more or less what I figured was happening. So they petition a GM and the GM checks everything and because this was classic and they did their job they gave my brother back his money and had him return 3 of the 4 items. He got to keep the AoN because it still dropped and they basically said that could just be counted as a normal sale.

That's the shittiest thing I ever did in EQ and I'm not even sure it was really that bad, because if I remember after buying all that shit I messaged the guild leader of The Companions and told him what I thought was going on which alerted the players to log onto their accounts and kick off the hacker dude.

I don't even think I got anything out of it, I just loved a good deal.
 
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Chukzombi

Millie's Staff Member
71,678
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The number of sordid and often tragic cases of EQ adultery is almost worth its own thread. I do have to say that particular spice of drama seemed way more prevalent 18-20 years ago on retail than it has been on TLP.
i know of way too many instances of EQ adultery, none of which involved me, but i saw how sad things would get between those people. none of my damned business.
 

Pasteton

Blackwing Lair Raider
2,602
1,714
I don’t really feel bad about rp’ing a girl to get free gear because it wasn’t exactly uncommon, though maybe I did it more than I should have.
I do feel bad however about getting multiple peoples accounts banned when I would use them for selling plat. On the bright side I never got banned myself and also paid for a year of rent
 
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Secrets

ResetEra Staff Member
1,873
1,879
In 1999, I joined an IRC chat channel and made fun of someone's nickname and dared my cousin to tell them. The IRC was about a game called Creatures. I had panic attacks about being kicked and banned from the IRC channel, and I swore off social interaction for years.

In 2001, I would have to juggle EverQuest and school. My young self felt like I needed an excuse to leave the game, like when leaving the classroom with a hall pass. I'd make up crazy excuses to just /q out of the game, pretending my network had gone out, to make sure I could get other shit done, like actually go to the next grade.

In 2002, I realized the game was no longer a high fantasy roleplaying experience and tried to hold onto that as long as I could. I'd log in only to go to the Crow's tavern with my then middle school friends and just get wasted ingame.

In 2004, I murdered a Nexus guard during a patch that allowed people to attack NPCs in non-combat zones. My druid still has the Staff of the Nexus. What a horrible thing to do.

In 2005, I realized EQ wasn't aimed at casuals anymore and hopped over to EQ2. I'd make fun of people still playing EQ1 for years because it was a shell of what it used to be.

2006, I joined EQEmulator. This had made a lot of people very angry, and was widely regarded as a bad move.

With 2008, I made my first emulated server after trying to socialize with other people who had their own issues, like Mortenson's Raid Addicts, and aza77's guildwars pvp clone. I was 17 at the time, and I didn't have a fraction of my skills. I tried to find my place in the community, and tried to join up later with folks like Daxum from VZTZ, and contributed small amounts, and my ego grew in turn. I joined up with EQClassic, and tried to establish a reputation as a 'database person' with them, which was just maintaining a bastardized version of Angelox's ax_classic DB that didn't contribute back. I also badgered a person named Doodman until he passed the torch, as he was basically about as interested as Rogean is in EQEmulator's loginserver today.

In 2009, I saw P99 launch. P99 had massive success and I made the conscious decision to join them because I felt EQClassic was 'not going anywhere'. Around the same time, two other individuals wanted to 'betray' Yeahlight by releasing the source code. This was my first incident with drama in the community, and I got caught up in it to the point where I was losing sleep over the anxiety knowing that I caused harm to someone else.

In 2010, I had become a narcissist due to my involvement on P99. I had done small feats that no one else had done, relating to the classic wolves and skeletons via dll injection, and felt high upon my achivement. I ended up getting in a forum spat with Yeahlight in 2011, and that thread was nuked into oblivion. Years later, I would later apologize only to have him berate me for not understanding how he felt, and how self-focused I was on the fact that P99 had success not solely due to me.

In 2011, my ego had inflated to new highs, and Cast (a p99 player and forum dweller here) had started posting 'tranny porn' and gore on the P99 forums. Infuriated that someone would dare fuck with me online, I attempted a bit of 'doxxing', which led to my removal/ban from P99.

In early 2012, I released the EQMac windows hack, after realizing a binary from 2002 could be used to connect to the same server with minimal modifications. Impressed by Rogean and I's collective ability to put it together and make it work, I released it to the public on the FOH forums, not understanding what damage it could do. MQ2 developer eqmule later updated the hack after Todd Schmidt had tried to patch the loophole. About a year later, EQMac was sunset. I realized my actions had consequences and contributed to making TAKProject, the first EQMac emulator by spending about 3 weeks rewriting the emu netcode, so that its players could continue on.

