xynnia said:
1) How did you come to start posting on the Escapist forums? What do you normally use them for?
2) What do you like and dislike about the forums?
3) Do you think the forums have changed at all since you joined?
4) What do you think of the moderation?
5) Have you ever been to an offline meet-up linked with the Escapist, or met fellow users offline? Would you if you got the chance?
6) Do you use any other platforms (Twitter, Facebook, Tumblr etc.) to connect with the Escapist community?
7) Do you think The Escapist should do anything more to give its users a good community experience?
Guess I'll throw in, if only because having had these assignments in the past I know how hard it can be to get any enough respondents. I will bang on at length so hopefully you can find something in here worth using.
1) Same as most, I was first interested in the site by Yahtzee (although I can't remember where I heard about him from), and eventually started commenting on his videos.
2)
Likes:
It's reasonably entertaining - I'm one of those bizarre psychopaths that actually enjoys reading everything about contentious issues. (Despite not actually caring about GG, the American gun debate, or the ME3 ending I find a certain amount of entertainment in reading all news and posts related to them if only to see how people react and change opinions as the argument continues.)
Despite many complaints about the volume of threads (too many of, not enough of) there is at least a reasonable level of variety in topics between and within the separate boards. On top of that there is a number of posters who are fairly knowledgeable about particular areas, and its nice to see someone who actually studies this or that topic weigh in.
Most people are generally polite and nice, although what I write next will make you doubt my sincerity here, and there is a good sense of humor among many regulars.
Dislikes:
Contentious issue burnout, exasperated by certain users. There are people on this forum who, despite claiming that they hate this or that topic, are wholly incapable of shutting up about it. If there is a news post even tangentially related to one of their gripes, it will get a passive-aggressive post, or general snark. These include, as of late, anything about censorship, anything about shady dealings, and a few certain names. The way these guys bang on about hating this or that, but still participate fully in it makes me wonder if these topics are some kind of replacement for a self abusive heroin addiction. No, seriously, the "I hate it but I must" thing is a mainstay among self destructive addicts.
Following from the previous - there is a subset of users that feel snark is a replacement for personality, and somehow get away with abusing other posters. I've felt it only rarely myself - I can out asshole anybody any day of the week so it isn't as much an issue for me - but it really is painful seeing the same jackasses lay into people day by day and receive no punishment for it. With that there are a number of people who seem to delight in sticking their heads into a thread to make a joke at the expense of the topic or the TC, with no purpose beyond derailment in mind, and promptly leave having apparently met a quota for the day.
3) Over time the forums have become less welcome to new users and more ready to defend old users poor behavior, which I feel is a shame. On the other hand, modding has generally improved even if not in the direction I personally would like, and new content creators have spawned new subcultures for me to watch.
4) Should have read all the questions first I guess. As I mentioned, I have some whines but in general the modding has been fair and straightforward.
5) No, and no. To expand, having read so much contentious stuff by so many people its very hard for me to not have a mild to not great opinion of a vast number of users just because I'm constantly seeing them at their worst (since I seek it out).
6) No, some level of anonymity is important to me so I can occasionally show off my own worst without fear of reprisal. Plus, facebook, twitter and tumblr and so forth don't really add anything to the experience anyway. Paraphrasing Bender, you're already talking with me, this is the maximum level of talking with me - adding more text based crap isn't going to enrich our interactions any further.
7) There was a community podcast for a while - by and for forum people - that I thought was an interesting idea. It would have been nice had that been more formally endorsed, but beyond that I don't really think so. We already have pointless badges and text based interaction, the only thing missing from an extremely run of the mill forum experience is reputation/thumbs, but having used forums with those it generally adds nothing.