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Destiny

Discuss all things Destiny.
Edited by Urayamashii: 7/31/2017 3:42:58 PM
6

TL;DR How to teach raids & Going forward from here in Raids

Interactive group that asks questions about raids

21

Avid learners who seem to absorb spoken material

8

One guy ranting the entire raid (callouts,etc)

2

The guy who sits in a fraction of the map

0

How many lost childs are there?

3

50% who don't like PvE content

0

I Don't Have Time For This

6

Hey [i]Day One[/i] player here, This rant is mainly for pug's (pick up group) so carry on if the above makes no sense! Consideration is appreciated but can also result in huge wastes of precious mental faculties, copious amounts of time, or emotional strain. Good news everyone, I think I broke some people. I know... why is that good news? Well short story short, I took it upon myself and formed a pug for a fresh VOG heroic and asked that people come play with the body text, [i][b]Solo Carries/Teaching the Raid[/b][/i]. I know how cruel of me. To say the least, opening the gate, Conflux Cp, Oracles Cp, went fairly well. Small hiccup of about 3-4 wipes on templar and we went the gorgon labyrinth in less then an hour. Yay. We get down to gatekeepers and I switch off my usual helpful guidelines and tips and don't say anything as we kill the original gatekeeper and began opening mars... and venus. now, old news to some, learning players tend to go haywire fairly quickly, but the strange phenomenon was, no one took initiative. I know how cruel and demeaning could I be to do this to poor unsuspecting "Beginner Raiders." The silence went on for about five wipes and moral began to plummet, so I continued observing. Now props to the more experienced raiders of the group noticing something was wrong. (At this point, several people had formed habits which were just sitting on sync plates/vex gates and hope for the best) So much for our smooth as heck run. Here are six guardians in the Vault (VOG) with no more helpful guide, no more leader/mentor/savior and a raid that is at the final moments. An hour goes by, confessions come out about how little people really knew (relic holding, which plate/gate should be first, etc.) and solved in a matter of about six attempts. Again, yay. This rant is mainly for pug's so carry on if the above makes no sense! Just was looking for some opinions on how people want to learn raids when they don't ask questions. Tired of people, coming into the raids, lying they know how to do anything, play cute, and then we spend 30 minutes on one part because no one takes initiative. We all know we don't have "unlimited" amounts of time and have breaking points. (mental, time, etc.) Why sit there and not get involved? Are you pessimistic and don't like your voice? Are you afraid a dumb question is dumb? Why yes to both, in most cases. Why do you care though? For real, three long years of content from the bungie lads and gals, and you want to sit there in the raid doing what you do? Ay boy, listen to this wall of text and tell me to -blam!- off! This is not my area to be putting my attention to! Long time raider, first time OP, be gentle. **thanks for listening ***did you know that only 7.4% of players have the raiding party achievement? Complete a Raid with a full team of your clan members

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  • There is this amazing thing called YouTube where you can find strategies and guides for raids.

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    • I still remember the first day when Wrath of the Machine. I was fortunate enough in a great team of six (Keepers of the Seraph) beat everything till Aksis Phase 2 from 10:AM to 10:PM and...one thing i noticed that in order to succeed a raid. 1) There must be a person who took the initiative to be a leader. 2) A lot of patience from everybody. No yelling, no mocking. 3) Listen actively to each other. No stupid joke or complaint. *** the worst things to encounter in a raid is when you were in a team of screaming kids or having an a-hole teenager who thought he knew all so that he could put all the blame on you when it came to failure. Especially in LFG. I strongly recommend the100.io where you can find many respectable adults who will nicely talked and guided you through the raid. You should be a sherpa in that site.

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      • I don't raid, simple as that 😳

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        • I would put it like this: When I start playing a videogame, I wanna play a videogame. I don't want to read walkthroughs, watch youtube videos or listen to a guy explaining step by step where I should stand, what to use, when to use it. My first raid was Crota. I think it was around House of Wolves, when me and a buddy tried doing it by ourselves, then we got another guy in at the bridge, where he basically soloed the rest, with us watching. It was cool and impressive, but not the best experience. A while later I got a bunch of noobs and muscled through VoG. We had one guy who had done it before, but basically told him to shut up unless we REALLY got stuck on something. And when we finally killed Atheon, it was amazing! It felt like we did it ourselves. And that's what a raid should feel like. You shouldn't be afraid to ask stuff or say you don't understand. There should be no angry yelling about who's fault it was that we failed. All the people I have played with says the same thing; raiding with me and my friends is the best experience. So much fun, laughing, some failing and zero stress. So you fell of the plate. Big deal. I blew myself up with a rocket. No worries. Need something explained? Sure thing. Wanna try using the relic? Here you go. Point is it should be fun. And not one of the people raiding today KNEW what they were doing the first time they went in. So give people a chance. A chance to learn, to fail, to adapt and to excel. One of my friends met a guy on the forum who said he had never done a raid, because people always kicked him and his brother when they said they were deaf. So my friend said; that's not right, got them in the fireteam and started Vault of Glass. A few hours later they had both completed their first raid. Turned out the guy was an awesome player and did really well, especially since he couldn't hear the callouts. Now they have been through all the raids, and are looking forward to D2. TLDR (lazy bums); Games are supposed to be fun to experience, not a chore you get angry about doing. Pick a character and start playing. Best way to experience anything new in a game.

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          • Hmmm. I have an idea. As a raid noob who is up front about it, I've been kicked from parties for not knowing and asking what to do before we even get there. As you can imagine, that doesn't encourage honesty. I've been belittled for not knowing what to do or not having the "right" weapons and gear needed for the raid. Dying on "easy" parts and other stuff. Basically there is a lot of demand for people to know what to do even if they've never done it before. I always got "you should study it on YouTube before wasting our time" type lines. Raid noobs want to raid and so don't say anything, it's the elitist attitude that some/most have that makes the newbies feel like they have to pretend. So far I've finished on raid start to finish and it was a Sherpa running a full raid noob team.

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            • As most groups go, do it, wipe, understand why it happened, try again, hopefully progress is made. As a raid sherpa, most success comes from not hand holding, but trusting them with a task and see how well they execute it after a few wipes. ~[i]TheGreatNike[/i]

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