In 2013, I applied to work at SOE on the EQ2 team and was rejected. Being rejected took my ego and crushed it. I spent my time doing a whole lot of nothing, and trying to figure out why that was the case, even though it's very obvious as to why today that was the case. I spent time looking for local retail jobs, feeling like I could never contribute to anything ever again. I also spent a ton of time in private servers, which were almost always using stolen code or binary files to run pirated copies of games with slight or major modifications. Contract that to EQEmulator, which was clean room emulation. I was an adult and needed an income source, but I also refused to take money except for contributions I made myself, so this was a time where I didn't make much money and collected supplemental security income.

In 2014, I was horribly depressed. Seeing the collapse of EQNext and realizing Dave Georgeson sold the world snake oil made me feel like I dodged a bullet, but also made me wonder why I was obsessed with working on a games company to begin with. I met a few industry folks around this time, shared my experience and bonded with them.

In 2015, I was offered a job by one of them, working on one of the games my autism attached to, but as a CSR: All Points Bulletin. From there, I joined the games industry, all while keeping up with pet projects that I'd work on in private. Before too long, the agreement between Daybreak and P99 was made, and it was something I was incredibly happy to see happen. I spent almost my entire time learning and continuing to tinker, got moved over to Hawken's console port as an engineer, shipped my first game, and I can't really tell you more than that without breaking confidential agreements.

Fast-forward to 2021, and I'm still making games... but I am now mentoring younger engineers that are entry level, mentoring hobbyists that have yet to come into the industry, and recounting my experiences over and over so the same mistakes aren't made, all while keeping with me a lifetime full of memories that remind me why I am making games and why I enjoy playing them.

Also I may have hacked a few guild websites on TLPs that pissed me off now and again. Sorry about that. I always struggle with my temper when I get competitive in games. I think that's why I've moved to FFXIV. Less opportunity to have to yell at people. I'm now 30. I tried the EQ TLP and there's so many people who haven't grown past the fact that being the best at EQ isn't the point of the game. The moment I tried to form a raid in FxIV and couldn't, for a target that was up and available to kill, that's when I realized the game isn't for me anymore.

That being said, gmes changed my life. I'm making more than anyone in my family ever dreamed of making. Even at my best, even at my worst, I still have the memories. The fact that I have had the incredible privilege of meeting and interacting with people of all backgrounds is more than enough to want to keep going. I almost killed myself in 2014, but kept going on the hope that maybe there's some new idea, or something to tinker with that I could look at. I taught myself assembly in a few weeks that year. I've had people tell me i'm doing crazy stuff. It doesn't always translate to money, but that doesn't matter to me. What matters is that others down the road get the same beneficial experience I did with games and its industry.

I felt so many different emotions playing, creating, interacting with, talking to, any sort of verb really, with the people who play, develop, socialize and learn on these games. EQ was a big part of that, even if it wasn't 989/Verant/SOE/Daybreak's rendition of EQ.

My mom said I'd never get ANYWHERE playing these games. But I did.
I'm off to tighten up the graphics on level 3.
 
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hEKK

Lord Nagafen Raider
71
54
In 1999, I joined an IRC chat channel and made fun of someone's nickname and dared my cousin to tell them. The IRC was about a game called Creatures. I had panic attacks about being kicked and banned from the IRC channel, and I swore off social interaction for years.

In 2001, I would have to juggle EverQuest and school. My young self felt like I needed an excuse to leave the game, like when leaving the classroom with a hall pass. I'd make up crazy excuses to just /q out of the game, pretending my network had gone out, to make sure I could get other shit done, like actually go to the next grade.

In 2002, I realized the game was no longer a high fantasy roleplaying experience and tried to hold onto that as long as I could. I'd log in only to go to the Crow's tavern with my then middle school friends and just get wasted ingame.

In 2004, I murdered a Nexus guard during a patch that allowed people to attack NPCs in non-combat zones. My druid still has the Staff of the Nexus. What a horrible thing to do.

In 2005, I realized EQ wasn't aimed at casuals anymore and hopped over to EQ2. I'd make fun of people still playing EQ1 for years because it was a shell of what it used to be.

2006, I joined EQEmulator. This had made a lot of people very angry, and was widely regarded as a bad move.

With 2008, I made my first emulated server after trying to socialize with other people who had their own issues, like Mortenson's Raid Addicts, and aza77's guildwars pvp clone. I was 17 at the time, and I didn't have a fraction of my skills. I tried to find my place in the community, and tried to join up later with folks like Daxum from VZTZ, and contributed small amounts, and my ego grew in turn. I joined up with EQClassic, and tried to establish a reputation as a 'database person' with them, which was just maintaining a bastardized version of Angelox's ax_classic DB that didn't contribute back. I also badgered a person named Doodman until he passed the torch, as he was basically about as interested as Rogean is in EQEmulator's loginserver today.

