Last night on the way back to my apartment in New Yorkās Lower East Side, I saw a crowd of men standing around two motorcycles. Iām a fledgling rider myself, as well as newly returned to the city. Iād spoken to these guys a few times before and did what I typically do when I see a guy on a hot bike: walk up and ask him how he likes it.
It wasnāt until I saw him glare at me from underneath his shield that I realized I was bothering him. I instantly sobered up, only to realize that the group of men standing around the bikesāpatrons of the Italian restaurant next door to my place who routinely get together and ride the exact same sort of dual-sport (on/off road) machines Iām trying to learn how to rideāhad all gone silent.
āHeās trying to leave, dude,ā the owner of the restaurant (and sort of the leader of the pack) laughed. And it was then I realized that I was standing there acting like a star-struck kid instead of one of the dudes. Iād just poured two months of slowly trying to get to know these guys well enough to be invited to go riding with them down the drain. They might tolerate me, but they werenāt going to invite me into their group.
I donāt blame them. When youāve got a good thing going on there are lots of people wanting to ingratiate themselves into your club. And itās more likely than not that the newbies arenāt going to be as friendly or as talented as your established cliqueāand itās not anybodyās responsibility to slow down for the new guys.
Iām seeing a similar thread running through the Team Fortress 2 community the last couple of weeks since Valve turned the online multiplayer shooter into a free-to-play game Just a couple of days afterwards there were already scripts available that would block new free-to-play players (free-to-players?) from servers. In a community already starting to divide between old-school, game-as-team-sport types and the more casual players interested in collecting and trading weapons and accessories, another fracture of a community is a logical but unfortunate byproduct.
https://lastchance.cc/team-fortress-2-is-now-free-free-forever-5815052%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Valveās done a good first step by creating the training modes within TF2; thereās even a player-run Steam group that specializes in Team Fortress 2 training for both newbies and established players looking to try new tactics. The creator of SpyParty is even trying to develop a mentoring system for his game. (Know any other training groups for other games? Iād love to hear stories from those in the comments.)
So Iām just throwing this out there: Maybe the next time you find yourself bored in a game that youāve been mastering for years, take a couple of hours to pull aside a flailing newbie and show them the ropes, if for no other reason than to keep the community strong and to raise the level of competition for everyone.