All the World's a Stage: Anonymosity
All the World's a Stage, and all the orcs and humans merely players. They have their stories and their characters; and one player in his time plays many roles.
Roleplaying is a journey of trust you take with strangers. You may now and then start out with a group of people you know in real life, but for the most part, the people you roleplay with have no idea who you really are, or why you are sitting here at the computer. You can tell them if you want to, but most people don't ask. Roleplayers tend to keep personal details private, and don't intrude on one another's space.
Besides, other roleplayers don't necessarily care that much about who you "really are" either. They're there to get to know your character, not you as a person, unless your character first makes a very good impression and they decide that they actually want to be friends as real people. Even though you respect each other as people who share the same interest, there's still a distance between you which either (or both) of you may wish to maintain.
And yet, the relationship you have is one of trust. It's not at all at the same level as a best friend of course, but you still have to trust one another in a very creative sense -- you rely on each other to create interesting things for your characters to share with one another. You're not just buying a shirt from a salesperson or holding the door for a passerby -- you're exchanging behavior and language in an unpredictable and totally interconnected way. Any little surprise a stranger brings to an interaction may completely alter the whole game session and stick in your mind as one of your most memorable gaming experiences. Roleplayers have to trust other roleplayers to help make those experiences positive, even without knowing anything at all about one another. Sometimes two characters can even become very close friends, even though the real people behind them do not.
"Anonymosity" defined
The word "anonymosity" first appeared in my head as I started thinking about all the people I've met in WoW, and how few I actually know by their real world names. I thought for a while that I had made the word up, but it's actually in the dictionary as "the state of being anonymous." It struck me that anonymosity is a very important part of what being a roleplayer in WoW is all about.
Some roleplayers would disagree with me, that they're more than happy to share their real world identity with anyone who asks, but the fact remains that they usually don't need to. We judge whether we want to spend time together, not by revealing who we are, but by entertaining one anther with something we are not.
In the game, between roleplayers, you may find a good number of people who want to talk to your character, but do not want to talk about anything related to real life. It's not because they are rude, nor because they have anything to hide, but because you're both there to roleplay, not to become real life friends, just like you're here at this website to read articles about WoW, and I'm here to write them for you.
Anonymoholics anonymous
Take my own experience as an example. When I first started roleplaying in WoW in 2005, I had a secret mission: I wanted to get inside the head of a female character and figure out why she behaved the way she did, to understand what being a woman was like. I had just suffered a very painful breakup with a woman I thought I wanted to marry, and I felt as though there was some terrible secret about women that I had failed to understand. Keeping my true identity anonymous seemed essential, because I thought that when found out I was a man in real life, then my little experiment would be ruined -- they would just start treating me as a man again and I would learn nothing.
Someone who didn't understand me at all might have felt as though I was trying to "pretend to be a woman" as if I wanted to lie to people and make them believe I was a woman in real life. Some people can't ever play a character of the opposite sex at all because it feels dishonest to them if they allow any possibility that someone might think they are the same gender as their character. One or two MMOs out there even force you to play your own gender by sending in a digital photograph of yourself to the company that runs the game.
While I respect that way of thinking, I also think it misses out on a deeper layer of honesty, in which you learn to interact with people's characters without knowing who they are in real life, and without having any need to know whatsoever. Just like an actor must find something in himself that really relates to the role he must portray in a film, you can learn a lot about an actor just by watching his or her movies, maybe much more than you could by just meeting that person in a line at the grocery store or something. The actor may be sharing something of his soul in a movie, but in a brief meeting, he may merely engage in a bit of otherwise meaningless small talk.
Trying (and failing, sometimes) to anonymously portray a female character in WoW was a deeply honest thing I did, because it was part of an honest question, and it helped me discover how I related, within myself, to some of the issues that women have to think about more often than men. As a man, my life is improved from being more aware about these things, and even though at the time I refused to give people my real identity, I was actually sharing an important part of my learning process with them, and to me that more honest than just playing a character who was more like myself in real life.
