Don’t Hate The Player; Hate The Game.

Survival Of The Everyone-But-You-est

Defense Of The Ancient And Tired Arguments

But What About My Feelings?

EVE is a videogame; don’t trump up your victories as anything more important.

don’t trump up your victories as anything more important. There are lessons to learn , so sportsmanship and constructive advice have value.

, so sportsmanship and constructive advice have value. Defenselessness is a choice, and every capsuleer has the right to fly dangerously.

“So… is this how you get off?” “wow dude, ur a pvp pro..” “Why don’t you pick on someone other than a defenseless miner?” If there’s one word I see come up all the time in my many torpedo delivery adventures, it’s “torpedo.” But if there’s a second word I see very frequently, it’s “defenseless.” “Defenseless miner” “defenseless hauler” and even “defenseless corporation” are usually preceded or trailed by insults and/or name-calling. “Nice cloak you fuckwit,” they might thoughtfully begin, “how could you shoot a defenseless explorer?” “Easily,” I’d reply. “They don’t shoot back.” Of course, the “how” isn’t really the part they don’t understand. With the limited technicality of EVE’s PVP mechanics, it’s typically the simplest part. What my customers don’t understand – or rathernot to understand – is the morality of the matter. Shouldn’t I feel bad aboutIn one word, no. I don’t feel bad. But in 902 additional words, here’s why.I know this is going to sound crazy to some capsuleers, but. Everything in it (the locations, the ISK, the ships, and the torpedoes) are fictitious, and I don’t feel any worse catalyzing or observing their demises any more than I feel guilty winning a game of Monopoly. I don’t feel guilt when putting my chess opponent into check. I don’t feel bad winning two Perfect rounds in Street Fighter IV. I don’t feel bad killing digital zombie Nazis, or headshotting Counter-Terrorists to win the round in CS:GO. And I definitely don’t feel bad watching EVE’s ten trillionth Iteron V combust in a very cool (if not scientifically inaccurate) explosion. Nothing of value has been destroyed when an AFK Venture pops. But I assure you, something of value has been created: a lesson.Every time I’ve fallen into a trap, gotten surrounded, or simply been outplayed, I’ve learned a valuable lesson. “Engage outside of webbing range” or “Watch your overheating damage” or “Holy shit a Proteus does a lot of damage.” I’ve been thoroughly(as the kids say) plenty of times, but I also like to believe I’m all the better for it. And I’m not just talking about EVE Online, either. For instance it’s only after you’ve failed 100 backstabs in TF2 that you intuitively know the distance at which your decloaking can be heard. True gentlemen will know what I mean. So when I see players sitting too close to a hacking site to be able to cloak defensively, or at an asteroid belt with zero velocity, or warping to the same POCOs in the same sequence with the same untanked hull, I feel a Darwinian obligation to correct these behaviors. Now, they say when all you’ve got is a hammer, everything looks like a nail. Well, all I’ve got are torpedoes, drones, and the awesome recording capabilities of NVidea’s GeForce ShadowPlay. So I hope others excuse the sometimes blunt nature of my lesson plan. However, the reality is New Eden isn’t going to protect you from your mistakes; if it weren’t my Hound uncloaking 15km off your multiboxing salvage team, it would probably be someone else’s.Going back to the roots of the matter – the idea of defenseless, helpless victims – I’m not sure what that term is supposed to mean. Every pilot in EVE is free to choose his or her own vessels, fittings, and allies, and I’ve been bested time and time again by players who leverage these freedoms. The un-pointably stabbed Magnates, the secretly tanked and combat fit mining barges, the unexpectedly cloaked Stratios orbiting the POCO. There have been scores of occasions when I believed I’d get away with virtual murder, only to retreat with a burning hull… or a frozen corpse… to show for my not-so-well-laid plans. In other words, anyone who is supposedly defenseless in New Eden has, consciously or not, chosen to forgo defenses. Maybe they don’t know better. Maybe they don’t feel like asking for help. Most of the time, I’d say they’re simply greedy, and choose to fit for maximum ore yield, scan strength, or [insert KPI that’s not tanking]. For instance, I camped a certain j-space system ending in 518 for two or three weeks. At first, the deliveries were easy, and my corpmates and I filled our killboards with green entries that would make even Ruby Rhod jealous. But the local residents began fitting warp core stabilizers to their miners. They began varying their planetary interaction routes, and even launching PI materials to non-POCO locations. They fit their exploration vessels with warp disruptors, holding our bombers in place while hostile destroyers landed on top of us. These guys, and I heartily salute them. What’s more, I guarantee you the next corporation that wandered into that system looking for easy ganks got a rude awakening.If there’s one thing thatreal in EVE Online, it’s the humans behind the computers behind the avatars behind the ships I’ve committed to blowing up. It’s one thing, after all, to triumph over an adversary (willing or otherwise), but it’s another thing altogether to “harvest tears” or go out of one’s way to rub the loser’s nose in the matter. And while many have taken my habit of sending “delivery receipts” to victims as an exercise in cruelty, I personally prefer to get a cheeky RP response than an upset rant. I’m even just as happy to send “failure of delivery” notices when my own vessels go down in a catastrophic torpedo malfunction. If I couldn’t celebrate dismal failure, I probably wouldn’t enjoy EVE particularly much! Anyway, interpersonal cruelty is where I draw the line, and the reason I’ve always required WINGSPAN agents to train Customer Service to V. Because just as I’ve used this article’s points to justify digital genocide, they are equally applicable to the importance of a professional mindset.You know, it’s just that