Skip to main content

It’s not just because you suck: Guild Wars 2 explains account suspensions

Guild Wars 2 still
Image used with permission by copyright holder

The free-to-play MMO Guild Wars 2 just arrived at retail, but thousands of players have already been suspended. We thought the game was pretty great, but were unable to get the full Guild Wars experience thanks to a foolish reluctance to karma-farm, hack other players, or deny the existence of the Holocaust. Lots of other players don’t share our restraint, and developer ArenaNet is banning them for it.  After facing lots of forum outrage for actually enforcing their conduct policy, ArenaNet has gone to Reddit to explain exactly why a screenname like “Adolf Chitler” isn’t welcome in Tyria.

Reddit was quickly swarmed by players cheekily inventing hypothetical names to see if those would be permitted, some of which were so funny that the ArenaNet admins conceded that it’d probably give them a pass for laugh value. ArenaNet also took the opportunity to clarify some aspects of its forbidden names policy, noting, for example, that while the prohibition on names for religious figures prevents you from calling your avatar “JesusOfCool,” common Biblical names like David, Saul, or Nimrod are fine.

Much funnier is the publisher’s willingness to publicly inform players exactly what got them banned. Many visitors to the thread threw out their chests and complained about why their ordinary screennames got banned, only to have their self-righteousness ground into the dirt when the ArenaNet representative replied with “Name: OK. Chat: Not OK” — followed by a published chat transcript that got the whiner banned. Devotees of name-and-shame websites like FatUglyOrSlutty (which, despite the confrontational title, exists to expose players who indulge in sexist behavior on Xbox Live) will find plenty of horror stories here to stroke their outrage. One particular player was so moved by the shaming to whimper, “I feel so stupid,” fulfilling the fantasies of many MMO players who’ve wished that some little troll would someday realize how awful he was.

There’s much less comedy in the many innocent players who are asking why they’ve been suspended despite perfect behavior, only to get the chilling reply that “Your account seems to have been hacked.” After only a few weeks of beta testing, Guild Wars 2  already harbors a substantial population of account hackers, gold farmers, bot-runners, and exploit-wielders — and although ArenaNet deserves commendation for reacting swiftly to those who’d break the game, a lot of players are becoming collateral damage.

ArenaNet has also been admirably focused on putting the same level of attention into its community as it puts into the game. “We’re not a video game company, we’re a community building company. We just happen to have one of the coolest ways to build a community, which is through a video game,” said Martin Kerstein, ArenaNet’s community manager. This is a fascinating perspective on what it means to make MMO’s. Even more admirable is ArenaNet’s willingness to engage with the community through personal communications via its website and Web forums, rather than just handing down dictates.

However, the enthusiastic swinging of the ban hammer has many players venting their outrage on every soapbox they can find, and many players may decide that if their supposedly funny racist friends can’t play, they don’t want to play either. It remains to be seen whether ArenaNet can build a business on the venn diagram intersection between people who want to play a fantasy MMO and people who don’t enjoy racism, sexism, and homophobia. But it deserves credit for trying to find out.

Daniel McKleinfeld
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Xbox Games Showcase coming this summer alongside mysterious game reveal
Indiana jones buried in the sand.

Microsoft has set the date for its Xbox Games Showcase this June. It's also teasing a Direct that will immediately follow the showcase, but won't say what that's for just yet.

The Xbox Games Showcase will return at 10 a.m. PT on June 9. Like all of its showcases, Microsoft plans to stream this presentation across its YouTube, Twitch, and Facebook, although it will also give away tickets to see the show in person via Xbox FanFest. According to the Xbox Wire post announcing the livestream, this is Microsoft's "first Showcase featuring games from our portfolio of studios across Activision, Blizzard, Bethesda, and Xbox Game Studios, in addition to titles from our third-party partners."

Read more
One of the best Tomb Raider games is coming to Xbox Game Pass
Lara Croft runs from a crashing plane in Tomb Raider.

Microsoft unveiled the batch of games coming to Xbox Game Pass throughout the first half of May. It's a smaller group of only four games, but all of them are neat additions to Microsoft's subscription service. Here's the full roster of games coming to Xbox Game Pass between May 2 and May 14.

Tomb Raider: Definitive Edition -- May 2
Kona II: Brume -- May 7
Little Kitty, Big City -- May 9
Brothers: A Tale of Two Sons -- May 14

Read more
Samsung TVs are getting their own exclusive games
Someone plays Rivals Arena on a Samsung TV.

 

Samsung announced two new video games for its TVs at the IAB NewFronts 2024 event that won't require a controller to be played.

Read more