LolisGloglis
Germany
Personally I am a strong supporter of the medieval art of extracting a person's vital essence in a most brutal and timewise lengthy procedure. I believe people should be governed by that fear of being persecuted and subjected to vile albeit necessary means of exemplification. Modern day societies (concerning videogames) have the meaning of discerning the innocent and the guilty by collecting and storing hard evidence. My proposal is that each and every one participant of multiplayer activities should have their profile, disclosing also full name and home address, displayed publicly at all times so as to the locating of them being facilitated. That way cheaters, smurfers, abysmal winners and other sadistic ways of approving one's superiority over a mere seeker of joy and what is commonly refered to as "a good time" are governed by that aforementioned fear. Consequentially, the admittedly large amount of such repulsive individuals should mark reduction, although the rate of it will remain unforeseeable. Games and companies that allow mismatch of players' skillsets should not be altogether excluded from the same treatment, since the problem is not generated by the players' side alone. And finally, to those that have already found their fulfilment in succeeding (relatively speaking) at finding happiness in partaking in multiplayer activities, I submit to you the idea of me and many others of my kind being denied that pleasure and thus being - indirectly at most cases - deprived of the will to search that joy, forced into an everlasting loop of searching and in the end abandoning the hope for feeling that happiness. Therefore, are we not living in a world unjust and unfit of equipping all p eople equally to enjoy their time in this miserable pit of endless craving? Instead of aid, some just get stomped to the ground while the other stand proud above them with the mask of righteousness fashioning their faces. After all, of the many masks that villainy has ever wore, the mask of virtue is the most effective. My suggestion is not that of torment, it is simply a quid pro quo, a way of balancing the scales, be it however radical it may seem. Might we be able to grasp the reality of a better world this way? Perhaps. Perhaps not. We won't know unless we try...
Personally I am a strong supporter of the medieval art of extracting a person's vital essence in a most brutal and timewise lengthy procedure. I believe people should be governed by that fear of being persecuted and subjected to vile albeit necessary means of exemplification. Modern day societies (concerning videogames) have the meaning of discerning the innocent and the guilty by collecting and storing hard evidence. My proposal is that each and every one participant of multiplayer activities should have their profile, disclosing also full name and home address, displayed publicly at all times so as to the locating of them being facilitated. That way cheaters, smurfers, abysmal winners and other sadistic ways of approving one's superiority over a mere seeker of joy and what is commonly refered to as "a good time" are governed by that aforementioned fear. Consequentially, the admittedly large amount of such repulsive individuals should mark reduction, although the rate of it will remain unforeseeable. Games and companies that allow mismatch of players' skillsets should not be altogether excluded from the same treatment, since the problem is not generated by the players' side alone. And finally, to those that have already found their fulfilment in succeeding (relatively speaking) at finding happiness in partaking in multiplayer activities, I submit to you the idea of me and many others of my kind being denied that pleasure and thus being - indirectly at most cases - deprived of the will to search that joy, forced into an everlasting loop of searching and in the end abandoning the hope for feeling that happiness. Therefore, are we not living in a world unjust and unfit of equipping all p eople equally to enjoy their time in this miserable pit of endless craving? Instead of aid, some just get stomped to the ground while the other stand proud above them with the mask of righteousness fashioning their faces. After all, of the many masks that villainy has ever wore, the mask of virtue is the most effective. My suggestion is not that of torment, it is simply a quid pro quo, a way of balancing the scales, be it however radical it may seem. Might we be able to grasp the reality of a better world this way? Perhaps. Perhaps not. We won't know unless we try...
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Comments
pikosolido69 25 Apr, 2022 @ 6:27pm 
+rep el moreno de mi corazon <3
Pablo 25 Apr, 2022 @ 6:25pm 
+rep funny greek man with big :bananas:

:demoneye::demoneye: