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Why would I help newer players?


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Now I don't mean me personally but ask yourself this question, what's in it for you? You get your guild group together at reset, rush through the raid wings in about 3 hours and then you are done for the week, no more rewards, you are capped. You see guildie after guildie ask in chat, you see pugs beg in map chat for a full party so they can even practice.... but why bother? You don't get any rewards for helping them, not even blues/greens, you get zilch. Maybe you can join the raid sellers instead, at least that way you get gold and others can get their raid done, who cares if they understand the mechanics or learn anything, what is important is that you make money. If only there was a system in place where you got extra loot if someone in the party completes their first clear of a wing, that could be incentive but that doesn't exist. You get nothing, why bother?

Maybe I should pose the question to the GW2 Raid Devs instead? There is only a small numbers of players that complete raids weekly and everyone else has to suck it up; the current system is flawed, especially when you consider that the only constant day to day is raid sellers in the LFG tool. No issue with raid sellers mind you, they are just filling a gap that the devs have left wide open. GW2 Raids have an artifical barrier built in that makes it harder and harder for the casual player to experience them, if you don't have 100 kill proofs then you cannot join but they can't get a group so they cannot join, it's a catch 22. This isn't a topic on the difficulty of raids by the way, just the lack of rewards for everyone. It's a minority of players that do full clears every week with the vast majority of players not able to find groups and it has nothing to do with their gear or skill levels, plenty are able for raids but if you don't play by reset each week, then you just don't play and that is the reality.

Update: The emphasis of my post has less to do with rewards and more to do with a flawed raid system that cuts off 95% of the playerbase by it's design, not by player choice.

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There are two distinct issues:

  • What's in it for experienced raiders to slow down their first clear and/or to go without substantive rewards to clear multiple times?
  • What happens when there are additional rewards for multiple clears?

The OP raises the first issue; ANet is worried about the second.


When the game launched, and dungeons could be cleared regularly by experienced players, what happened was groups got very specific about comps to speed through and then they repeated them over and over again. They did not slow down for newer players to join & learn. Even as ANet added time gates to the rewards, this didn't substantially change: groups that repeat, repeat for speed, not for training.

So the "reality" is that adding rewards for people willing to go again and again doesn't actually create a better space for training. Instead, it creates a reward structure that allows experienced players to earn more.

(And no, it doesn't get much better by changing the requirements to include a minimum number of first clears, since there are plenty of ways to abuse that.)


tl;dr the OP has a point... it's just not the only point.

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If this is specifically about raids, I imagine there's a few possible reasons to help new people out. Such as:

  1. Looking to increase the raid playerbase
  2. Looking for people who to be part of your organized runs
  3. boredom (because raids are too easy when everybody knows the mechanics)
  4. To show off by attempting to carry the squad (which was totally what was happening when chronomancer could use party-distortion)
  5. Because one enjoys teaching others.
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@Skotlex.7580 said:If this is specifically about raids, I imagine there's a few possible reasons to help new people out. Such as:

  1. Looking to increase the raid playerbase
  2. Looking for people who to be part of your organized runs
  3. boredom (because raids are too easy when everybody knows the mechanics)
  4. To show off by attempting to carry the squad (which was totally what was happening when chronomancer could use party-distortion)
  5. Because one enjoys teaching others.

Pretty much yes. All in all, everything is subjective when it comes to self-benefits. Some wont see those as worthwhile reasons to do it, and some will lament that not enough people do this as a rule of thumb. I'm in the second category, but I wont throw stones at the first. To each their own, if a change is to come, it will when it needs to.

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@"Illconceived Was Na.9781" said:There are two distinct issues:

  • What's in it for experienced raiders to slow down their first clear and/or to go without substantive rewards to clear multiple times?
  • What happens when there are additional rewards for multiple clears?

The OP raises the first issue; ANet is worried about the second.


When the game launched, and dungeons could be cleared regularly by experienced players, what happened was groups got very specific about comps to speed through and then they repeated them over and over again. They did not slow down for newer players to join & learn. Even as ANet added time gates to the rewards, this didn't substantially change: groups that repeat, repeat for speed, not for training.

