Stop collecting blue messages. Start exploding with style. :cool:
Wide awake in a world that sleeps, enduring thoughts, enduring scenes. The knowledge of what is yet to come.
From a time when all seems lost, from a dead man to a world, without restraint, unafraid and free.
Mostly retired Discovery member. May still visit from time to time.
I've found that while a good number of people who sport a fairly poor attitude to combat, the worst are the "bad winners". I'm sure most of you know what I mean...
That said, the problem with people's attitudes to shooting isn't so overwhealming as to make it so I cease doing something I enjoy. That'd be a little bit daft. It's all worth it when you and your opponent are out of bots, out of batts, running low on mines and fighting hard... Knowing that the gap between winning and losing is only a couple of rounds of magma hammers. Both people so deeply engrossed that everything seems to slow down a bit, everything you do is a risk, your awareness of your virtual surroundings increases. And you know that regardless who wins and who loses, it was so intense that both people involved will high-five, congratulate one another on a good fight and walk away from their computer with a grin on their face...
That's why I still get into combat in this game... Because what I just described above more than compensates for ten or twenty bad experiences.
I agree with Joe on this point. There are times and fights when/where you'll be dissapointed, but remember those good fights, when people fight fair to the end.
For me PvP was shooting SNACs at Transports and Capitals. Now I'll be in a Freighter for quite a long Time. Always been just average in fighting with and against Fighters. I hope I can see good old Action again ^_^
"Who is it doing this synthetic type of alpha beta psychedelic funkin'?"
But yea, I'm with Joe. One killer experience against a player roughly of equal skill that doesn't get interrupted by some idiot with a battleship sized e-peen is worth more then a dozen 2milordai experiences.
Wide awake in a world that sleeps, enduring thoughts, enduring scenes. The knowledge of what is yet to come.
From a time when all seems lost, from a dead man to a world, without restraint, unafraid and free.
Mostly retired Discovery member. May still visit from time to time.