I've heard that question so many times. Sometimes even in shout at whitegate. Japanese people are actually really friendly people. They're not racist, it's just that english speakers have really bad manners and no respect sometimes. So let me help you get into some japanese pts and hopefully, I can teach some of you some manners and give EN players a good name because I'm tired of the bad sterotype we get.
#1. I see this more and more often, and it royally pisses me off when I'm a pt leader as well. DO NOT REPLACE YOURSELF. You might think you're doing the pt leader a favor by replacing yourself and leaving as soon as your replacement comes to reduce downtime, but this is NOT TRUE. Here's the reason why. The party you were in might already be exhausted from however many hours you have partied. When someone new is invited, the party is obligated to gain a reasonable amount of xp before breaking. This is to make his (the replacements) trip to where ever you were lvling worth it. How would you feel if you went to cape terrigan and the pt lasted for 1000 exp? If you were to get a replacement, ASK THE PT LEADER FIRST. PT leaders HATE it when you dont tell them before you invite a replacement. I can't emphasize how much hate. Because when the replacement comes, but the pt was going to break anyways, you get to leave without any hassle, while it is up to the pt leader to be the bearer of bad news to tell your replacement that the pt is breaking. Always ask pt leader if it is ok to replace if needed. Then it should be up to the pt leaders job to find out if the rest of the party had enough time to continue exping with a replacement. I've had tanks replace themselves with drks without saying a word until the replacement came. If you are party leader, then replacing yourself is out of the question. The leader abandoning his own party? That shows extremely bad leadership.
#2. Give at least a 30 minute warning before you leave. Not just a, {Have stuff to do}{see you again!} /ma "Warp" <me>. This is just common respect and at the same time gives the pt leader some time to decide whether to break pt or to find a replacement.
#3. Stop travelling ahead of the other members. For example, if I were to lvl in CN, and I invited you. Don't go to CN immediately. In fact, don't even leave jeuno for the sake of getting to CN faster until prompted by the pt leader. So what if you got to CN faster? You still need the rest of your pt before you begin. If you don't wait in jeuno, you're waiting in CN. Besides, if the whole pt travels together, any complications would be easier to resolve. If you aggro, your pt can help you kill it. On the other hand if you went solo and are far ahead of your pt, then got aggro, then the pt will have to find you a raise, wait for weakness, etc. Point is, going ahead of your pt doesn't make anything faster, but only increases chances of complications to happen.
#4. Don't question where the pt leader wants you to go. You might have gotten awesome xp in CN before, but never tried altepa. Don't argue with him to go to CN and just listen to him to go to altepa. He might have a particular party setup that works better with altepa and not as well in CN or vice versa. I've had so many people, especially at lower lvls, challenge where I wanted to xp even though they've never been to the places I recommend. Besides, he's the pt leader, not you, just listen to him. And one side note: Please please please don't spam {party}{camp}{where?} before the pt even started. When the leader is ready, he will tell you. Only exception to this is if he's taking an exceptionally long time to decide, but generally that will rarely ever happen.
#5. Stop leaving the party 20 minutes into fighting. Look, when you join a party, it's almost like a contract to stay for at least 1 and a half hour. In fact, if you can't stay for any longer than 2 hours, I'd advise you tell the pt leader that. It takes time to assemble a pt, to travel, then finally to xp. It really puts unecissary work on the pt leader to replace and what not.
These are the main things that come to mind right now. I'll add on to this if I think of anything else. Japanese honestly aren't racist people. In fact, they kind of envy american culture and music. It just so happens that mannerism is much more important in japan, and almost non existent in the states that give EN such a bad name. I'll admit, EN manners have improved a lot during the past year (at least during lvls 70-75). However, there are much much more improvement that we could make. I've had so many parties even in the 50-65 range that had manners comparable to what you find in valkurm dunes.
#1. I see this more and more often, and it royally pisses me off when I'm a pt leader as well. DO NOT REPLACE YOURSELF. You might think you're doing the pt leader a favor by replacing yourself and leaving as soon as your replacement comes to reduce downtime, but this is NOT TRUE. Here's the reason why. The party you were in might already be exhausted from however many hours you have partied. When someone new is invited, the party is obligated to gain a reasonable amount of xp before breaking. This is to make his (the replacements) trip to where ever you were lvling worth it. How would you feel if you went to cape terrigan and the pt lasted for 1000 exp? If you were to get a replacement, ASK THE PT LEADER FIRST. PT leaders HATE it when you dont tell them before you invite a replacement. I can't emphasize how much hate. Because when the replacement comes, but the pt was going to break anyways, you get to leave without any hassle, while it is up to the pt leader to be the bearer of bad news to tell your replacement that the pt is breaking. Always ask pt leader if it is ok to replace if needed. Then it should be up to the pt leaders job to find out if the rest of the party had enough time to continue exping with a replacement. I've had tanks replace themselves with drks without saying a word until the replacement came. If you are party leader, then replacing yourself is out of the question. The leader abandoning his own party? That shows extremely bad leadership.
#2. Give at least a 30 minute warning before you leave. Not just a, {Have stuff to do}{see you again!} /ma "Warp" <me>. This is just common respect and at the same time gives the pt leader some time to decide whether to break pt or to find a replacement.
#3. Stop travelling ahead of the other members. For example, if I were to lvl in CN, and I invited you. Don't go to CN immediately. In fact, don't even leave jeuno for the sake of getting to CN faster until prompted by the pt leader. So what if you got to CN faster? You still need the rest of your pt before you begin. If you don't wait in jeuno, you're waiting in CN. Besides, if the whole pt travels together, any complications would be easier to resolve. If you aggro, your pt can help you kill it. On the other hand if you went solo and are far ahead of your pt, then got aggro, then the pt will have to find you a raise, wait for weakness, etc. Point is, going ahead of your pt doesn't make anything faster, but only increases chances of complications to happen.
#4. Don't question where the pt leader wants you to go. You might have gotten awesome xp in CN before, but never tried altepa. Don't argue with him to go to CN and just listen to him to go to altepa. He might have a particular party setup that works better with altepa and not as well in CN or vice versa. I've had so many people, especially at lower lvls, challenge where I wanted to xp even though they've never been to the places I recommend. Besides, he's the pt leader, not you, just listen to him. And one side note: Please please please don't spam {party}{camp}{where?} before the pt even started. When the leader is ready, he will tell you. Only exception to this is if he's taking an exceptionally long time to decide, but generally that will rarely ever happen.
#5. Stop leaving the party 20 minutes into fighting. Look, when you join a party, it's almost like a contract to stay for at least 1 and a half hour. In fact, if you can't stay for any longer than 2 hours, I'd advise you tell the pt leader that. It takes time to assemble a pt, to travel, then finally to xp. It really puts unecissary work on the pt leader to replace and what not.
These are the main things that come to mind right now. I'll add on to this if I think of anything else. Japanese honestly aren't racist people. In fact, they kind of envy american culture and music. It just so happens that mannerism is much more important in japan, and almost non existent in the states that give EN such a bad name. I'll admit, EN manners have improved a lot during the past year (at least during lvls 70-75). However, there are much much more improvement that we could make. I've had so many parties even in the 50-65 range that had manners comparable to what you find in valkurm dunes.
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