All The World's A Stage: RP on a non-RP server

As a result, when I first got into World of Warcraft, I was under the impression that you were expected to role play your character. My poor human paladin (who I had decided had been sent to the order as a child because his parents didn't particularly care to feed yet another mouth after the war, and who was frankly too slow to grasp book learning to make a good priest) quickly learned that any attempt to discuss epic adventure, make comments about how boring life at the Abbey had been, or even treat kobolds as anything other than copper shedding piñatas to be beaten until the glittering candy came out would be treated with extreme derision. I didn't know about things like roleplaying servers back then.
However, I'm a relatively stubborn and mean spirited person. And so, when I rerolled to my first warrior, who I still play to this day over two years later, I decided that I was still going to come up with a backstory for him and role play him when I could. I was aided in this endeavor by my wife and a small group of friends, and so the warrior Marketh on Azjol-Nerub strode into being. Sarcastic, flippant, cantankerous, a veteran of the Third War (a footsoldier then, he'd seen none of the glorious battles or exploding World Trees, he'd mostly been fighting waves of undead and been pushed out of his family farmstead in Lordaeron, having lost most of his family to the Scourge, which he didn't talk about) I took great glee in playing him to the hilt at every opportunity.
Complaining about my sore old bones after a mob hit my shield, yelling insults about the Scarlet Adept's being 'frilly little bookheads' while trying to interrupt their heals, and the now infamous Blackrock Depths run where we kept cycling people in and out to try and finish as many quests as possible while Marketh had a full-blown claustrophobic attack while killing what seemed like several hundred dark iron dwarves bellowing that caves were no proper place to keep a man, begging Marshal Windsor to just find a door.
By the time we transfered to Norgannon, Mark was quietly famous among small groups as being totally deranged. I would actually get invitations to groups not because they really needed another warrior, but just because people wanted to see what I would say to Drakkisath (I believe I insinuated that his mother was a Gecko with extreme difficulty restraining her flatulence and he was the end result of an egg that had been overly exposed to same flatulence.)
From time to time to this day I'll hang out with some of my older online friends and talk shop, as it were, as if the raids and dungeons I've tanked were actual places I've visited. Tales of the expedition to Ahn'Qiraj are exceptionally popular - "And what do you think we saw in there? I'll tell you what we saw... a bleeding eyeball bigger than the whole Keep, that's what we saw!"
The key to successful RPing on a non-RP server is to not care that most people won't get it. If you and your RP friends (sometimes it was just me and one other person, wandering through Hyjal before it was made so difficult to enter, wondering at the corpse of Archimonde laying against the partially regrown Nordrassil) are having fun, that's all you need to worry about. Last week while PvPing on my horde warrior I was asked to run a group of lower level characters through Zul'Farrak and I agreed, but playing the character of my tauren (who I imagine as being very guileless and innocent, even naive, based on the rather placid face I designed for him when I first rerolled horde) to the absolute hilt, telling my 'new little greenies' and 'poor dead friends' that I would protect them from all the bad, bad monsters and scary sand trolls in the instance. "No no, little orc, you stay back here, you shouldn't play with fire like that, keep your rather horribly ugly dog back here too, I'll go talk with these trolls and see if they let us pass."
Sadly, the trolls did not see things his way and we were forced to kill them. It was very sad for him. After a while the rest of the party started playing along, possibly not wanting to ruin a free ride, but also possibly because having fun is infectious: the warlock kept declaiming "By Kil'Jaeden's teat, I'm not a child!" every time I'd ask him in my gentle way to stay back and be safe. It was only made better by his growing slow burn, which he finally got to unleash during the troll waves atop the pyramid, in my opinion. They were great sports.
It's moments like that, where complete strangers play along and make it more fun, that make RPing worth doing for me even though I'm not on an RP server. In fact, I've only played one character on an RP server ever and he's been level 42 for two years now. To a degree, I guess I find RP servers too easy: people there are expecting you to role play, they'll even get upset if you don't sometimes, so there's a social pressure to do it that does my work for me. I like to feel like I'm doing a good enough job of being my gentle, peaceful warrior (seen above in his full gladiator gear and his massive 2h axe... he never seems to understand why people automatically assume he's hostile, the poor guy. He'd love to try and talk things out with those nice Alliance folks but they keep trying to burn down our towers and they just won't stop and listen and it makes him so upset and then things become unfortunate) that people will be swept up in it, not that they're humoring me.
Of course, they probably are humoring me, but the important thing is that we have fun. If you can get past the fact that most people won't get it, that nine times out of ten they won't do any role playing themselves, and that you're basically beating your head against the brick wall of folks who think it's weird to actually act like the slavering orc rogue that they spend hours and hours making more and more effective at stabbing people (I mean, to my mind, you put that much time into a character, you might as well have fun playing him, but I know I'm weird) hoping for those rare moments when you get a good group together and they're all willing to treat this trip to Razorfen Downs not as yet another repeatable loot crawl but to actually play up the idea that they are descending into a pit in the earth infested with undead pigs. I had a blast that run. The shaman kept yelling "Okay, seriously, we can just leave! We do not have to be here!" even though we all knew he desperately wanted the chestplate that Amnennar drops.
Think of RPing on the non-RP servers as a way to spice things up. It's fun to cut loose sometimes. What would your gnome mage actually say or do in a given situation? Does she constantly bridle at the gigantic chairs in Stormwind? What does she think about being at crotch level to just about everyone who she meets? Have fun with it. I mean, it's a game, and you're already paying a monthly fee* to play it, why not mess around? You may even find some other people just as odd as yourself. And if not, you can sometimes laugh yourself silly over their puzzled reactions.
It makes yet another interminable run to The Steamvaults so much more tolerable.
*There was a typo here containing an extra letter. Search the comments for the unintended hilarity.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Virtual selves, Instances, RP, All the World's a Stage (Roleplaying)
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
ErsatzPotato May 19th 2008 11:49PM
Ahh Pendragon. What a snazzy game. Fantastic art, innovative rules and timescale. Pity no one played it. Same problem with Jorune. (Well, no innovative rules there. Stunning setting though.)
Balius May 18th 2008 4:44PM
I've never really understood roleplaying in WoW. I don't deride people for it, and I won't try to ruin anyone's fun, but WoW just seems like the least friendly vehicle to creative storytelling; the whole game is based around doing and redoing scripted encounters and grinding mindless enemies. There's very little character customization, no way to really define your look as you progress, and it's got to be hard to roleplay through an encounter with a named when he respawns before you can get out of sight of him.
It seems like the roleplaying that's done is better suited to even a forum than WoW itself. Playing WoW you have to ignore a lot of what's going on to make roleplaying viable, but in a forum you can actually create events.
I guess what I'm saying is that, aside from players attacking your fun, the game itself seems contrary to RPing.
Wolffe May 19th 2008 2:03AM
To a certain extent I agree.. But. Every event (albeit scripted) still has a narrative and it requires interaction from your character. In my opinion, that is the basis of WoW: the interaction. Not the repetition.
I must admit that I haven't played on a RP server or have I really role-played myself. However, I can say with some degree of confidence that role-players (at least the serious multitude that there seems to be) have it a little tougher compared to non-rpers when they raid the same instance week after week. How can that be explained in a world where things never really change (without a patch)? ;)
What it boils down to I guess, is the fact that this game has many different facets and many different people take many different things from it.
2c
inkgrrl May 18th 2008 5:01PM
Oh this is brilliant! I've done this a wee bit in a few places, but never fully committed to it. I think I just found a new way to have fun in WoW - thank you!
Wolffe May 18th 2008 5:08PM
"I mean, it's a game, and you're already paying a monthly *feel* to play it, why not mess around?"
I spot an easter egg!
Ashwin May 18th 2008 5:17PM
Most of my RP on my PvE server(6/7 of my toons there) is confined to plenty of bows and salutes to various npc's and the occasional pat to kids and animals. Very occasionally I used skip a quest because it does not suit my character but now I somehow find a way to justify/ or ignore, doing it.
Super Guest Man 9000 May 18th 2008 5:24PM
I would role play a little bit on my rogue alt, she had a pet sprite darter and I would always argue with it as if I was the only one who could hear it.
"No I'm not going to ninja on the boss, why do you always tell me to do that."
"....WHAT!? No I do not think that robe makes the priests butt look big"
"The tank is doing a great job, stop telling me to stab him when he's not looking so we can leave."
Then I would appologize to the party for the way it was acting. Always made things a bit more fun.
RetPallyJil May 18th 2008 6:33PM
:) I always do stuff like that on my PvE server. My guildies humor/tolerate me ... probably because I'm the guildmistress, but hey - I'll take what I can get.
I do have a couple of like-minded friends; we jabber away for hours while we work on stuff. It's fun.
airwalke May 18th 2008 6:46PM
I never rolled my main with the intent of RP, but I find it interesting that more people don't act through their characters more, even on non-RP realms. It just makes it more interesting to taunt a boss as you approach, or just interact with the world in general.
In person, I'm just a quiet guy with a deep voice... but my gnome mage allows me to act out a smaller, naive, and energetic personality that's not a part of who I am day-to-day. I don't have a backstory for him, or any defining characteristics (although I do jump whenever I cast Frost/Blast Nova to give the impression that the force coming from the spell propels him upwards.)... but it's still fun to inject some flavor into an otherwise stale PvE environment.
Anaughtybear May 18th 2008 11:09PM
I don't think it's difficult to see that players on PvP servers have more skill than the flower-pickers on RP servers. Hence the transfer rules. I also see that we definitely look down on RP players as little Nancy boys who deserve a hot, fresh ass-beating for talking like they are in old England on PvP time. Keep it to the proper server, and that goes for everyone.
Matthew Rossi May 18th 2008 11:18PM
Keep overcompensating, man. Eventually the pain will cease and you'll be comfortable enough in your own skin to just live your life and be happy, but playing tough guy from behind some pixels will help mask it until then.
Badger May 19th 2008 10:16AM
Indeed? Verily, old chap? Why, I do declare that thou hast made a comment most Nine-Of-Asses, and believe - nay, Sire, I insist! - that thou art a TOTAL FUCKING IDIOT.
Rannulf May 19th 2008 12:16AM
Great article, I really need to try that. Right now I'm on a rp server and for every 1 person who rps openly there are rougly..... 300 who don't. May be over exaggerating, but yeah. Sad that more people don't care about all the story WoW has to offer.
Cynra May 19th 2008 12:04AM
I originally debuted on a string of PvP servers, hopping from character to character until I made my home at Arthas US. And, like Mr. Rossi, I roleplayed on that server. I found it to be quirky fun and was always surprised by the number of people who would jump in and join without prompting. There were always quite a few and I managed to snag a little bit of notoriety myself before being coerced by a good friend to join Feathermoon US -- a true-blue roleplaying server. And, yes, I loved the derisive comments of people who seemed ridiculously offended at the thought that I'd roleplay my character.
It makes the non-RP asshats that populate my current server seem laughable in comparison.
The only thing that I miss on being on a RP server is the lack of world PvP. I loved the thrill of being out in contested territory and not knowing if that enemy rogue that stealthed was going onto some other mob or was going to turn around and ruin my robes as soon as I turned my back on him. I tried RP-PvP servers for a bit, but I found even LESS roleplay there than I did on PvP servers.
Leonarr May 19th 2008 1:28AM
Have to laugh at Anaughtybear, just so hardcore. If you were so elite at Player vs Player gaming, you'd play something that wasn't gear dependent. Hope people playing their characters as characters doesn't put off your aim... oh that's right you don't have to aim in WoW... just press tab then number buttons.
l33+ or what?
Me, I've tried RPing on HARDCORE!!! servers, but just get fed up with the lack of imagination. Let them get their power up and win the game.
Worcester May 19th 2008 12:33PM
I think the best thing about a little light RP on a non-RP server is that it points out something that should be obvious... not everyone plays the game for the same reason.
Sadly, much of the game I love is filled with immature players with no common courtesy, or hardcore raiders with only loot on their minds. No one seems to have fun.
I think I'll definitely take a cue out of Matt's book on this one. The next time someone hastily asks me for a run-through, I think I'll subject them to a little RP.
Consider it retaliation... for Barrens Chat!
DeeHat May 21st 2008 1:50PM
"The key to successful RPing on a non-RP server is to not care that most people won't get it."
That is so true Matt, and true for RP servers as well... sometimes I think we forget that first and foremost we should RP for ourselves, to enhance our enjoyment of the game and the world, and not to impress the audience.
Wonderful article Matt, thank you!
as you said... the important part is that you are having fun...
after all, isn't that why we are into games such as WoW? if we aren't having fun, why the heck are we doing this? ;)