How lag forced me to play a little differently

Most people who follow my exploits also know about the dreaded lag issues that I was having because of still unsolved issues with certain internet providers and odd packet inspection (presumably). Connecting to the Chicago data center was never a problem until the release of Cataclysm and, really, not until I started to raid heavily around late December 2010. Things got real ugly during late December. This is my story of changing what I could to keep playing the game that I love.
Being the main tank for a 10-man in Cataclysm is no easy job, especially during the current state of 10-man and 25-man balance between hard modes and new content. It's no secret that 10-man content, at the heroic level, is more restrictive for the common player. There's a lot of pressure being in a 10-man group that doesn't really have a roster to choose from. I came from a very unique guild where raiding was less a guild activity and more multiple 10-man teams that came together for the common purpose of hanging out together, leveling the guild, and raiding in separate teams.
When December hit and the lag came with it, I knew there was something wrong. I've never been the guy with the lag problems or computer problems. Personally, that made me feel pretty great for my internet existence -- at least I never had to worry about lag. After 2 months of fighting with ISPs, having technicians replace every cable in my house, and returning a pile of modems back to the distribution center, the lag was unavoidable. The SSH tunneling service Smoothping was working well for a while, but paying extra to connect wasn't something I wanted to do, and ultimately, the 5% of the time the service wouldn't give me optimal results was enough to make me consider switching. The service is wonderful, however, and I very much recommend you give it a shot if your ping is terrible due to distance issues.
The great server test
So began the great server test: a month-long attempt to figure out what the hell was going on with my connection to the Chicago data center. I tried creating characters on servers from each region, testing lag in both raid and regular environments. It was as comprehensive as comprehensive could be.
The lag and disconnects were enough to make me really hate logging on and playing. I spent more and more time on servers where the latency problems were not manifesting. It's a game, after all, and the last thing I wanted to do was take home the annoyance and fatigue of raiding in a suboptimal environment and hate myself because I failed the group. These were my friends, not just faceless raiders, but eventually the lag won out, and I made the decision to leave the server that had been my home for over a year.
The Horde to Alliance main swap
While I had made up my mind to switch servers due to the latency issues that were not fixing themselves, it had never occured to me that my new home would be on the Alliance side of the coin. For my main, at least, this was a big change -- the last Alliance alt that I had was during vanilla, and while I did get that paladin to the max level, it had been a long, long time since I was ever associated with the Alliance. In fact, I've made it my business to assault their gnomes and dismiss their draenei and all that fun jazz.
Lodur and Matticus made me the offer that I couldn't refuse, and off I went in to new frontiers, giving the once-alt-now-main warrior a facelift and a faction-lift, if you will. Stormwind was very odd the first few days. I did all my reforging in "purple town," getting anywhere on Kalimdor was a giant pain in the butt, and I couldn't help but stare down every worgen I saw, hand quickly darting over to mash attack buttons as they ran by. Suffice to say, I was not at home.
I missed my old realm and my old friends. Things weren't going to be the same, but my new home was welcoming and free of the issues that I could not control that were driving me from loving every minute of Cataclysm to the boiling point of just tossing it all away. "I like spending my time in Azeroth," I told myself, "and if this is what I have to do to enjoy it, then this is what I have to do." So I did.

Back a long time ago, a friend told me that he was getting bored with WoW and sort of sick of the politics of his guild's special brand of drama. He was Alliance and didn't like the loot council rules that he was currently being forced into accepting. After much deliberation, I asked him if he enjoyed playing WoW. His affirmative answer gave me pause, because even though he liked WoW, he didn't enjoy playing it. My advice was to try the other side. For all my Horde bias and loathing of a lot of the Alliance constructs in game, I do appreciate the fact that this game has two sides -- enough so that my advice to roll a new alt on the opposite side and build up from scratch was the same advice then as the advice I gave to myself now.
My story is one about fixing what you can and accepting what you can't. I cannot control what AT&T's level3 bridge does to my connection as I try to connect to the Chicago data center. My enjoyment of the game comes from the people I surround myself with and the opportunity to play the way I want to play. If you love WoW but have that weird "do I, don't I" feeling, try playing things a little bit differently.
It's going to be an interesting journey from here on out. My Horde characters are still Horde and are making just as much progress as they were before. The main, now Alliance, is being joined by my first Alliance alt in 6 years -- a draenei priest named Juruud who, as Mike Sacco knows intimately, just wants to find a bathroom while lost in Kalimdor. Latency forces outside my control demanded a decision be made that was in my power, and the game has become fresher than ever because of it.
WoW Patch 4.1 is on the PTR, and WoW Insider has all the latest news for you -- from previews of the revamped Zul'Aman and Zul'Gurub to new valor point mechanics and new archaeology items.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Cataclysm






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
magicjamie Apr 20th 2011 7:16PM
Two posts like this in one day?
What's happening D: I don't like change
Tim Apr 20th 2011 8:12PM
I like it. It's a welcome change from the same old same old. I like to know what MY "celebrities" are thinking.
Danterius Apr 20th 2011 8:27PM
@Tim
Agreed. I've enjoyed reading both of these posts now. A peek into the writers' Warcraft-related lives is definitely welcome :D
Sleutel Apr 20th 2011 7:23PM
I've been through a similar faction swap--but the other way around. Early in Cata, an old GM made me an offer I couldn't refuse to come tank for him again... but the catch was that the new guild was Horde. My main was a Night Elf, and I wanted her to always stay that way, but the prospect of raiding again with the people I'd had the most fun with was too good to pass up.
I'd played both sides before--my other non-farmer 80 in Wrath was an Undead Mage and I've had a slew of alts of all races--but I'd never wanted to switch my main to the other faction. I don't think I'll ever be entirely happy with her as anything but a Night Elf, and every day she spends as a Belf feels like a bit of an exile. But, for now, it's a sacrifice I'm willing to make to keep playing the game I enjoy so much with the people I enjoy playing it with.
Dragonrose Apr 21st 2011 9:06AM
My story of side swapping was more or less the same, only I couldn't bear the cost of both a server transfer and a faction change, so I didn't: I rolled a new toon, same class, power leveled her and used the aid of my friends to gear her up quick. Puff, into raiding faster than most mains. : D
Nowadays I'm really glad I didn't transfer my main(Alliance), because my friends on Horde side quit playing (both druids, both healers, both unhappy) and now I'm in a pretty good Alliance guild with other friends.
Eirik Apr 21st 2011 4:41PM
I have seen a number of my friends and guildies change servers. While I have not moved any of my characters, I've occasionally created new ones on the destination server.
Most often, though, either said friends moved to yet other servers/factions, or quit playing altogether. While depressing, it justified my not moving my own characters to go with them.
Xsinthis Apr 20th 2011 7:24PM
"After must deliberation....Enough so that my advice to roll a new alt on the opposite site ...."
Annoying typos are annoying
Orin Apr 20th 2011 7:33PM
Some annoying typos are amay-zing, like the one I read earlier today:
"With the rise in popularity, Pike Research also predicts that the battery industry is at the beginning of a massive boob." ( http://bit.ly/fTcTSf )
Smellykent Apr 21st 2011 4:19AM
Hmmmm and how would one be able to get involved in this 'battery industry'? Sounds like interesting perks.... ;)
razion Apr 20th 2011 7:32PM
What gets me is that your problem was lag and that you resolve it by switching realms *AND factions*. It sounded to me like you were enjoying your faction up until the lag became unbearable for you. Seems to me like all of your troubles went away once you transfered realms, and there was no real reason to switch factions.
I just can't wrap my mind around that decision--it just seems like you went a step further than you probably should have. I think you "used up" your "switch factions for a taste of something new" coin too soon. That's just me though.
Mathew McCurley Apr 20th 2011 7:37PM
I switched factions because the guild opportunity for me was Alliance. It was an unexpected part of the whole "I have to go now" thing.
Rob Apr 20th 2011 11:02PM
So what if he switched factions? I have mains on both sides. I wouldn't give it too much thought. I encourage everyone to at least try both factions and see which is better. For me, i like the cute races, so gnomes and goblins are pretty big.
Shinae Apr 21st 2011 10:05AM
It's better to switch factions and play with people you know, than to stay the same faction and not be able to play with anyone you know (on your realm).
raingod Apr 20th 2011 7:34PM
Much as I love WoW if it came between quitting or rolling an alliance toon, I'd quit first.
Deathknighty Apr 20th 2011 9:15PM
Derp. 8P
trisco2001 Apr 20th 2011 7:38PM
I too had my disconnection problems start right around Cataclysm's launch, and they still persist to this day. I went from the guy who was always the dependable tank, to regularly getting DC'd, and praying that I was not only still alive but... *had aggro*... when I came back online.
Heroics were much less of a deal than raids have been. My guild still laughingly declares that "Ol' Gamlin's been Broadstripe'd" (my ISP, only one in town). But my guild is so entrenched in our server that changing is just not an option, and so every day there's the constant fear of getting disconnected during what would have been our guild's first defeat of a boss.
My guild has been very supportive, but my household has between two and three people who are often raiding simultaneously, and will ALL get DC'd when the gods of packet loss decide that now is that time again. It is a new element to the game, and one that I really don't care for. But having spent a grand or more on various hardware replacements, service changes, and wasted hours on research, there's just nothing more I can do about it.
I feel like whatever happened to the internet last November has just plum defeated me, and it's made my WoW experience less enjoyable, though I don't blame WoW for it... nor can I simply stop playing.
Damn you, Internet. And damn packet loss.
Vaeku Apr 20th 2011 7:38PM
"Connecting to the Chicago data center was never a problem until the release of Cataclysm"
Could be because the servers that are located in Chicago were originally in Dallas until I believe summer 2010, when they moved to Chicago. That same time, the Seattle servers were moved to Phoenix, and the Boston servers to NYC.
I had sorta a similar issue. My main realm was located in Dallas, and since I live in Texas I had low latency and lag. But after the move to Chicago, my latency got worse (not much worse, never went above maybe 300 ms), and I noticed that the Phoenix servers, which I originally got 1000 ms latency when they were in Seattle, were better than Chicago, so I moved.
(That wasn't the only reason though, I liked the community on my new home realm, and found a guild that actually played at the same times I do).
Noyou Apr 21st 2011 12:41AM
Interesting. For the most part my lag is fine. My latency is usually around 45-65 home and 98-160 world. I do sometimes get odd lag in the banks in SW when there's hardly anyone in there even. I also get some odd lags in the world when going to places that have a lot going on (mobs of NPC's fighting etc.) I am in Chicago but not sure where my server is- it's somewhere on the east coast. How can we find out where our server is located and which one is closest to us?
Vaeku Apr 21st 2011 4:12AM
@Noyou
Wowpedia has a list of the realms, sorted by time zone, battlegroup, and server location: http://www.wowpedia.org/US_realm_list_by_datacenter
This is actually how I decided what realms to play on... Instead of just choosing a realm in my timezone, I looked up what servers were the closest to me physically and also if they were in my timezone.
Noyou Apr 21st 2011 5:48AM
Very cool. Thanks. I am happy to see my alt realm is in the chicago data center and in the central time zone. Bonus! After logging on and running around I noticed my latency numbers were better but I still lagged a bit here and there. I guess that's normal for me. My Primary server is in a NY data center but a west coast timezone. Not as bad as a WC data center.