Patri Andari wrote:CCP Greyscale wrote:Shoogie wrote:So much has changed in the last couple pages.
stuff & stuff
This is a good post, thank you.stuff & stuff
Read on if you dare:
Did you just really single out one post as a "good post" and then respond?
There are sooo many reasons why this is just horrible form. Let me point out a few:
1. No one has ever proclaimed the criteria a post requires to get a response, yet this "good post" rises to the top and is responded to fortwith. I would love to see an enumerated guide on how to get a response from the devs.
2. Why have so many other posts which bring up even more important circumstance gone ignored?
3. Is it required that one post in a way that rubs a dev the right way to be considered a 'good post'? If so, how do you like to be rubbed?
Yeah ok, this is a reasonable question.
Preface: I am British (as evinced by the fact that I spell my name the way the Queen intended when she invented the English language), so all my expressions of emotion are compressed around the midpoint. To translate into eg American, exchange "good" for "excellent".
1. Here's the general guide, in
approximate order of importance from my personal perspective
- Be calm and reasonable. Angry posts are harder to process, both because the actually worthwhile bits tend to be broken up by the angry bits, and just because it takes additional effort to filter out the negative vibes while you're trying to extract the useful information.
- "Show your working". The single most useful thing you can do in a post is to explain, in as much detail as possible,
why. Simply stating things you believe to be true is somewhat unhelpful, as it's incumbent upon us as developers to be able to explain why we are making changes, and also to filter out things that players are saying because they are true from things that players are saying that they mistakenly believe to be true from things that players are saying that they know are false but hope will sway development decisions anyway. For both of these reasons, an explanation of why you are saying what you are saying is the biggest thing you can do (in combination with the previous point) to get a developer to make changes based on what you're saying. A lot of people seem to be under the misapprehension that simply stating their opinion should be enough for developers to change their mind; this isn't viable for a number of reasons, but the most obvious one is that any given thread will generally have multiple players stating mutually contradictory opinions. We have to be able to pick between them somehow, right?
- Be specific. I love players who actually present numbers rather than just saying "that is too big", because it makes it very clear what they're actually hoping to see, and gives context for what they find reasonable.
- Consider the whole picture. It's very easy to express an opinion about things that affect you directly. It's much rarer for people to consider how the changes they're suggesting affect other players, particularly those of different playstyles or levels of experience. As developers, we have to consider
everyone, and that often involves tradeoffs. Your common-or-garden post says "this is what *I* want", and we have to then synthesize all those different points and figure out how to balance competing interests. Showing at least an awareness of this, and better still actually accounting for it in your working, is a good way to make a post more useful to a developer.
- Have a good, short opening paragraph. If your post starts off badly, I will jump through it quickly looking for anything that sticks out, because I have lots of posts to read and other work to do. If you catch my attention with your opening, I will read it carefully. Note here that I'm not saying it has to make an effort to be catching or provocative, just that a clear, well-written paragraph which meets all the other points in this list suggests that it's a post that's probably worth reading slowly.
- Be novel. Posts bringing up things that haven't previously been mentioned in the thread are
generally more useful than posts repeating the same thing that's been mentioned twenty times. I want to properly clarify this: I'm *not* saying not to repeat points, or even that doing so isn't useful. Seeing the same thing brought up multiple times is a good indicator that there is a broad concern about a particular thing. It's not as powerful as a single post laying out succinctly and convincingly
why a particular thing is problematic, but it's still useful information!
- Be nice to read. If you can be gently witty, or format and punctuate your post so it's easy to read, that will always score bonus points.
2. Nothing in this thread has been outright ignored. With fifty pages I'm happy to hold up my hand and say that some posts I skim-read because, as above, I have other work to do too, but I have read every post for some definition of "read". I have not
replied to every post raising an important point, for a variety of reasons:
- In many cases a reply doesn't really add anything to the discussion
- In some cases that you are considering important posts, I probably simply didn't find the points they were making particularly compelling. YMMV, obviously :)
- I can't reply to everything, both because it would take forever and because it would destroy the rhythm of the thread.
- What a developer does and doesn't reply to tends to, over time, influence the character of the forum. I am
less likely to respond to a post which makes good points in a bad way, because while good points are good, bad presentation is bad. Conversely, people making really good posts I will go out of my way to reply to, because I would like to see more posts like that.
3. This is kind of repeating the first question, at least in the case where I take it seriously rather than snarkily. I'm going to use this opportunity then to say why I replied to Shoogie's post:
- He starts off by giving a suggested rank for Titans. I am immediately reading this post carefully. There have been a lot of posts saying "caps take too long to research". Here is somebody actually proposing a solution. Excellent. (Yes, I note that he said the same thing earlier, I guess I didn't catch it the first time round? Sloppy reading on my part, sorry.)
- Good paragraph length, well written, clear, not angry. Good.
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