Drama Mamas: How to find gaming buddies
We've talked before about how to leave your guild, but what happens after that?
Hey Drama Mamas!
Today i write to you lovely ladies with a problem that I have been wrestling with for almost 4 years: finding someone to play World of Warcraft with. Here is the high and low of it, or rather the long and short:
Four or so years ago my brother starts playing a game that I considered to be a money sand trap: World of Warcraft, I cannot honestly say I was friendly to the franchise as at the time I was Neverwinter Night's personal slave (still am sometimes) but to make a long story short (too late) I was persuaded to take a vacation to Azeroth and I have never left. I fell in love with the planet and its people and while my hearth stone will always be set to Neverwinter, I am really enjoying my time in Azeroth.
But here is my dilemma; I'm lonely. Not long after I started playing my brother quit, after that I soloed until I convinced my two best friends to play (who were a couple, mistake number one) but when they broke up they started getting on at different times and then more and more infrequently and now not at all, then (having run out of RL friends who play) I spent the next year jumping from guild to guild, trying to find the right family. Eventually I found one, in my eyes the perfect guild; we raided, we did group quests, leveled alts together, helped each other with achievements, and protected each other from gankers (this was on my old pvp server), we even held in game parties with contests and prizes and guild meet ups twice a year but we were a progression guild and after 2 years of running together we hit a rock, all progression stopped and people got frustrated, and then it didn't take long for the frustration to turn into arguments and then the five words you never want to see when logging in, "your guild has been disbanded"
These days I just play by myself, I have joined a new guild but it doesn't have the same atmosphere as my old one and I find that I am just keeping to myself when I log in and because we are so big (we had to split in two) often requests for this or that quest/group go unnoticed or unanswered. Of all the RL friends who I used to play with only one still plays but she lives in a different country and with the time difference and my work schedule, play time is sparse. I have a boyfriend who I would love to get playing but he doesn't express any desire to play (and if he thinks that makes me sad/offended every time i ask and he refuses he buys me play time and in game pets ^_^)
So now I ask, any advice? Do I look for the "right" guild? Do i put an ad on the forums "help wanted, friendly players who like playing and doing anything and everything in game and not take anything seriously and have fun?" or maybe a real life ad? I don't know, I'm not very social I just like being with other people.
Sincerely with the greatest respect and appreciation,
LFG
Let's say I want to shoot pool competitively again but have been out of the league for some time and have moved. What can I do?
- Contact my old team members and ask if they know of anyone or any place near me that they can recommend.
- Hang around in bars with pool tables and try to make friends while playing with strangers.
- Go to tournaments, socialize, and see if I hit it off with any one team.
- List myself officially as looking for a team in the area.
- Enter myself into solo events and see if anyone approaches me. (This idea is the scariest for me.)
- Look online for local leagues that may be looking for members and take the plunge blindly.
- Ask another group I belong to (knitting, parents at my child's school, the local YMCA) if they play or can recommend people for me to play with.
- Contact any of the members of the guild you really liked to see if they have calmed down, are still enjoying the game, and belong to a guild you might like.
- Hang around in bars. OK, that won't really help here, but it's fun.
- Join any local server events or raids and see if you hit it off with anyone participating people who can recommend their guild.
- Scan the forums looking for guilds that want new members and seem to have a similar mindset.
- Ask another group you belong to in the physical world if any of them play WoW. You may be surprised that the acquaintance you have at the gym also plays or someone in your book club is hiding a secret World of Warcraft habit.
- Look at online forums for your other interests and see if there is anyone who hangs out in Azeroth too.
- You could use the Guild Finder tool, but ... well ... that's not really that helpful, unfortunately.
I know there are many others like you who want the same things, LFG. Good luck in finding each other.
Randomly:
- Try something entirely new. Like ... ever roleplayed? Go check out the scene. (I don't recommend showing up at a random location on a random RP realm; I do recommend poking through RP realm forums first.) Not your cup of tea? Our 15 Minutes of Fame column is packed with players who take all sorts of unusual angles to the game -- you could find something that sparks an interest.
- Stop pestering your boyfriend about playing. Love him for who he is, rather than pushing him away over what he's not.
- Sort out what you actually want. You say you're "not very social and just like being with other people," yet you're unhappy that your new guild feels relatively unresponsive and you find yourself keeping to yourself. Frankly, if you're not very social and just like being around others, this guild sounds like a pretty good match -- so perhaps you should pause to reevaluate what it is that you're really after.
- Hint: It sounds like you're still looking for a gaming buddy.
