Breakfast Topic: Your world of Warcraft

When I first started playing WoW, I was working at a sandwich shop with a couple of Horde players. It did not take long for WoW-speak to enter our vocabulary at work, especially on the rare occasion when a customer walked in wearing some sort of World of Warcraft T-shirt. I remember one of my fellow workers/players telling a customer, "It's a good thing you're not wearing an Alliance shirt, because this is a Horde-friendly restaurant." He then proceeded to talk about the then-new blood elf paladins until the customer got his sandwich and left.
On another occasion, during a slow bit at work, I turned around to see my coworker trying to cast some sort of shadow priest magic my direction. I immediately War Stomped and began to "auto fire" back, pointing out that Arcane Shot did not have a cast time.
Not only did WoW-speak help make the time go faster (especially at the tail end of night shifts), but I also noticed that I began to miss elements of the game while in real life. There is no general or trade chat to watch during the lunch rush, and at the end of the night, we were all disappointed that we had to mount up instead of using our hearthstones.
Who else has had experiences like mine? Has WoW helped you get through the day, or is it only a distraction in real life?
Filed under: Breakfast Topics, Guest Posts






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 5)
Revrant Nov 21st 2010 8:07AM
I have to admit I've never hit this epic level of geekiness in real life, but kudos for hitting the peak of Mount Geekerest, sir, kudos to you.
Gendou Nov 21st 2010 8:18AM
Given the name of the author, I would suggest "Ma'am" to be more appropriate here.
Revrant Nov 21st 2010 8:38AM
Touche'.
vocenoctum Nov 21st 2010 1:12PM
Inconceivable! There are no girls on the internet.
Rob Nov 21st 2010 4:29PM
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
Revrant Nov 21st 2010 7:23PM
Touche', sir, touche'.
minimagicman Nov 21st 2010 8:14AM
I must say i have been disappointed repeatedly that i can't simply teleport to the 4 or 5 places i go to most often.
Gendou Nov 21st 2010 8:19AM
Ever found yourself searching for the 'Blink' button when stuck in particularly slow traffic?
unexpectedeof Nov 21st 2010 9:39AM
Used blink button in traffic, falling through earth, need GM
Kylenne Nov 21st 2010 2:03PM
I'm a 2nd degree Reiki practitioner in real life, which means I actually *can* Lay on Hands. With no cooldown even. ;)
No Quarter Nov 21st 2010 8:17AM
I wish I knew someone in real life that played WoW.
Raydex Nov 21st 2010 9:26AM
Ugh, I know, right? None of my friends can afford it cept one and her computer can't run it (that's how old their machine is D:). At least I still have my Ebon Blade tabard my sister made me. xD
Tomatketchup Nov 21st 2010 10:27AM
I do know people who play WoW irl, but they are all so... not-geeky. They just play it. Never do we discuss it more than new features or classes. I just wish I could also go around Ambushing and then Backstab peop- no wait, that came out wrong.
Alexa Nov 21st 2010 10:38AM
You probably do know someone who plays WoW in real life... but you just haven't figured it out yet. :)
Harvoc Nov 21st 2010 11:29AM
Same. The closest person I know who plays WoW is a classmate's cousin who I don't even know.
Bass Nov 21st 2010 4:36PM
I think everyone know someone who plays WoW, and like the poster above me said, just hasn't found out yet.
I don't really have a wow-friendly environment around me either, which is actually quite strange for the 14 year old I am, maybe the situation in teh USA is different, but meh. I have one friend who plays/played WoW, but he buys months worth of game time every few months, so well, that isn't much of an incentive for wow talks either. If anyone else near me actually plays, I fear that he/she might, following the steriotype, is one of the despised sort of 14-year olds. Either way, more people around me playing it, or atleast a more gamer-ish, more geeky-ish, or however you'd like to call it.
Anyway, i'm lucky to have a wow-player as a brother, him actually being the one who dragged me in, anyways, I agree with you.
Gendou Nov 21st 2010 8:18AM
Working in IT, the odd non-gamer is often the exception, not the rule.
I remember working overnight shifts monitoring equipment in the late 90's, and we would discuss EQ while playing M:TG or AD&D.
Kylenne Nov 21st 2010 2:08PM
This is how I always end up as the favorite of all the IT people wherever I work. Well, that and I'm actually computer literate, unlike the rest of the office.
At my last job, a couple of them razzed me when they found out I played a Blood Elf, until I recited the Horde oath from memory (I've taken a LOT of alts through Dragonblight, what can I say?). Then they shut up. :)
psycho.knight Nov 21st 2010 8:25AM
Yep, Helps pass the time in economics and the occasional nod I get in the halls at school when wearing my horde T-shirt.
Gendou Nov 21st 2010 9:10AM
Have you ever used the Remote Auction House to relist your auctions while sitting in Economics class?