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What's the point of a fansite these days?Follow

#1 Jul 13 2011 at 11:40 AM Rating: Excellent
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Just a curiosity really. Blizzard has done a lot of things that have arguably made an online community less relevant than in the past.

For example:

- Breadcrumb quests lead you to the next zone
- In game Questhelper
- In game guild finder
- Characters are more powerful, making leveling easier
- Simplified stat system makes mix/maxing largely irrelevant to most players
- Dungeon Journal explains boss fights

I could probably add more to the list if I thought about it for a while. When it comes down to it a lot of the compelling reasons I sought out answers on line originally can now be found in game; or at minimum on blizzards website/armory. Not meaning for this to be a dismal post. There's always a place for people with a shared hobby to come together to chat about it. It just seems rather ironic to list one example, that as the theory-crafting community got better tools, those tools were less necessary.

So do you think online WoW forums are less relevant now?
Yes:15 (21.1%)
No:21 (29.6%)
WoW is dying:19 (26.8%)
omg ur ossum:16 (22.5%)
Total:71


Any thoughts? Also given the ways things have changed in game, do you still think there's a compelling reason for new players to visit an online forum? What would that be? What do you see the purpose of a community such as this one being now and in the future? If you're a newer player, why did you come here?

So many questions...
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#2 Jul 13 2011 at 1:18 PM Rating: Decent
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Quote:
- Breadcrumb quests lead you to the next zone


No reason to visit a forum when a bit of exploration will tell me where to go.

Quote:
- In game Questhelper


While it did help smooth out leveling you still had no need to visit a forum to figure out quests. Not to mention you could download an add-on that does roughly the same thing the in game one does.

Quote:
- In game guild finder


Yeah a forum did help quite a bit on this one. I still believe that a forum is the place to go to find the better guilds and things like that. Guild finder though does lower the need for more casual people to find guilds though.

Quote:
- Characters are more powerful, making leveling easier


Not sure how forums have any effect on the ease of leveling. :S

Quote:
- Simplified stat system makes mix/maxing largely irrelevant to most players


My experience tends to lead down the road that the people who min/max before are still doing it. There is just less of "got to check the forums to see what the number crunchers say about my class today" kinda bull. I swear it felt as though some classes kept jumping back and forth on what you should prioritize with what gear. It got very confusing and hard to keep up with unless you were into that sort of thing. Like I told my guild back in WotLK, I play the game to pew pew, not to sit around and crunch numbers on a calculator.

Quote:
- Dungeon Journal explains boss fights


A bit misleading there. It explains what the bosses abilities do, not the fight itself. It does not tell you that you need to stack on this part, you need to stand there, you need to jump through that hoop, etc...


To answer your question though, yes new people should visit an online forum and become active members in it. There are things that are said in forums that you will never find in the games interface. Not to mention friendships are made and bonds are formed. Smiley: grin

Oh and the person who voted "WoW is dying" is a numbskull. Smiley: oyvey
#3 Jul 13 2011 at 1:54 PM Rating: Excellent
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Criminy wrote:
Quote:

- Characters are more powerful, making leveling easier



Not sure how forums have any effect on the ease of leveling. :S


The thought being that people ask for help when they get stuck.

I just kind of made the off-hand observation (true or not) that people I was seeing on forums playing something like a Arms Warrior in spellpower cloth with a white shield tended to be more along the lines of level 60ish, instead of level 20ish. It probably sprung from that.
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#4 Jul 13 2011 at 2:07 PM Rating: Good
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It's still useful to players who are new to MMOs to have an online community. I've only been playing WoW since ~November, but I played FFXI for years, so I'm familiar with taking the initiative to go look things up on my own without creating new threads for every little thing. I know what kind of information I want to be looking up, and how to find a reputable site to do so on. That said, there are people who are not very internet-savvy, and forums are a great place for them to be able to turn to.

People are always going to have questions, and they're not always going to be easily answered via in-game information. Sometimes in-game stuff comes across as ambiguous; sometimes you just want to check with another human being to confirm or double-check conclusions you've made based on in-game information.

I guess you could say that the forums have lost some relevance, but I don't think they're anywhere near irrelevant. As someone who greatly enjoys the social aspect of online gaming, forums are an extension of the in-game community I associate with.
#5 Jul 13 2011 at 2:15 PM Rating: Excellent
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someproteinguy wrote:



Any thoughts? Also given the ways things have changed in game, do you still think there's a compelling reason for new players to visit an online forum? What would that be? What do you see the purpose of a community such as this one being now and in the future? If you're a newer player, why did you come here?



