Regarding the MSQ dungeon thing and similar arguments that pop up regularly in this thread...
- People have arguments in their heads and assumptions about what make some people "right" and others "wrong" and often react quickly when they see a chance to use them
- People often bring up whichever moral or ethical principles happen to support their own benefit at that particular time
- People love moralizing, that is, explaining why others are lacking some type of (supposed) virtue
Notice this isn't about which "side" someone is on. And if you watch, similar discussions often get away from the reported facts of what happened to arguments over how people should or shouldn't behave in a broad sense and then sometimes even to basic schoolyard "I know you are but what am I?" type stuff.
Yet we're all people playing a game for fun
So consider if you will:
Some will say that if you aren't 100% prepared when the dungeon or trial starts it's entitlement or disrespect to others. And perhaps sometimes it does seem fair to call it rude if the person is severely under-geared and has absolutely no idea how their job works. Yet, what if it's someone who clearly is trying but needs some quick explanations or tips here and there, is that 80-95% level of preparation and willingness to ask/learn a sign of entitlement or disrespect?
Or, is it the person who thinks they deserve a super-fast and quiet-as-the-grave run every time who is acting entitled? The game is full of people of all skill, knowledge, and experience levels who are also queueing up, and you know that. You accept it by choosing to play this game and not stick to FC/friend-only runs. As for the lament for the long dps queues or the person who needed to log off soon to sleep or work, where is the "personal responsibility" for choosing to queue as a dps *and* choosing to use a tool to group with random strangers who may or may not be able to finish the run as fast as you want?
Notice how easily these arguments can go either way, depending on which way suits us best in the moment.
We all have our expectations and wishes, and we all limits to our skill and our patience with others. When ours clash with the expectations, wishes, skill level, and degree of patience of others, we are annoyed. It's cool. So people blow off steam in this thread. Also cool.
No big point at the end. No sermon with a call for reflection or repentance. No lecture with a stated a lesson. I also have my expectations and wishes. I also worry if I'm terrible and annoying others, yet find myself wishing other people would play a little better. This is just an observation, one that people can make of what they will, or make nothing of at all. Go forth and have fun![]()