- If it's people you want, make an alt and try Spectacular Death or It came from the Blog. These two guilds (the former, long-time friends of WoW Insider; the latter, actual WoW Insider readers) have become my default solution for players in search of a laid-back place to have fun with maturity, stability and no drama.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Guilds, Drama Mamas
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
ladygamertn Jan 30th 2012 2:00PM
I can absolutely recommend Spectacular Death!!! I started a toon on Llane and joined as a Tourist and one month later, I am in LOVE with this guild!! Friendly, fun and not a bad raiding guild as well. I transferred my main and am having a blast laughing and giggling like a kid again. The people are witty, the humor is clean and dry! Gimmlette is the BEST guild leader and everyone is helpful! And they don't pressure you to do stuff you don't like. Me, I am not a fan of Pvp... but from the screenies and bits of logs I see on the guild website, it doesn't look at all like the stuff I hate in Pvp. So... I just may do some because the guild is just that much fun to be in!
ladygamertn Jan 30th 2012 2:08PM
I forgot to mention that I, too, LOVED Neverwinter Nights! I was a long time player there and still occasionally check out Neverwinter Connections to see what's up. I have broached the subject of roleplaying but that doesn't seem to be high on many people's lists. I suppose if two or more people had dedicated toons they only RPed with, it could be fun... That's what makes SD so much fun, the sky's the limit!
This Guy Jan 30th 2012 1:39PM
@ LFG - I'm in a similar position. Quick summary: I've played since Vanilla, varying who I played with, had RL friends play then leave, transferred servers a few times, and I've tried many different guilds, as well as both factions. My goal has always been to play with fun people, good people. Not good as in skill, but just great people that are looking to have a good time. Finding them has gotten harder over time.
Presently, I play mostly solo, tho my gf will join from time to time. Most recently, I had RL friend come back to the game only to leave about a month later. I've invested a lot of time in my characters (2 85's, and too many alts to count, levels 10-80), as well as my tiny guild (really just 4 accounts, 18 toons, level 4, 6 tabs, etc). Leaving it all to start fresh (or faction changing to Alliance) isn't that inviting , but recruiting for a small guild is more challenging than I'd have imagined. It seems that today people care about joining a level 25 guild just for perks over finding people that they really mesh well with. I'm okay with a small guild, if it's filled with people that really make it feel like home.
I did recently join a level 25 guild with an alt, but I really feel like a number, more than a contributor. I also felt like I was playing by myself, which I'm able to do in my own guild, or guileless. I know that I have a lot to offer (not so much raid experience, but more help, humor and a willingness to support the greater team), and watching a guild conversation that revolves just around the raiders on at the time seems to promote end game and exclusion versus inclusion and growth for the guild by embracing new members and supporting them. Not every guild's experience, sure, but a common theme I've run into when joining the larger guilds trying to find active and friendly folks, even those which claim to be "leveling guilds."
I'm curious about WoW Insider's (and it's readers) perspective on guild recruiting. How do small guilds lure new members without the perks and activity of larger guilds? What incentives are there for players to help level a guild, versus just joining one that is already maxed? Looking ahead to Mists, and the potential of new perks and guild levels, what can be done to save the small, casual guild?
Gimmlette Jan 30th 2012 1:54PM
I'm curious. Does the letter writer do any kind of event, like pugs, outside of her guild? Some of the best recruiters for my guild are the guild members who pug, particularly at the odd hours when neither me nor an officer is online. If she runs pugs and chances across a particularly chatty pug member, ask them how they like their guild. Even cross-servers, it's worth it to ask X about his/her guild. If you find the guild that's perfect for you, spending the money to transfer is so worth it.
Something totally off the wall, but look at the tabards in the town square. We've had people inquire about us purely by the name of the guild or the tabard was interesting to them. Many guilds have web sites. Start with The Armory and go from there. You can tell a great deal about a guild by what is posted for the public to read. (Yes, that is a line of taurens outside Tol'Barad. We were laughing so hard it was hard to dance.)
I feel the big thing is sorting out what she wants. Does she want to raid? Would she be happy just sitting on the floor and chatting with people in guild chat? (Looking for the achievement "Spend 1,000 hours standing in a capital city talking to people.") Spectacular Death is a raiding guild that acts socially. If she doesn't know what she wants, we might not be what she's looking for either. Once she sorts out how she wants to spend her time in Azeroth, she'll have a better feel for what kinds of guilds to approach. There's room for everyone in this game but it may take some digging to find just the right fit.
skippy88 Jan 30th 2012 3:59PM
As someone who started this game without knowing anyone I feel her pain. You can go days or weeks without having any form of conversation. Eventually though you do join a guild and get to know some people and you just hope that it's still standing in a month or two.
It can be a lonely and frustrating road but once you find that good group of people it is worth it.
andrews Jan 31st 2012 4:05PM
I would second the recommendation for It Came from the Blog and its related guild. I go from being chatty at times to completely in lurk mode and seem to fit in well. Lots of great people in the guild. WHU (Warcraft Hunters Union) has a guild (and related one) on Icecrown that is quite similar on the alliance side.
I am an altoholic and have toons in several other guilds, but these are the ones I am most active at the present. (Other than my second main guild which is very quiet right now.)