Well, Wow O-boards, game and armory don't have Darqflame and Pigtails avatars, so there is a plus!

On a serious note, I like the community here, even tho I lurk most of the time. I'd say it's one of the best on Zam. I guess that's your answer. It's all about the people that are the regulars.
#6 Jul 13 2011 at 3:04 PM Rating: Excellent
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I rarely used fansites to figure stuff out in game. I usually just use their forums to chat with other folks about the game.
#7 Jul 13 2011 at 6:38 PM Rating: Excellent
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Devildawgs wrote:


On a serious note, I like the community here, even tho I lurk most of the time. I'd say it's one of the best on Zam. I guess that's your answer. It's all about the people that are the regulars.


Agreed. I have been lurking for roughly 4 years. Checking this forum and a few of the classes that I play is almost a daily ritual even if I average about 10 posts/year...I enjoy reading the contributions from regulars and learning (or living vicariously Smiley: smile) in the process. The Alla forums have made Wow a much richer experience for me as I am a pretty casual player.

And while I have played Wow long enough to figure out most of casual problems I run into, it's nice to check online to see if I'm dealing with a bug or if I'm just a bad player. It's usually the latter but sometimes I am surprised...
#8 Jul 13 2011 at 7:02 PM Rating: Default
Still need PVP help, gears, enchants, arena tips etc...
#9 Jul 13 2011 at 7:46 PM Rating: Good
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WoWhead is still nice for instantly knowing who sells what, what mob drops what, and where especially for crafting recipes, and it is good for looking up where something drops and/or what vendors have what instead of having to travel way out to, say, Vashj'ir to find out what exactly the Earthen Ring vendor sells, for example.

Edited, Jul 13th 2011 9:47pm by Lyrailis
#10 Jul 13 2011 at 7:56 PM Rating: Good
Criminy wrote:
Oh and the person who voted "WoW is dying" is a numbskull. Smiley: oyvey


That's another topic entirely (one which I think we actually already did).

On this topic, though, I think that forums still do serve a purpose. Sure, they're no longer about in-game data, but I don't think they ever really were. It's always been a place to talk about the game, not about how to play it.

Sure, it's useful for that purpose, but that's always been a secondary.
#11 Jul 13 2011 at 8:12 PM Rating: Good
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Criminy wrote:
Oh and the person who voted "WoW is dying" is a numbskull. Smiley: oyvey


After reading this I went back just to vote that WoW is dying. How many mmos have you played?
#12 Jul 13 2011 at 9:34 PM Rating: Good
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I believe I first came to this site to look up information on how to become a Jedi back when Star Wars Galaxies wasn't a joke and stuff.

A while back, other sites became dedicated to compiling information and keeping it up to date, so basically there's nothing much to do here, anymore. We used to produce guides with talent builds and whatnot for all the classes. ElitistJerks, ArenaJunkies and Wowpedia provide the strategies, builds and such. Wowhead provides the raw data. So now, if people come here looking for builds, we refer to those sites.

Allakhazam's WoW pages are mainly here for the social aspect. You come here if you want to just talk to other players without having to worry about being banned for asking something that someone answered somewhere in a 12-page guide sticky, or if you don't want to sift through a dozen incoherent troll threads on the first page.
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#13 Jul 13 2011 at 10:13 PM Rating: Excellent
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someproteinguy wrote:
What's the point of a fansite these days?


+1
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#14 Jul 13 2011 at 10:14 PM Rating: Excellent
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AND WHAT'S THE DEAL WITH AIRLINE FOOD?
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#15 Jul 14 2011 at 2:15 AM Rating: Good
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Mazra wrote:
Allakhazam's WoW pages are mainly here for the social aspect. You come here if you want to just talk to other players without having to worry about being banned for asking something that someone answered somewhere in a 12-page guide sticky, or if you don't want to sift through a dozen incoherent troll threads on the first page.
This site's also a decent place to ask questions when you want some advice not laden with massive technobabble and maths.
#16 Jul 14 2011 at 3:12 AM Rating: Good
Websites for WoW in particular for me was a big part of playing the game in years past. I came here mainly, and searched through the comments of an item, or quest I was interested in. I used James leveling guide heavily before there was an add on for quest helping.

