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This sums up my feelings. I don't like being beholden to a schedule for gaming, so I have practically 0 interest in raiding these days. I would just flake out, so I don't bother committing.I dont like relying on people to do a job in an online game. I also am not really reliable. Fuck raiding.
I don't hate it, but I am no longer fond of scheduled game time so I avoid it.
I don't hate it, but I am no longer fond of scheduled game time so I avoid it.
This sums up my feelings. I don't like being beholden to a schedule for gaming, so I have practically 0 interest in raiding these days. I would just flake out, so I don't bother committing.
Being into my 30s with a family, work, and other shit to do in my life, then this resonates with me. I have done LFR in WoW mainly because I can jump in when I have time, and if something comes up I don't mind ditching the group. I could not put real friends through such shenanigans.
I would say that I enjoyed it...sometimes. I always enjoyed the learning of encounters. The farming, not so much.But what about if you had a guild that let you just show up whenever, and they would be raiding all the time. So forgetting about scheduling, did you actually enjoy the raids themselves?
I think the real question is if every instance had a raid and a group version, and the gear dropped and difficulty was the same, would the raid versions ever be done? I bet not. The hardcore players that would normally do all the heavy lifting in a raid would get geared in the group version, and the people riding the bandwagon would be incapable of doing either.
I see you've raided with usbased on 90% of raids in WoW I'm willing to bet everyone enjoys eating cheesy poofs and letting the rest of the group get them loot.
The downside is a cheese covered keyboard during the dance dance revolution sections.based on 90% of raids in WoW I'm willing to bet everyone enjoys eating cheesy poofs and letting the rest of the group get them loot.