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All the World’s a Stage: What Blizzard seems not to see



When you decide to roleplay, a whole new world of imagination opens up to you — soon you realize that all the WoW is a stage, and all the and humans merely players.

definitely cares about roleplayers. They listen to us and there’s a special place for us in their hearts — which is natural, because in many ways, their whole world has its own and background which means a lot to them, and while all players get to see that unfolding through their activities in the game, roleplayers are the ones who participate in that by making their own within .

The problem is that and its roleplayers are on pretty different wavelengths when comes to what roleplayers want to receive and what wants to provide. wants to give us more neat toys and perfect places to enjoy, with lots of and behind them — and while this is all very interesting and everyone enjoys , most roleplayers are wishing they had more sandbox-like tools, spaces and they can easily bend or shape in their own ways, to use for their own purposes.

may care, but do they really understand? Read on for insights may be missing.

The Brazier of Gimmicky Fluff

In the latest Blizzcast, my esteemed colleague Jim H. Moreno asked a question through his troll Wichdocta, about what new were coming up for roleplayers to use. In fact there are lots of in WoW which roleplayers use all the time, but we don’t always use these in the ways thinks we will. In the Blizzcast, they brought up like the Brazier of Dancing Flames, which they thought was neat because of how looks so nice and has all this interactivity — you can kiss , bow to , or even with and turn into a dancing flame yourself.

The thing is that most roleplayers probably won’t use in their actual roleplaying experiences. ’s and pretty and all, but ’s hard to fit into our characters’ personal . What do you say to people? “Hey, guys, look this neat dancing flame thing I got!” to which they reply, “Hey, that’s pretty neat!” and then you say… “Yup!” And… then you’re done. ’s kind of hard to figure out why your character would have such a thing, except to say that he bought from the Fire Festival merchant. A really creative roleplayer might be able to come up with something Pygmalion-like, “Behold! I have conjured up the woman of my dreams from the passionate element of Fire! Don’t get too close though… the burning passion is contagious. Muahaha.” But for most of us, the only way we can make fit is as a novelty, not actually part of our .

One man’s trash is another man’s neat little prop

So what treasures do roleplayers really love? Ironically, a lot of is stuff that considers “trash.” Legal Documents, A Steamy Novel, and a Small Pocket Watch are all we can use as props that speak volumes about our character when we mention them in our emotes. feels so much better to have an actual item you can link to, so rather than just using an emote like, “Soandso cries on your shoulder,” you can say, “Soandso takes out his Tear-Stained Hankerchief and dabs his eyes.” There’s a feeling of surprise you get when someone uses an item like this in such a way, as if we’re not just playacting a game — that item is really there.

What roleplayers really want in terms of are more props like this. More things we can use to give our characters more expressions of flavor and personality. Elder’s Moonstones and Elune Stones are another great example of which can be used in a variety of ways to fit our . They have a visual effect which could be anything from a spotlight on a theater, to the Light itself granting its blessing to your . Some people figure out ways to use non-combat pets as roleplaying too. Engineers are fond of showing off their pets as their amazing creations, for instance, and one of my Dramatis-Personae found out she could use the Red Helper Box to represent her gnome character’s daughter.

Roleplayers don’t want gimmicks so much as they want tools. The Brazier of Dancing Flames is nice in its own way, but fails as a roleplay item because ’s way too complicated and specific to the Midsummer Fire Festival; tries too hard to be the center of attention, whereas the Elune Stones, for instance, could be used in any number of situations outside of the Lunar Festival, and allow the players’ themselves to stay in the spotlight.

This is the main difference between and roleplayers. Each one wants the child of their own creative inspiration to be in the forefront. says “here, have some toys!” and we ask, “but where’s the tools?”

says all the world really is a stage

In the WoW Q&A Develoment Panel, the very last question that got squeezed in the end was from a roleplayer who to know if was planning on creating cities or other environments specifically for roleplayers. On one hand, their answer was reasonable: different players want different kinds of environments, so rather than create things which are exclusively for roleplayers, they put and character in places all over the world and welcome roleplayers to roleplay there.

They cite the Darkmoon Faire as a good roleplaying spot — and is; I have roleplayed there sometimes, especially when first came out. The toys were a novelty to play with, but they didn’t last the test of replayability — you don’t come back to the tonk machines in the same way you come back to the and . In the same way, as a roleplaying spot ’s good for characters who like to get drunk a lot, but ’s not really what roleplayers everywhere are asking for these days.

Going

What they want is customization. They want to create and spaces which are all their own, not just appreciate the and that comes up with. They want things like houses to live in, family surnames, notebooks they can write in, clothes and disguises they can wear any time or any place, ways to show their personal descriptions and other without needing a special addon to make work. For them, the game is not just consumption of whatever creates, is a sandbox playground, in which they can use the tools to make up of their own within ’s world.

Whether understands this or not, I don’t know. could be that knows full well what roleplayers want but don’t feel that they have the time and energy takes to give to them. I really doubt that they actually want to maintain strict control of the WoW experience and prevent roleplayers from having these tools — rather they just want to play to the widest possible audience, including people who don’t have that creative inclination that so defines roleplayers.

On the other hand, could be that just doesn’t really get what we want, nor have a real understanding of how to give to us. If they did understand, I think they would find we’re not asking for super-fancy complicated stuff that takes a long time to make — just more simple things with multiple uses in different creative situations.

All the World’s a Stage reveals to you the hidden wisdom underlying the mysteries of forbidden knowledge in the depths of mysterious mumbo jumbo! Feast your eyes on the of the ’s , as well as how to make yours unique. Illimine your mind with the method for roleplaying your in a and refreshing way.

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