With everything you mentioned that has changed within the game, it's just not needed anymore. Coming to a forum for the social aspect isn't a huge thing for me to do. I mainly do so now just to get the daily "news" as it were. I come to ZAM very rarely now. With the separation of its database from its forum community and of the like, I just don't see a real need. I never really contributed here other than a few premium subs, and I never made friends with anyone. Oh sure, most of your names are recognisable to me over the years, I have just never joined the "crowd", so to speak.

The Oboards are just entertaining, with the QQ's, and my regularly trolling my servers forum. But with today's add ons and my knowledge of the game, I find myself needing to search a website for information at a bare minimum.

But omg ur ossum.

Edited, Jul 14th 2011 5:15am by Magilicotti
#17 Jul 14 2011 at 3:31 AM Rating: Excellent
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Magilicotti wrote:
I never really contributed here other than a few premium subs



Your mario avatar was awesome.
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#18 Jul 14 2011 at 5:24 AM Rating: Good
Horsemouth wrote:
Magilicotti wrote:
I never really contributed here other than a few premium subs



Your mario avatar was awesome.


Smiley: grin
#19 Jul 14 2011 at 6:59 AM Rating: Good
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someproteinguy wrote:
Just a curiosity really. Blizzard has done a lot of things that have arguably made an online community less relevant than in the past.

For example:

1 Breadcrumb quests lead you to the next zone
2 In game Questhelper
3 In game guild finder
4 Characters are more powerful, making leveling easier
5 Simplified stat system makes mix/maxing largely irrelevant to most players
6 Dungeon Journal explains boss fights


1: They nearly always did, only the breadcrumbs were small, and further apart. Now we have breadloafes instead, at every corner, and spiced up with a blue item now and then. Has nothing to do with a forum, it's just because WoW attracts all kinds of people (you know what I mean).

2: again, not forum-related. Add ons and wowhead did exactly the same.

3: Just a toy. It's not likely to place you in the exactly right guild for you without many tries.

4: They are, but I don't see this related to a forum in any way.

5: min/maxing is just as relevant as before, only the simplification leaves less room for error. Also, there WILL be mouthbreathers failing at equipping their characters as long as there's more than 1 stat to choose from.

6: It doesn't exactly explain the fights, it only tells us the abilities. And to be honest, some people will still fail, no matter how much information they get. They will only be increasingly more pathetic the more information they get.



For me, a (non O-boards) forum is about talking to and with people who are not quite as stupid as some people you may find on the oboards or ingame. A retreat from the stupidity of the wow community without having to leave wow as a game.
#20 Jul 14 2011 at 8:19 AM Rating: Good
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Well one reason I came to Alla in the first place was Google! When I first started playing WoW whenever I googled something Allakhazam was always there right on top, so kudos for good advertising.

From there I started lurking and eventually posting. One thing I really like about Alla is that they aren't "hardcore" - EJ and "wannabehardcore" - MMO-Champ. People here don't try to over complicate simple information. I don't want to sift through pages and pages of stats and equations and spreadsheets of numbers to find what I'm looking for. They provide accurate and beneficial information.
#21 Jul 14 2011 at 12:29 PM Rating: Default
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Blizz has done a lot of things in the past two years that have, at first glance, appeared to be augmentations to the game, but upon further (real world) testing have proven to be detractors from the overall experience.

As you put it – “Bread crumb leads” seemed like a good idea. How frustrating was it when you knew you had to do something in Dustwallow with spiders, but where the hell were the spiders…? While on one hand I’m happy to quickly and easily find the quest – it does take a bit of ‘feel’ out of the game.

The same could be said for the dungeon finder. At first glance, this thing was a great idea, but after experiencing life after /LF-Random… All it has done is create a hostile atmosphere, an entitled tanking class, and destroyed the on-realm community.

When you look at BoA gear (or anything else that helps you power through lower level BS) – again ~ At first glance you want to congratulate Blizzard for recognizing that the game is really all about ‘end-game’, but when you watch how it played out… Well it wasn’t quite so clean. People complained that old content was boring – so Blizz made it easy to become OP using BoA gear. While this did make the boring period progress quicker – it made the boring period MORE boring. I first killed dwarves in the Searing Gorge years ago and it was exciting and while it has grown tedious over the years – making it both trivially easy and tediously boring didn’t improve it much. I’d equate the “BoA Solution” to boring (dead) content to the “Air Freshener Solution” to foul smells.

“Wow. This place smells like ****. Let me spray some of this potpourri scent in the
air…….. Wow, now it smells like **** and Potpourri.”