In 2009, I saw P99 launch. P99 had massive success and I made the conscious decision to join them because I felt EQClassic was 'not going anywhere'. Around the same time, two other individuals wanted to 'betray' Yeahlight by releasing the source code. This was my first incident with drama in the community, and I got caught up in it to the point where I was losing sleep over the anxiety knowing that I caused harm to someone else.

In 2010, I had become a narcissist due to my involvement on P99. I had done small feats that no one else had done, relating to the classic wolves and skeletons via dll injection, and felt high upon my achivement. I ended up getting in a forum spat with Yeahlight in 2011, and that thread was nuked into oblivion. Years later, I would later apologize only to have him berate me for not understanding how he felt, and how self-focused I was on the fact that P99 had success not solely due to me.

In 2011, my ego had inflated to new highs, and Cast (a p99 player and forum dweller here) had started posting 'tranny porn' and gore on the P99 forums. Infuriated that someone would dare fuck with me online, I attempted a bit of 'doxxing', which led to my removal/ban from P99.

In early 2012, I released the EQMac windows hack, after realizing a binary from 2002 could be used to connect to the same server with minimal modifications. Impressed by Rogean and I's collective ability to put it together and make it work, I released it to the public on the FOH forums, not understanding what damage it could do. MQ2 developer eqmule later updated the hack after Todd Schmidt had tried to patch the loophole. About a year later, EQMac was sunset. I realized my actions had consequences and contributed to making TAKProject, the first EQMac emulator by spending about 3 weeks rewriting the emu netcode, so that its players could continue on.

In 2013, I applied to work at SOE on the EQ2 team and was rejected. Being rejected took my ego and crushed it. I spent my time doing a whole lot of nothing, and trying to figure out why that was the case, even though it's very obvious as to why today that was the case. I spent time looking for local retail jobs, feeling like I could never contribute to anything ever again. I also spent a ton of time in private servers, which were almost always using stolen code or binary files to run pirated copies of games with slight or major modifications. Contract that to EQEmulator, which was clean room emulation. I was an adult and needed an income source, but I also refused to take money except for contributions I made myself, so this was a time where I didn't make much money and collected supplemental security income.

In 2014, I was horribly depressed. Seeing the collapse of EQNext and realizing Dave Georgeson sold the world snake oil made me feel like I dodged a bullet, but also made me wonder why I was obsessed with working on a games company to begin with. I met a few industry folks around this time, shared my experience and bonded with them.

In 2015, I was offered a job by one of them, working on one of the games my autism attached to, but as a CSR: All Points Bulletin. From there, I joined the games industry, all while keeping up with pet projects that I'd work on in private. Before too long, the agreement between Daybreak and P99 was made, and it was something I was incredibly happy to see happen. I spent almost my entire time learning and continuing to tinker, got moved over to Hawken's console port as an engineer, shipped my first game, and I can't really tell you more than that without breaking confidential agreements.

Fast-forward to 2021, and I'm still making games... but I am now mentoring younger engineers that are entry level, mentoring hobbyists that have yet to come into the industry, and recounting my experiences over and over so the same mistakes aren't made, all while keeping with me a lifetime full of memories that remind me why I am making games and why I enjoy playing them.

Also I may have hacked a few guild websites on TLPs that pissed me off now and again. Sorry about that. I always struggle with my temper when I get competitive in games. I think that's why I've moved to FFXIV. Less opportunity to have to yell at people. I'm now 30. I tried the EQ TLP and there's so many people who haven't grown past the fact that being the best at EQ isn't the point of the game. The moment I tried to form a raid in FxIV and couldn't, for a target that was up and available to kill, that's when I realized the game isn't for me anymore.

That being said, gmes changed my life. I'm making more than anyone in my family ever dreamed of making. Even at my best, even at my worst, I still have the memories. The fact that I have had the incredible privilege of meeting and interacting with people of all backgrounds is more than enough to want to keep going. I almost killed myself in 2014, but kept going on the hope that maybe there's some new idea, or something to tinker with that I could look at. I taught myself assembly in a few weeks that year. I've had people tell me i'm doing crazy stuff. It doesn't always translate to money, but that doesn't matter to me. What matters is that others down the road get the same beneficial experience I did with games and its industry.

I felt so many different emotions playing, creating, interacting with, talking to, any sort of verb really, with the people who play, develop, socialize and learn on these games. EQ was a big part of that, even if it wasn't 989/Verant/SOE/Daybreak's rendition of EQ.

My mom said I'd never get ANYWHERE playing these games. But I did.
I'm off to tighten up the graphics on level 3.
Where's the confession and who's livejournal is this from?
 
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