Hmm. Interesting, beard-stroking times in the WoW community. Not that I have a beard. Or that I stroke anyone else's. Even Ratshag's. Anyway, I digress. It's interesting times. 'cos people are talking about elitism and differentiation in WoW. And it's a tricky topic, because no-one wants to feel like an identikit-clone.
WoW is basically a gear-based system, and with a limited set of routes for getting new gear in the end game, people start to graduate towards looking the same. And thus people start to find other routes to mark themselves as different to other. One way is the activity-based eltism my guildleader talks about:
In the wider WoW world there's been a number of forum posts from people
demanding privelages for their 'elite' characters: "I must be allowed
to AFK in battlegrounds because I'm a pro duelist", "I should be
allowed to create new characters at lvl 70 as I've already levelled x
of them", "Only hardcore people should be allowed to get item X", "Only
people who have done SSC/BT/MH should be able to play/test new
content", "You casuals are ruining the game by getting the attunements
for Raid X removed"
Or the rather fallacious faction-based "I'm more mature than you" idiocy that Big Bear Butt Blogger is discussing:
I can't help but wonder if the perception that Horde players are more
mature than Alliance players might stem, at least in part, from an
unconscious belief that the people that choose to play Horde are mature
enough to prize individuality and personality over appearance, and the
people that choose to play Alliance are shallow or immature for
choosing a faction that has pretty models.
The urge to differentiate yourself, I understand. It's one of the reasons I steadfastly refuse to go Primal Mooncloth and make the healing Epic set, because I don't want to be yet another healer loitering around Shattrath in it. I'm quite happy with my many-Kara-leather-pieces set, thankyouverymuch.
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