More layers
My hope in sharing this example from my own personal experience is to show that anonymosity in a roleplaying setting is not necessarily what you would think from watching the news and hearing horror stories about things that happen on the Internet. It certainly isn't necessarily a recipe for rude behavior.
While I was actually trying to learn a particular lesson in life, another person might just enjoy escaping the confines of whatever stereotypes people have toward their sex, race, age, or whatever. A woman might play a male character just because she doesn't want people to "treat her like a woman" for a while -- maybe she just wants to be herself, without people offering to help her or teach her do something else stereotypical just because she's a girl.
Another person might use anonymosity as a kind of shield to protect himself from uncomfortable emotional attachments with others. Giving away his true name makes him feel uncomfortably exposed, but through his character, he can feel safe interacting with people.
Yet another person might just want to keep the game life and real life separate, because that's how they organize their life. It's not that they have any reason to hide something from you -- rather they just want to focus on the task at hand, and going on talking about themselves and other aspects of real life is just too much like... real life! Anonymosity, to them, just means focusing on having fun.
What's your approach towards being anonymous as a roleplayer? Do you talk about your real life just as much as you roleplay? or do you consider your real life as a private matter you'd rather people didn't even ask about? Have you changed from one approach to another over time?
All the World's a Stage is your source for roleplaying ideas, innovations, and ironies -- and we are super-sorry for having missed the last two weeks! Scheduling and sickness prevented the author from writing, but he hopes to share a few choice articles with you as a peace offering in the hopes that your anger may be mollified: You might wonder what it's like to sacrifice spells for the story, or to totally immerse yourself in your roleplaying, or even how to RP on a non-RP server!
Roleplaying is a journey of trust you take with strangers. You may now and then start out with a group of people you know in real life, but for the most part, the people you roleplay with have no idea who you really are, or why you are sitting here at the computer. You can tell them if you want to, but most people don't ask. Roleplayers tend to keep personal details private, and don't intrude on one another's space.
Besides, other roleplayers don't necessarily care that much about who you "really are" either. They're there to get to know your character, not you as a person, unless your character first makes a very good impression and they decide that they actually want to be friends as real people. Even though you respect each other as people who share the same interest, there's still a distance between you which either (or both) of you may wish to maintain.
And yet, the relationship you have is one of trust. It's not at all at the same level as a best friend of course, but you still have to trust one another in a very creative sense -- you rely on each other to create interesting things for your characters to share with one another. You're not just buying a shirt from a salesperson or holding the door for a passerby -- you're exchanging behavior and language in an unpredictable and totally interconnected way. Any little surprise a stranger brings to an interaction may completely alter the whole game session and stick in your mind as one of your most memorable gaming experiences. Roleplayers have to trust other roleplayers to help make those experiences positive, even without knowing anything at all about one another. Sometimes two characters can even become very close friends, even though the real people behind them do not.
"Anonymosity" defined
The word "anonymosity" first appeared in my head as I started thinking about all the people I've met in WoW, and how few I actually know by their real world names. I thought for a while that I had made the word up, but it's actually in the dictionary as "the state of being anonymous." It struck me that anonymosity is a very important part of what being a roleplayer in WoW is all about.
Some roleplayers would disagree with me, that they're more than happy to share their real world identity with anyone who asks, but the fact remains that they usually don't need to. We judge whether we want to spend time together, not by revealing who we are, but by entertaining one anther with something we are not.
In the game, between roleplayers, you may find a good number of people who want to talk to your character, but do not want to talk about anything related to real life. It's not because they are rude, nor because they have anything to hide, but because you're both there to roleplay, not to become real life friends, just like you're here at this website to read articles about WoW, and I'm here to write them for you.
Anonymoholics anonymous
Take my own experience as an example. When I first started roleplaying in WoW in 2005, I had a secret mission: I wanted to get inside the head of a female character and figure out why she behaved the way she did, to understand what being a woman was like. I had just suffered a very painful breakup with a woman I thought I wanted to marry, and I felt as though there was some terrible secret about women that I had failed to understand. Keeping my true identity anonymous seemed essential, because I thought that when found out I was a man in real life, then my little experiment would be ruined -- they would just start treating me as a man again and I would learn nothing.
Someone who didn't understand me at all might have felt as though I was trying to "pretend to be a woman" as if I wanted to lie to people and make them believe I was a woman in real life. Some people can't ever play a character of the opposite sex at all because it feels dishonest to them if they allow any possibility that someone might think they are the same gender as their character. One or two MMOs out there even force you to play your own gender by sending in a digital photograph of yourself to the company that runs the game.
While I respect that way of thinking, I also think it misses out on a deeper layer of honesty, in which you learn to interact with people's characters without knowing who they are in real life, and without having any need to know whatsoever. Just like an actor must find something in himself that really relates to the role he must portray in a film, you can learn a lot about an actor just by watching his or her movies, maybe much more than you could by just meeting that person in a line at the grocery store or something. The actor may be sharing something of his soul in a movie, but in a brief meeting, he may merely engage in a bit of otherwise meaningless small talk.
Trying (and failing, sometimes) to anonymously portray a female character in WoW was a deeply honest thing I did, because it was part of an honest question, and it helped me discover how I related, within myself, to some of the issues that women have to think about more often than men. As a man, my life is improved from being more aware about these things, and even though at the time I refused to give people my real identity, I was actually sharing an important part of my learning process with them, and to me that more honest than just playing a character who was more like myself in real life.
More layers
My hope in sharing this example from my own personal experience is to show that anonymosity in a roleplaying setting is not necessarily what you would think from watching the news and hearing horror stories about things that happen on the Internet. It certainly isn't necessarily a recipe for rude behavior.
While I was actually trying to learn a particular lesson in life, another person might just enjoy escaping the confines of whatever stereotypes people have toward their sex, race, age, or whatever. A woman might play a male character just because she doesn't want people to "treat her like a woman" for a while -- maybe she just wants to be herself, without people offering to help her or teach her do something else stereotypical just because she's a girl.
Another person might use anonymosity as a kind of shield to protect himself from uncomfortable emotional attachments with others. Giving away his true name makes him feel uncomfortably exposed, but through his character, he can feel safe interacting with people.
Yet another person might just want to keep the game life and real life separate, because that's how they organize their life. It's not that they have any reason to hide something from you -- rather they just want to focus on the task at hand, and going on talking about themselves and other aspects of real life is just too much like... real life! Anonymosity, to them, just means focusing on having fun.
What's your approach towards being anonymous as a roleplayer? Do you talk about your real life just as much as you roleplay? or do you consider your real life as a private matter you'd rather people didn't even ask about? Have you changed from one approach to another over time?
Filed under: All the World's a Stage (Roleplaying), WoW Social Conventions, Virtual selves, RP







Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
TheChao Dec 6th 2009 10:05PM
i think you're thinking of the word "anonymity."
Psiwave Dec 6th 2009 10:15PM
Close, but they aren't quite the same.
That's a really interesting article. I'm not a roleplayer in wow but i think a lot of what you are saying translates well to the population as a whole, albeit to a lesser extent.
Jiga Dec 6th 2009 10:16PM
No, no, it works. It's just not a widely used term compared to"anonymity."
Res Dec 6th 2009 10:23PM
helps to read the article.
Oteo Dec 7th 2009 12:41AM
It doesn't help that, if you google "Anonymosity," this article is 4th on the list. Yes, it is that bad. David got the definition from wiktionary, and the source for wiktionary is shady (gave me a security warning when I tried going from the definition to the main site). It's not in the Merriam-Webster dictionary or the Oxford English Dictionary.