Instead of making it better. They made it trivially easy and just faster…


So – IMO, a lot of the changes in the last few years have been designed to fix problems, errors, and complaints, but something was lost in the translation. I think that something is/was the online community and feel to it all.
#22 Jul 14 2011 at 1:28 PM Rating: Good
Borsuk wrote:
Blizz has done a lot of things in the past two years that have, at first glance, appeared to be augmentations to the game, but upon further (real world) testing have proven to be detractors from the overall experience.

As you put it – “Bread crumb leads” seemed like a good idea. How frustrating was it when you knew you had to do something in Dustwallow with spiders, but where the hell were the spiders…? While on one hand I’m happy to quickly and easily find the quest – it does take a bit of ‘feel’ out of the game.

The same could be said for the dungeon finder. At first glance, this thing was a great idea, but after experiencing life after /LF-Random… All it has done is create a hostile atmosphere, an entitled tanking class, and destroyed the on-realm community.

When you look at BoA gear (or anything else that helps you power through lower level BS) – again ~ At first glance you want to congratulate Blizzard for recognizing that the game is really all about ‘end-game’, but when you watch how it played out… Well it wasn’t quite so clean. People complained that old content was boring – so Blizz made it easy to become OP using BoA gear. While this did make the boring period progress quicker – it made the boring period MORE boring. I first killed dwarves in the Searing Gorge years ago and it was exciting and while it has grown tedious over the years – making it both trivially easy and tediously boring didn’t improve it much. I’d equate the “BoA Solution” to boring (dead) content to the “Air Freshener Solution” to foul smells.

“Wow. This place smells like ****. Let me spray some of this potpourri scent in the
air…….. Wow, now it smells like **** and Potpourri.”


Instead of making it better. They made it trivially easy and just faster…


So – IMO, a lot of the changes in the last few years have been designed to fix problems, errors, and complaints, but something was lost in the translation. I think that something is/was the online community and feel to it all.


Breadcrunb: That's not a breadcrumb quest. A breadcrumb is "you did all the quests here, now go to this other hub." It leads you to more quests. Much better than "I finished Tirisfal glades, I guess I'll go East. OH G-D MY ***!"

Dungeon Finder: Idiots are idiots. I find entitled tanks become such by the dps being openly hostile to them on the assumption that they already ARE entitled tanks. If you're nice to others they're nice to you and while I get an occasional hell PuG I get a lot more success than failure.

The lower levels: Cataclysm did a lot for the pre-60 content, improving quest flow and having interesting plots. How can you complain about Searing Gorge when it has the best capstone quests in the entire game? Outlands and Northrend are like slamming into a wall, though.
#23 Jul 14 2011 at 5:30 PM Rating: Good
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Not gonna lie, the only thing I ever used Zam for in WoW was the forums. Those are still relevant, though to be fair less so now that dedicated TC sites have cropped up.

Though the WoW forums had never been as active as, say, the FFXI ones were. There just wasn't as much to talk about, with only endgame ever being a point of concern.
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#24 Jul 14 2011 at 6:23 PM Rating: Excellent
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Well, for the longest time FFXI didn't have an official forum. So places like Zam and KillingIfrit were where players had to go to talk about the game.
#25 Jul 14 2011 at 11:45 PM Rating: Excellent
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Quote:


Breadcrunb: That's not a breadcrumb quest. A breadcrumb is "you did all the quests here, now go to this other hub." It leads you to more quests. Much better than "I finished Tirisfal glades, I guess I'll go East. OH G-D MY ***!"



I thought there were always the breadcrumb quests, as you finished an area sending you on to the next "logical" zone which might not be level appropriate for where you're at. I don't know for sure as I've always been one to work at completing a zone before moving on, skipping some zones to come back to later when I had nothing really going on. But I thought if you pretty-well completed a zone you were lead to a new spot. NOW though, now you finish a quest /ding whatever pop back to the capital to clean out your bags / dump some stuff in the bank and hit the hero board for your next questing spot (I take 'em just for the bonus xp for not really "doing" anything more than finding your next level appropriate spot.
#26 Jul 15 2011 at 12:19 AM Rating: Good
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AstarintheDruid wrote:
Well, for the longest time FFXI didn't have an official forum. So places like Zam and KillingIfrit were where players had to go to talk about the game.
Which was, as the expression goes, a double edged sword. The FFXI forum here had a lot more traffic, but at the same time didn't have an official forum to draw the worst of the posters away, so they ended up much like the WoW Oboards. Some good posters, but a lot of crappy ones to wade through to find the good ones.
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