This post was from a user who has deleted their account.
I have been in alot of bad groups.For an example, one time i was doing CoS and guess what, the leader didnt get a tank. So they decide the unholy/blood DK should tank. We wiped on the first pull. So then they decide after a few min to finally replace ME the best dps in the group. So what i learned from the 15min. i was in CoS was this.1)If you decide to be the leader of a group/raid you should know the dungeon/raid and be able to find tanks and healers and then be able to fill all the extra spots with good dps.2)If you do not know how to tank or have tanking gear, PLZ do not try to tank something.3)If you die in a group because you are dps and trying to tank, dont blame the healer or dps.4)If you can heal then i suggest that when the healer dies then plz put some healing spells on your 2nd bar like me are anywhere really beacause you never know what will happen.(im a Spriest and i always keep healing spells on my 2nd bar for an emergency)-Sneakers
Another thing that I have not seen here, is that you should always in first time TRUST new people,As a hunter I have a problem that their are allot of hunters, that sometimes fail horribly.. Main reason here being pet control. This results in the fact that I sometimes have a harder time finding groups, cause I will get replies like "Sorry rather have a shammy then a hunter". Or like the other night when I got a comment "Nice to have a Hunter on board instead of a Huntard". Although this comment is positve it shows, that people then not to trust hunter completly.So one of the main things that also makes a good player is trust, if you dun know a person. I he is a bad one, you will remember his name and simply don't invite him next time.in time you will get a nice feeling for the better persons in the server, and in the end if you have a party with good players you can all lift each other to a new lvl
Perhaps you didn't know it, but you've misused the term "philosophy", while actually explaining what philosophy really is; a rather ironic twist. It means "love of learning", or "love of wisdom", and you've been using it as "this is how go about doing my business". Arguably, the latter definition is fairly common these days, but my philosophy teacher mentioned this misuse the first day of class; she didn't seem too happy about it either. :)The real meaning however, is best conveyed in your post with this quote:
Naruto sucks.
I believe it stands to reason both halves of the word, that is both definitions, are put in place throughout my article. For if one is not willing to learn, then one is not really devoted to the cause in the first place.Also, I originally hated Naruto (the anime), but I loved the video game Naruto Ultimate Ninja 2. I am currently facing a constant uphill battle in the next fighting installment, Naruto Ultimate Ninja 3, against my brother. When I am tired of getting whooped, I'll probably get the one for PlayStation 3 as I hear it's ground-breaking in terms of 3D cell shading graphics. Recently I saw the first episode of Naruto and have to admit: it isn't that bad. It's much better in Japanese, though.