Guildless: The saga continues

As you might remember, I made the decision a while back to try my hand at raiding, and for the first time ever /gquit. It was with a heavy heart that I applied to a friend's raiding guild, one that had previously accepted a few of my guild's members that wanted to get into raiding. It took a couple of weeks to be accepted in, mostly because my gear was so very shoddy in comparison, and they were looking toward TK and SSC. In addition to that, I had a friend in the guild who was fighting on my behalf with the guild master, and just about the time that talks opened up between the three of us, I shipped off to BlizzCon.
So I came back from the convention with an absolute burning desire to play again, something I haven't had for a good long while. I messaged the Guild Master, eager to know the results of her discussions with the other officers. No answer. I messaged my friend, and was given the run around. Just about the time I thought I better throw in the towel, my answer came. It came in the form of a guild invite. I had managed to weasel my way in.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Raiding

We've covered this kind of thing
The phrase "guild drama" is one that crops up a lot in WoW; the necessary consequence of a large
group of individuals all working towards a few common goals seems to be tension, strife and disagreement. From
personality clashes to mergers and alliances, you need to deal with a lot of other people's business to get far in the
endgame. Even if you choose to bypass raiding and focus on your PvP, more politics come into play over rank and
honour.



