Yeah. And I know I add my own share of sewage here. :man_shrugging:

Doesn’t change the fact that this could be so much better if we weren’t such dicks, collectively, myself included.

If you mean your debate with my favorite debate bro, then no, I stopped trying to read that a while ago. If it’s something else, then I must’ve missed it.

As for clarification, I both agree and disagree. I think the way TOS is written is okay. Sure, there’s are doubts and questions about it, but there always are. More importantly, any answer to a question about TOS is unlikely to be 100% solid, without any possible exceptions.

Most people who say the rules need clarifications are really looking for that: a set of rules that will never be interpreted with any degree of leeway by Funcom. They want to follow the letter of the rules and not have to think about the spirit of the rules.

Ain’t gonna happen. Shouldn’t happen, no matter how hard people cry about it.

But that doesn’t mean the rules can’t be clarified or shouldn’t be clarified. I just disagree with most people about how that clarification should happen.

I believe the most important clarification would be on a case-by-case basis.

Ideally, if you break the rules, Funcom should send you a warning and explain how you broke the rules, in your specific case, and give you time to fix that. If you don’t fix it, then they wipe and/or suspend you.

I understand why they don’t issue warnings: it’s a lot more work. So if they don’t clarify before acting, the next best thing would be to do so afterwards.

At some point, you have to decide where to draw the line. Every time Funcom improves the discoverability of the rules, the malcontents move the goal posts: before it was ā€œnobody even knows there are rules or where to go to read themā€, now it’s ā€œyou can’t even click on the linkā€ and ā€œnobody should be expected to read the rulesā€.

If Funcom did what you’re proposing, it would be ā€œpeople just scroll through and click, they shouldn’t be expected to readā€ or something along those lines, because the people who keep saying these things aren’t really complaining about how difficult it is to get informed, or even about the grey areas in the rules. They don’t want to play by the rules.