Not that I'm against the coining of new words to express new ideas. Shakespeare coined many new words himself (assassinate, for instance). So let's see how this new word differs.
It's definition is "The state of being anonymous."
The definition of anonymity is "the state or quality of being anonymous."
... oh wait.
Oteo Dec 7th 2009 12:50AM
Downrating myself for its/it's fail. :( Which internet law did I just break again? "A post correcting someone else's language is bound to have at least one mistake in it."
Sitruc Dec 7th 2009 1:24AM
Not broke, proved!
Shrike Dec 7th 2009 1:29AM
@Oteo:
That would be "Grznt's Law of Pedantfy".
Anaughtybear Dec 7th 2009 3:02AM
That's not a real dictionary. Anything with Wiki as a prefix should not be used as a source. Real dictionaries state that it's not a word. You mean anonymity.
Necrolord_Bob Dec 7th 2009 5:01AM
Naughtybear is absolutely correct
"Anonymosity (n): This is not a word, so you shouldn't be looking it up, idiot. In fact, use of this non-existent word is such bad practice that anyone who uses it in the title of an article on WoW.com grants everyone the right to flame them, insult them, and be a total jerk. Have Fun!"
David Bowers Dec 7th 2009 9:21AM
In hindsight, I think maybe "anonymity" would have been a better choice. When I started writing the article, I thought I had made up the word, and I had this plan in my mind for how I was going to connect being anonymous to feeling animosity, but once I found it in that dictionary, I went a different way with it and decided to write more about the trust angle. Changing "anonymosity" to "anonymity" would have fit with the topic alteration, but I didn't think of it because of that dictionary reference.
Several commenters here are correct to point out that wikitonary may not be the best reference. I do think "anonymosity" sounds better than "anonymity" but I suppose that doesn't work as a valid justification.
I'm not sure about the whole "flame the author" thing, though. Besides, nobody even mentioned the "Anonymoholics Anonymous" thing. You must agree that has a lot of cleverosity, no? I think it's full of funnitude myself.
Zeplar Dec 6th 2009 10:20PM
Sounds like a combination of "anonymous" and "animosity" lol. I was expecting the article to be about evil bad people using their anonymity to screw with roleplayers, a la Penny Arcade.
Lirendà Dec 6th 2009 10:42PM
yes that was the word mash i was seeing too ... seemed like it should be about how people use anonymity to be rude to other people.
RobynM Dec 6th 2009 11:35PM
Ditto that - I was expecting some sort of discussion of the ever-present type who hides behind roleplaying as an attempt to excuse their bad behaviour. Y'know, the "I'm roleplaying being a jerk" guy.
Kia Dec 6th 2009 11:37PM
Thirded. I even made the PA connection too before seeing this comment. xD
Hollow Leviathan Dec 7th 2009 12:33AM
I was actually expecting it to be a term for people who dislike others who reveal their real names. I know I'm faintly annoyed when Vel turns out to be Mike or whatever. I already know you as something else! Don't give me another name to mess up.
Nick Dec 6th 2009 10:29PM
Where is the mask from?
Eddy Dec 6th 2009 10:31PM
I believe that's a player hiding behind the Troll pet from the Argent Tournament- the Sen'jin Fetish.
Eddy Dec 6th 2009 10:30PM
I play a lot of males because they're sort of... neutral to me while women are sort of the model with the special features (I believe there's a lot written about this sociologically). Women have to have female issues whereas men can just deal with... the task at hand- I know this isn't actually true in the world but it seems that way in almost all fiction. But I usually find- partly because I tend to roleplay most with people I already knew in person or were friends of friends- that its easier for me to roleplay a guy when people know I'm a girl.
Jed Dec 6th 2009 10:36PM
This article was a really nice read for me:) It makes me want to try a role playing server even more now! Truth be told.. WoW gets boring to me pretty easily and maybe this would be a way to keep it interesting no matter what. Thanks again!