So the "reality" is that adding rewards for people willing to go again and again doesn't actually create a better space for training. Instead, it creates a reward structure that allows experienced players to earn more.

(And no, it doesn't get much better by changing the requirements to include a minimum number of first clears, since there are plenty of ways to abuse that.)


tl;dr the OP has a point... it's just not the only point.

You could argue putting repeatable rewards on content could incentivise new players to get in on the action, wether thats finding a guild or watching/reading guides.

Im not speaking for everyone but that what happened with me and my innitial group of friends and thats how i got to know alot of my friends in the game.

As you said putting caps to rewards didnt really stop ppl from trying to be optimal and looking for the right comps etc, so i think worrying or disabling this gameplay will only hurt some ppl's engagement while not inproving other's.

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@"zealex.9410" said:You could argue putting repeatable rewards on content could incentivise new players to get in on the action, wether thats finding a guild or watching/reading guides.The OP already made that argument and I agreed that incentivizing veterans to meet up with newbies is important. (And I'm positive ANet would agree, too.) The point is: it's not the only consideration. And a critical issue is that there don't seem to be non-abusable incentives that actually do increase engagement.

Im not speaking for everyone but that what happened with me and my innitial group of friends and thats how i got to know alot of my friends in the game.Yes, just as nearly all my friends from GW1 (and indirectly, in GW2) stemmed from P2P trading. That isn't an argument in favor or against such features; it's a story about how we met likeminded people.

As you said putting caps to rewards didnt really stop ppl from trying to be optimal and looking for the right comps etc, so i think worrying or disabling this gameplay will only hurt some ppl's engagement while not inproving other's.It costs ANet to change the status quo. Arguing that "this wouldn't really make things worse" isn't an incentive to change things.

Worse, it actually costs ANet something more than dev time to implement because now they have to balance rewards to take into account the speed-clearing contingent. It's not impossible to do so; it's just another headache for them.


I'm sure ANet would love to hear your ideas of what would actually get you (or your cohort) to spend time training people you don't know, that isn't the same "because some people find it fun to help newbies learn."

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@Skotlex.7580 said:If this is specifically about raids, I imagine there's a few possible reasons to help new people out. Such as:

  1. Looking to increase the raid playerbase

This^^ -sorry for the correction-

The game isn't new anymore. Making raids was probably a mistake/waste of money/man hours etc. but they're here to stay. That said, there's still significant barrier to entry - whether that's time learning a profession, or learning strategies for higher tier play before being accepted by others. And while Anet builds raids and other contents for us to play as a community, they don't include a basic tutorial for social skills. I guess they just erroneously assumed that the people playing their game would have them and know how to use them.

It's a two way street. If you want competent(important), friendly(even more important) people to progress through content with then you have to take a bit of time to ensure that they aren't alienated or put off by utterly ridiculous requirements, intolerance of mistakes, and the abuse that tends to come hand in hand with those sorts of behaviours.

It's probably why so many otherwise prospective players(what more raiders) are gun shy about coming into an established player base and after their first few bad experiences they drop the game and say, 'to hell with it.'

Unfortunately there's no way to force people into not being antisocial outside the respective pirate crews of other anti-socials they already struggle to suppress their revulsion in order to accomplish certain in game goals on a weekly basis. It's the human condition when you add a significant remove between people and a limited amount of anonymity into the mix for good measure.

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@Illconceived Was Na.9781 said:

@"zealex.9410" said:You could argue putting repeatable rewards on content could incentivise new players to get in on the action, wether thats finding a guild or watching/reading guides.The OP already made that argument and I agreed that incentivizing veterans to meet up with newbies is important. (And I'm positive ANet would agree, too.) The point is: it's not the only consideration. And a critical issue is that there don't seem to be non-abusable incentives that actually do increase engagement.

Abusable? As in?

Im not speaking for everyone but that what happened with me and my innitial group of friends and thats how i got to know alot of my friends in the game.Yes, just as nearly all my friends from GW1 (and indirectly, in GW2) stemmed from P2P trading. That isn't an argument in favor or against such features; it's a story about how we met likeminded people.

