Officers' Quarters: The road to mediocrity
"Every Monday Scott Andrews contributes Officers' Quarters, a column about the ins and outs of guild leadership. We've all come across those mediocre players. They are the hunters that can DPS but don't know how to trap a mob; the shamans that never break crowd control but windfury their way to the top of the aggro list every single pull; the warriors who excel at single-target tanking but can't hold more than one mob at a time. wow eu Where do these players come from, and how do they stay so mediocre after 70 levels. The author of this week's e-mail thinks he has the answer: The road to mediocrity is built by your own guild. Scott, I enjoy your Officers' Quarters articles on WoWInsider.com, so maybe you can tackle this subject for me in your next piece: I am now a casual player (played since beta and used to be hardcore) and I'm in this nice and friendly social guild. I'm not an officer, nor do I have the desire to be one. wow euro I just want to log on and do whatever I feel like with my limited play time. This guild puts no pressure on me and I appreciate that. The guild leaders' philosophy is to be helpful to one another – helping on whatever is needed by other members. wow power leveling Guild members get rank up by how much they help others. This was a noble idea . wow powerleveling but there's a huge caveat. One of the things that lower level members often ask higher members for help on is to run them through instances. However, there's a very bad side effect to this: mediocrity. "
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