• BillCheddar@lemmy.world
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    8 days ago

    It might help to think of it less like a video game and more like a million person bowling league.

    People would log in to hang out. To chat. To bullshit.

    Sometimes, to level up or to raid or to pvp. Sometimes, people would log in and play for a few hours just…going around helping other people with stuff. Some people take their characters to the starter zones, handing out bags and some nice gear upgrades and advice to new players.

    And that doesn’t even take into account the RP servers, where people would have like guild meetings in game, or legit life events like a wedding in game. Funerals when a guild mate dies? Of course!

    That is how it became the biggest MMO ever.

    And the game has largely strayed from those roots, which is why so many WoW players go for the Classic version, rather than play the new expansions.

    • I Cast Fist@programming.dev
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      7 days ago

      Adding to that: this was back when a lot of people were getting high speed internet for the first time, which allowed them to play for much longer periods. While messaging programs already existed, the social aspect was super important and the artificial difficulty of certain enemies was an attempt to force people to socialize, before dungeon/raid finder killed a significant part of that.

      “You don’t miss spamming LFG with need tank, need tank, need tank, nowadays you just press a button and wait!” - from the “you think you do, but you don’t” guy