Nephretiti said:True story:
One middle-of-the-week night a long time ago I decided to work on my crafting...
Me:
Some guy I have never even heard of: Um, Hi! Hope you dont mind but I did a /who all Illu and found you.
Them: What are you doing?
Me: Leveling up my crafting.
Them: LOL! You idiot! Put that (*& down. You're coming to Tov with us.
Me: Lol! Okies.
The point here is that we need to keep some of the old tried-and-true methods. Let folks find us in this way as well as other methods. Or if you definately do NOT want to cold-called like this, a simple command to opt-out would be nice. Like /anon
Yeah the old ways should still be available and possible, but you make a good point: Maybe there should be a /NLFG (Not Looking For Group) flag or /LFPAQ (Looking for peace and quiet) too.
Celandor said:I liked the old school /lfg flag that I could pop up whenever. It allowed you to do simple things like
/who all lfg cleric 15-20
This lets you find exactly what your group is looking for. The problem with that system is people get too lazy to type /lfg or the /who command, so you had silly things happening in-zone like "lfg check". People stop using /lfg, then your ability to look for group members gets restricted to the zone you are in.
Whatever system we implement, I hope it merely identifies potential group mates and doesn't automatically try to match them up.
Celandor states this very well. I agree that we don't need some kind of automatic lfg system (ew!).
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