Tutorial to new players are the greens sprouds quests! right in the beguinning of eatch capital. Usually at the inn. I been in 14 since remake of game, past 1.0. The learning curve of skills and dg are very satisfying. No problem to learn, cause i had previous exp with wow.
Last edited by Fellgon; 07-10-2021 at 09:21 AM.
Those don't teach you anything but the basics of the basics. It doesn't teach you about eye gazes, stack markers, proximity attacks, bombs, etc. There's just way too many incredibly vital things that they just tossed into the game without explicitly teaching it to people. It takes the person having to YouTube or have someone share. When I was on Aether, people were complete pricks and expected everyone to know mechanics. Over on Primal, people actually are calm and teach you. It's been night and day between everyone on Aether thinking they are pro gamers and Primal actually kicking butt while making sure to have fun with each other.Tutorial to new players are the greens sprouds quests! right in the beguinning of eatch capital. Usually at the inn. I been in 14 since remake of game, past 1.0. The learning curve of skills and dg are very satisfying. No problem to learn, cause i had previous exp with wow.
Player
You can, unless you're working off some wonky definition by which teaching can only refer to explicit step-by-step instruction. (And even then, it can be taught. You'll just have probably killed any motivation to bother learning.)
In any less artificially confined sense of teaching, well, that's exactly how common sense becomes common.
I play this game casually.
I still care enough about my performance to try.
Taking your hobbies even remotely seriously isn't "hardcore".
I'm a casual wire jeweler. I use expensive materials sometimes. I'm just supposed to wing it when using sterling silver or 14k gold fill?
Casual is time investment, not effort. What the OP is complaining about is lack of effort.
Casual can be used either way, but casual as time investment is a completely worthless description. It's only useful if it means the type of content you engage with. If you would call someone who only logs in for an hour a week to clear Ultimate a "casual" then the word casual doesn't tell you anything about what type of player they are and there's no point in ever using the word. If someone describes themselves as a casual I'm going to think there is certain content they don't engage with, most likely because of the difficulty. Because that's what it means.
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