(03-14-2013, 06:46 PM)Trail Wrote: This thread is filled with karlotta alts just crusading for the sake justice in discovery without him we would just be sheeple.
No im not being sarcastic at all.
Maybe making more alt accounts and getting banned repeatedly breaking the server / forums rules (ban on the forums is a ban on the game and vice versa) will show us how much of a robin hood he is.
Karlotta is obviously being hounded by the admin team since they refused to listen to his ban appeal and now shows us regular members how unfair the admin team is.....
Cut! Cut! wrong script! Wrong script, this all never happened. That was some other guy.
In all fairness, Robin Hood repeatedly broke the law and evaded capture.
(03-14-2013, 06:46 PM)Trail Wrote: This thread is filled with karlotta alts just crusading for the sake justice in discovery without him we would just be sheeple.
No im not being sarcastic at all.
Maybe making more alt accounts and getting banned repeatedly breaking the server / forums rules (ban on the forums is a ban on the game and vice versa) will show us how much of a robin hood he is.
Karlotta is obviously being hounded by the admin team since they refused to listen to his ban appeal and now shows us regular members how unfair the admin team is.....
Cut! Cut! wrong script! Wrong script, this all never happened. That was some other guy.
In all fairness, Robin Hood repeatedly broke the law and evaded capture.
His cause was way more just and chivalrous however
... Except that in the stories (yes, it is fictional) about Robin Hood, he was made an outlaw as a result of the authority he was struggling against geniunely being abusive.
If we were to change the story to better reflect what we're seeing here... Robin Hood would have returned from the crusades while wearing a big cape embroidered with the slogan "ALL ENGLISHMEN ARE WORTHLESS SCUM", covering an entire village in horse-poo and trying to shoot someone's prize bull with his bow.
Then, when the Sherriff came along to tell him to stop, explaining how Robin's actions were damaging everyone, he would have called the Sherriff something awful, then run away into the woods, shaking his merry butt.
If that was the story of Robin Hood, I doubt he would have become a folk hero at all.
(03-15-2013, 01:15 AM)Jihadjoe Wrote: If we were to change the story to better reflect what we're seeing here... Robin Hood would have returned from the crusades while wearing a big cape embroidered with the slogan "ALL ENGLISHMEN ARE WORTHLESS SCUM", covering an entire village in horse-poo and trying to shoot someone's prize bull with his bow.
Then, when the Sherriff came along to tell him to stop, explaining how Robin's actions were damaging everyone, he would have called the Sherriff something awful, then run away into the woods, shaking his merry butt.
If that was the story of Robin Hood, I doubt he would have become a folk hero at all.
He would have been my hero though
well , xept for the anglophobia.
edit: On quick retrospective , The Robin Hood you portray actually really seems like an awesome guy.
In the rude days of King Richard and King John there were many great woods in England. The most famous of these was Sherwood forest, where the king often went to hunt deer. In this forest there lived a band of daring men called the banned.
They had done something that was against the laws of the land, and had been forced to hide themselves in the woods until they made a new account. There they spent their time in roaming about among the flood, in reading the sanction posts, and in sharing constructive feedback with the community.
There were nearly a hundred of these alts, and their leader was a bold fellow called Robin Hood. They were dressed in suits of green, and armed with bows and arrows, and sometimes they wore capes embroidered with the slogan "ALL ENGLISHMEN ARE WORTHLESS SCUM" , which looked quite good on them.
Whenever they had yelled anything, it was brought and laid at the feet of Robin Hood, whom they called Karlotta. He then divided his criticism fairly among the people, giving to each man his just share.
Robin never allowed his men to harm anybody but the admins who lived in great houses and did no work. He was rarely kind to people and he often sent carriages filled with manure to the villages , to smear it all over the town square ; and for that reason the common people looked upon him as a cool dude.
Long after he was banned, men liked to talk about his deeds. Some praised him, and some blamed him. He was, indeed, a rude, misguided fellow; but at that time, people did not think of right and wrong , just like nowadays.
A great many replies were made about Robin Hood, and these replies were read in the cottages and huts all over the land for days afterward.
(03-15-2013, 03:07 AM)madvillain Wrote: The revised story of Robin Hood.
In the rude days of King Richard and King John there were many great woods in England. The most famous of these was Sherwood forest, where the king often went to hunt deer. In this forest there lived a band of daring men called the banned.
They had done something that was against the laws of the land, and had been forced to hide themselves in the woods until they made a new account. There they spent their time in roaming about among the flood, in reading the sanction posts, and in sharing constructive feedback with the community.
There were nearly a hundred of these alts, and their leader was a bold fellow called Robin Hood. They were dressed in suits of green, and armed with bows and arrows, and sometimes they wore capes embroidered with the slogan "ALL ENGLISHMEN ARE WORTHLESS SCUM" , which looked quite good on them.
Whenever they had yelled anything, it was brought and laid at the feet of Robin Hood, whom they called Karlotta. He then divided his criticism fairly among the people, giving to each man his just share.
Robin never allowed his men to harm anybody but the admins who lived in great houses and did no work. He was rarely kind to people and he often sent carriages filled with manure to the villages , to smear it all over the town square ; and for that reason the common people looked upon him as a cool dude.
Long after he was banned, men liked to talk about his deeds. Some praised him, and some blamed him. He was, indeed, a rude, misguided fellow; but at that time, people did not think of right and wrong , just like nowadays.
A great many replies were made about Robin Hood, and these replies were read in the cottages and huts all over the land for days afterward.