Quote Originally Posted by Durandallwyn View Post
I was watching my 13 year old daughter playing a trial boss. And some mouthy little entitled twerp started blaming her cuz she was panicking a little and the party wiped. She was in tears and left. Now she\\'s saying she never wants to play again.
She\\'s always been a bit sensitive and shy but enjoys final Fantasy games even the old ones I grew up playing. She was very proud of herself for getting into stormblood and kept saying she was looking forward to the new expansion. Her confidence level was starting to show and it was a great way for us to do something together.
You rude players out there need to stop expecting others to be like you! Be understanding! you don\\'t have most of the facts and can\\'t judge them nor blame them. You do not know what is going on in other people\\'s environments, various distractions occur, and stop freaking out cuz your video game wasn\\'t perfect.
*Eyetwitch.*

This post sounds too much like "OMG, don't tell my kid how to play a game! *Engages overprotective parent.*"

With the limited given information, mistakes will happen and people will point them out, especially to the person who caused a wipe. Since the statement is vague, we don't know how [potentially un]kindly this criticism was given. You admit she's sensitive - so it literally could have been something not even rude and set her off. Text doesn't translate into tone very well unless you know that individual's mannerisms very well. Pointing out mistakes and giving criticism is not rude by default, especially if it's something that could be considered basic competence (you know, a healer healing, a tank holding aggro and using the correct CDs, DPS not eating bad and doing decent numbers). It's an MMO - a team-based one.

You can teach her how to take the comments in stride - how to handle criticism, how to correctly deal with rude players (making use of the blacklist feature) or even killing people with kindness (sometimes people do back down or change their tones by saying sorry I messed up). I wouldn't suggest teaching them going to the forums in a futile attempt to change thousands of strangers - changing a single person's reaction is far more plausible.