you seem a bit ignorant to me, some people have trouble making friends in 'real life' due to low self esteem and such, making friends online means they can talk to people without these low self esteem issues etcSillyBear said:You're partaking in your social relationships through a barrier of security. These friends of yours online aren't really connected to you other than through voice and by game. You have never seen them outside of the game, you have not seen how they interact with the world and you are interacting them with the equivalent of a brick wall between you.Daniel Janhagen said:If you seriously think that (and it seems you do), I don't know how to change your opinion. I have friends that I didn't meet in WoW, and I have friends I did meet there. They're the same quality friends, but the WoW ones are three times as many (not counting my family and relatives, obviously). I do not regret a single hour spent in that game. (Five years worth).
Of course you don't agree with me, you're too entrenched to do so. And that's fine! I realise that people can make friends online, but to suggest that being friends in WoW and being friends in real life is equal is ridiculous.
Real life>Fantasy. Of course there is a place for both and of course you can be enriched by both, but one is significantly more important and holds more gravitas than the other.
Even trying to suggest to me that talking through a laggy voice communication system and cartoon characters is as equal as real life conversation is being completely ignorant to biology. Face to face conversation and non-verbal cues count for a fuck load.
For some people this is the only way they can feel comfortable speaking to others, and you shouldn't criticise them for that
I do understand, that if you can make friends in the 'real world', then you should, because life is more fun with friends (IMO anyway) but you shouldd't dampen other peoples relationships with there friends just because you think 'it doesn't count'