Are You In A Guild Of One?
I'm in a Guild of One, and I'm wondering how many more there are out there who are like me.
If you used to be in a Guild of One but went back into a more social guild environment, how long did you stay in your Guild of One?
About My Guild Of One
After I left the raiding guild I got into back in February, I wandered around guildless for a little while but started to notice that guilded players were, on occasion, behaving oddly towards me as I did some fishing and questing in Zangarmarsh.
I started to wonder if, perhaps, these individuals were thinking that I was a Gold Farmer, and they were attempting to grief me as I played.
What type of griefing? Well, in less than two days of playing unguilded, I saw no less than four attempts to "train" a bunch of mobs onto me.
If you're not familiar with the term, it's the name given to the process of gathering up the aggro of a bunch of mobs and then running out of their battle range in such a way that when they go to run back to their reset spots, they run past a target player in battle. If done correctly, the mobs running back to reset will join into the battle with the target player. If the target player isn't paying attention or is actually a bot with very little human guidance, this strategy can be used to kill a target player, whether they're Alliance or Horde.
So, since I was dual-boxing and dragging my low-60s healing-spec'd Priest through her Zangarmarsh quests by my 70 Hunter with a lot more firepower, I figured the least I could do to avoid being griefed while I quest on my own would be to have a guild tag.
But I have non-social goals in World of Warcraft right now - wanting to do more video recording and video editting and PUGs with strangers... all things that will result in more writing in this blog, and more regular socializing out-of-game than in-game. And I don't want to offend anyone with my lack of conversation in-game, which means to me I shouldn't put myself into a social guild environment.
"Silence Is Golden" is born
The decision was made, and a guild name of Silence is Golden was selected. I picked up a Guild Charter in Orgrimmar and headed to the Auction House to buy some supplies.
10 minutes later, I rode into the Valley of Trials on my Black War Kodo, and my bags full of ... more bags.
I advertised on the General line in Durotar that I was looking to buy Guild Charter signatures, and I offered 1g + a 10 slot bag in return for the signatures.
It took less than an hour to get all the signatures I needed, and the guild was formed in Orgrimmar to complete the cycle of creation.
Thank You, *boot*
I then headed to the mailbox and sent messages to each of the charter signers, thanking them for signing the charter, and letting them know the guild is not meant to be a "real guild", and therefore that I wish them luck in their adventures on this realm.
I attached another two 10 slot bags or a couple of pieces of green equipment to each thank-you letter, and sent another 5g to each of them as well.
Then, when everyone was logged out the next morning when I logged in, I removed all but my own toons.
Benefits Of My Own Guild
If you're feeling more social in-game than I am right now, you'd probably be wondering what benefits there are, other than having a guild tag, to belonging to a guild that is shared with nobody else on the game.
- First, there's that Gold Farmer issue - guildless players are viewed with more suspicion than guilded ones. Even though my guild name isn't well known, the fact that I'm able to "get into a guild" (ha ha) seems to speak something on its own. The fact that other players won't have had a poor experience with someone in my guild already will also give me more credibility for an odd reason.
- Second, there's the Guild Bank. A central place to store items shared by my toons - potions, elixirs, raw materials for professions and the likes - and an easy way to track Auction House profits and repair expenses on a regular basis. Plus, since I have two WoW accounts, I can use the Guild Bank to get past the one-hour mailing delay of items, yet still don't have to dual-box to trade.
Not a whole lot of benefits, but since my play time is not going to be social time for the most part for the next little while, this serves me well.
Expect to see a whole whack of videos coming out soon!
I'm also looking at getting a more professional WordPress theme developed for this site and I need to clean up the categories and tags, so stay tuned for updates over the next few weeks.
If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!Related posts:
- Fast and Easy Steps To Creating A WoW Guild
- WoW Guild Banking FAQ (Patch 2.3)
- Back From The Raiding Guild
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Well I use to be the tank of a guild. When your a tank/healer class you pretty much are at the beckon call of the guild, because your pretty much useless by yourself. (I know arguable point)
So I would hide on my alts, then one day I decided why not make a guild, have my own tabard, and guild bank. It was pretty cool. The Drunken Horde is my guilds name. Adds another bit of fun to the game, making tabards, and such. Plus who knows you never know when you want to take the reins and go big time with your guild :)
Tanks are not useless by themselves. I'm a Paladin Tank and I do everything by myself soloing, questing and grinding. Fun times. Its all in how you play.
However my Alt Investment Banker my lvl 13 Warlock has had his own guild as a guildbank since patch 2.3 was released with guildbank. He owns 4 big slots from all the stuff I farm on my paladin. Rest of my other non social alts are members if the guild and alternate bankers as well with one prime investmenter Banker. Even at lvl 13 Warlock can amass 10k g just hangingout in silvermoon city.
Yeah love private guilds for G Bank:
Well, I'm technically in a guild of two, does that count as close enough? It's more of a family/real-life friend guild. My father-in-law is the only other person that plays every week. An uncle got his character to all of level 10 and hasn't been seen in a year. My nephew raced to 60 before the expansion but realized it was eating up all his free time so he sold his account (and was obviously removed from the guild). Two other friends tried it for awhile but didn't catch WoW fever. The only other person ever on is my best friend from high school, but he's not around much these days, but his 10 yr old daughter plays around with some of his low-level characters now and then (but never bothers us).
My father-in-law and I have talked about joining a raiding guild, but we just enjoy the no-pressure playing we do with our 2-person guild. We both have 2 accounts, so like you mentioned, the guild bank is a great way to move stuff around. I recently leveled a Jewelcrafter to 375, and so I often log his 375 alchemist to make Skyfire Diamonds (he doesn't do trade skills much) that I exchange instantly through the guild bank. I use that guild bank constantly just for my own accounts, it is such a handy feature.
It's nice b/c neither of us really talk a lot in the game unless we need help or are doing BGs/Arenas. Being in a 2-man guild is kind of like having a friend as a roommate: you pretty much do your own thing most times, but just having that extra person present makes things not feel as solitary. And we're not constantly bugged to run this instance or raid at this time on this night, etc., etc.