Quote Originally Posted by Bulwarkz View Post
Aw gawd.. how does that have anything to do with the gist of what I said. One, my world layout theory would appropriately gather together the player base, and create arteries to travel from node to node. Two, I'm assuming people would be chocoing a bit and would want to leave from a destination that made sense, and travel around a landscape that made sense. To your only point, 5k a ride isn't exactly ideal - and that just throws players into starting cities anyway. You missed all of my points entirely.

You've pulled this simplistic, irrelevant response crap on me before:
http://forum.square-enix.com/ffxiv/t...of-Anima/page7



When we were talking about how it was unfair for a player to be able to warp to a spot with someone else's tele and then touch the aetheryte to regain access. We were also discussing someone's idea of how the anima system should work. Some how, this is what you derived from all that:



Which I gave you no evidence to support that conclusion, with you being completely wrong anyway.

Way to take people's lengthy statements and generalize them into something completely different, short and retarded. How bout actually comprehending what you're reading, or how about getting your own ideas and making a real post.
My ideas are suited for polymer research, not game development. I like the current map layout. I was also very thankful for that teleport that got me to Mor Dhona without necessitating my touching it beforehand.

It's my opinion that after airships were introduced people should've spread out across the city-states and focused the Market Wards with the cities' respective guilds' products. This didn't happen because things were already very established as they were. 5k per trip is nothing, especially when you can get more than that from a single leve. For new players, the cost is much less.

There were plans for Mor Dhona, I'm sure. I mean, there's a giant downed airship in the middle of it. Saying it's unnecessary overlooks this.

About that other comment: I tend to read some comments and not others. There was no complexity inherent in what you said there. But what you did say just seemed easily refutable.