What i meant to say (which i guess i didnt make clear, was that those are mostly the only ppl ive actually got to know and cool friends ppl that i spend time in game playing and talking, like minded or not being incentivised to interact with others to get a group started for dungeons back then got me there).

I havent really had interactions like that since then in fractals (post hot) or metas (only exception is during the release of fractal cms where i pugged them and spend hours attempting to clear them for the first time.

What im trying to say, js that quick get in get out content doesnt really promote interaction and community making.

As you said putting caps to rewards didnt really stop ppl from trying to be optimal and looking for the right comps etc, so i think worrying or disabling this gameplay will only hurt some ppl's engagement while not inproving other's.It costs ANet to change the status quo. Arguing that "this wouldn't really make things worse" isn't an incentive to change things.

Worse, it actually costs ANet something more than dev time to implement because now they have to balance rewards to take into account the speed-clearing contingent. It's not impossible to do so; it's just another headache for them.

They are already doing that tho, albeit they more often look to change the content to fit their average and not rewards. Its not like changing the stance on repeating content changes things much.


I'm sure ANet would love to hear your ideas of what would actually get you (or your cohort) to spend time training people you don't know, that isn't the same "because some people find it fun to help newbies learn."

This wasnt tbh about my ideas of helping new ppl and rewarding that. It was mostly about the second point, what happens with rewards when the content is repeatable.

About the first point, idk just add a mentor system and give ppl the ability to rate mentors at the end of the run, limit it to only helping ppl that havent maxed their fractal climbing or smth. Give rewards at the end of the week based on your average rating.

Another one would be to just let content be repeatable, as we saw in the raid thread about rewards ppl said it was nice to get some loot in reclears while helping newbies.

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@"zealex.9410" said:Abusable? As in?andAnother one would be to just let content be repeatable, as we saw in the raid thread about rewards ppl said it was nice to get some loot in reclears while helping newbies.

Go hand in hand.Many players & raiders have more than one account. Those would be picked first to rerun things and get the rewards before people would help newer players. You would need a completely new implemented system to assure that only beginners are getting help. Repeatable rewards alone wouldn't solve the issue it only makes the rich people richer and here Anet has no interest in and me neither tbh.

About the first point, idk just add a mentor system and give ppl the ability to rate mentors at the end of the run, limit it to only helping ppl that havent maxed their fractal climbing or smth. Give rewards at the end of the week based on your average rating.

"Just add" is simply said but not easily done. Implementing such a system would take gazillions of hours of manpower. And we all know how this is going in GW2. We still don't have an ingame DPS meter or build templates. Not to speak about things like an additional SAB world or major improvements for festivals. I don't thinkthey are even capable of delivering such a mentor system in the slightest.

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@"Vinceman.4572" said:"Just add" is simply said but not easily done. Implementing such a system would take gazillions of hours of manpower.Is there any automated system for promoting mentors that actually exists? I don't think it's theoretically possible at this point. In fact, how would it differ from any of the proposals for requiring people to prove leadership in order to "earn" a commander tag for WvW?

Training isn't something that a bot does. It takes a combination of skills and every student learns differently. Heck, it's challenging to figure out how to promote educators without getting stuck "teaching to the test" or giving too much authority to a few individuals (not all of whom have altruistic intent in evaluating). Systems that rely on voting usually end up being about popularity, not about effectiveness.

I don't mean to say there's nothing useful to be accomplished for MMOs. The point is that "just add" assumes that all the difficult work has already been done.


A more likely scenario is for ANet to find ways that help support the existing mentoring communities. Build templates would help. As would an in-game DPS meter with logs available through a robust API. And an official, opt-in gear inspection tool (the API already allows for this and some of the mentoring communities have built API tools to make it work).

That would make it easier for people on the fence about helping out to decide to jump in.

