THIS IS WHY YOU DIDN’T GET A HEAL
Archives
“It’s a PVP server” is not an excuse
I’m leveling on Sargeras again and just because it’s a pvp server, should not mean a level 50, or 60 should get one shot by level 100’s nearly everywhere you go. Hellfire is especially terrible for this.
Fly high in the air? Dead to a level 100.
Try to turn in a quest? Dead to a level 100.
Try to 1v1 another same level horde? Dead to a level 100.
Flying to another area? Dead to a level 100.
No, not crying. I see this as a legitimate problem that should have a solution for quality of life.
One time I hit this guy so hard..
He renamed/server transferred. This guy was horsing around in Goldshire while I, guards, and other people killed him several times, got him again outside Stormwind, and the last time on top of the gates here.
His bones vanished so I logged over to horde to check for him, since he was from Dentarg, which is merged with us. He wasn’t online. Curious I checked his armory:
and today that character no longer exists. Weird!
The skeletons are up…
You sound familiar
I used to run into this enhancement shaman named Kash (Oltar) during AV weekends. Every time the battle ended, there he was again, queuing up and scrapping with me, Squeektoy, and whatever random DK was hanging around.
At first, it was just the usual back-and-forth—me calling him a “dirty enhancement shaman,” him insisting he was “clean” thanks to Healing Rain. But then he dropped a line from the Zelda cartoon—“Excuuuuse me, princess”—and suddenly I was right back in the ‘90s, laughing like an idiot at my screen. I threw Super Mario Bros. Super Show at him in return. From there, it was game on.
We traded jabs constantly—me threatening to bite, him claiming everyone who ganked him eventually ended up liking him. He wasn’t wrong. Even when I swore I’d keep fighting him, he’d wink back with, “Wouldn’t have it any other way.”
He’s gone from my friends list now, but those fights with Kash stick with me. It’s rare to run into someone in PvP who can trash-talk, banter, and still make you grin instead of grind your teeth. He made random battlegrounds feel less like a queue and more like a story I was lucky to be a part of.