Not sure which groups you're in in dungeon/raid finders, but those I'm in regularly have 0 communication and people leave immediately at the end of the run without a word said. Maybe you're just That Damn Awesome, Khane, and everybody wants to talk to you. Anecdotally, for me, DF/RF are a means to get to the end of the run. They have nothing to do with social contact whatsoever and they don't lead to friends. They lead to loot and scoot, unless you make a concerted effort to drag people into a conversation, which not everyone (read: most people I've DF'd with) will engage in.
Part of the reason for this is the nature of repeated (repeated, repeated) M/M+ runs. There is no need for communication as far as the execution of the run goes other than an occasional "ready? r. r. r. r." and that's about it.
I have seen Method, Serenity, etc. discussed exactly 0 times in-game outside of guild chat. There is plenty of scuttlebutt on forums and other sites, but out of game discussion is irrelevant to this point. Again, not sure where you're going with this. My only knowledge of who's on top on various servers is from wowprogress, and that's not through contact on the server. That's not community.
Just more blather from a guy who absolutely always has to be the center of attention. Do you ever read what you write?
Part of the reason for this is the nature of repeated (repeated, repeated) M/M+ runs. There is no need for communication as far as the execution of the run goes other than an occasional "ready? r. r. r. r." and that's about it.
I have seen Method, Serenity, etc. discussed exactly 0 times in-game outside of guild chat. There is plenty of scuttlebutt on forums and other sites, but out of game discussion is irrelevant to this point. Again, not sure where you're going with this. My only knowledge of who's on top on various servers is from wowprogress, and that's not through contact on the server. That's not community.
Just more blather from a guy who absolutely always has to be the center of attention. Do you ever read what you write?