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@Illconceived Was Na.9781 said:

@zealex.9410 said:You could argue putting repeatable rewards on content could incentivise new players to get in on the action, wether thats finding a guild or watching/reading guides.The OP already made that argument and I agreed that incentivizing veterans to meet up with newbies is important. (And I'm positive ANet would agree, too.) The point is: it's not the only consideration. And a critical issue is that there don't seem to be non-abusable incentives that actually do increase engagement.

There could be, in theory, but in practice that would require changing some existing game systems/introducing new ones. Which probably wouldn't be easy (or even possible without some heavy changes to the game).

A good example is FF XiV levelling/main scenario roulettes. You queue once a day for an automatic duty finder queue for one of the story dungeons, and you receive a significant number of xp and tomestones (currency that's mostly used for getting better gear). And for the few dungeons that are very long and would probably be skipped by anyone that did them once, the rewards are significantly higher. Also, if you happen to be matched up with a new player (something that is easily recognizable, because they get cutscenes veterans no longer watch), there's an additional reward. There's also a penalty for leaving the duty after it has started, so in most cases it's usually better to push on even if you don't like the dungeon/your teammates.

Now, in GW2 you don't probably need more xp, and veterans don't really need more gear (raid currency is enough for it anyway). You could use this kind of currency for other rewards however. Unfortunately, that kind of method wouldn't work with current LFG system - for it to work, the duty finder has to be random. And that brings a score of other issues that are not easily solvable (not having fixed roles being a major, but not the only one)

In short, while the issue might have a solution, the cost of implementing it would probably end up way too big, ending in a net loss.

Notice though, that the abovementioned system exists only for the easier content. The harder content doesn't use that incentive, because it is assumed that people attemtping it are not new to the game. Besides, the harder the content, and the greater chances of wiping over and over if you get bad teammates, the greater the rewards would need to be to incentivize players to put up with it anyway instead of just going static. And that can get out of hand very, very fast.

Just ask yourself, how much would you want to be rewarded for putting up with 2 hours of raid fight wipe clownfiesta that doesn't end in a kill? How much you would want to be rewarded to put up with it more than few times?And how would those rewards be balanced if you found out a way to guarantee that kill (and in GW2, you would have found it)?

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I can guarantee you if MO was repeatable for the same rewards people would be spamming it. You can clear it, even with a totally casual group, and I mean totally casual, in less than 2 minutes. Even our group, who will sometimes miscommunicate(I /said/ I was protecting!!!) and wipe there once a month, can do it in less. That would be a hella lot of gold, drops, mag shards, the works.

This would become more abused than Istan ever dreamed of being.

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@Vinceman.4572 said:

@"zealex.9410" said:Abusable? As in?andAnother one would be to just let content be repeatable, as we saw in the raid thread about rewards ppl said it was nice to get some loot in reclears while helping newbies.

Go hand in hand.Many players & raiders have more than one account. Those would be picked first to rerun things and get the rewards before people would help newer players. You would need a completely new implemented system to assure that only beginners are getting help. Repeatable rewards alone wouldn't solve the issue it only makes the rich people richer and here Anet has no interest in and me neither tbh.

About the first point, idk just add a mentor system and give ppl the ability to rate mentors at the end of the run, limit it to only helping ppl that havent maxed their fractal climbing or smth. Give rewards at the end of the week based on your average rating.

"Just add" is simply said but not easily done. Implementing such a system would take gazillions of hours of manpower. And we all know how this is going in GW2. We still don't have an ingame DPS meter or build templates. Not to speak about things like an additional SAB world or major improvements for festivals. I don't thinkthey are even capable of delivering such a mentor system in the slightest.

Ofc its gonna take hours of manpower but nothing comes free and if we are looking to improve the game without manpower then the game will run out of meaningful options real soon. Imo its better to put resources to the game and improve it than standing here argueing about it.

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@zealex.9410 said:Ofc its gonna take hours of manpower but nothing comes free and if we are looking to improve the game without manpower then the game will run out of meaningful options real soon. Imo its better to put resources to the game and improve it than standing here argueing about it.

You don't want to hear it I believe but it is pretty obvious that Anet's effort to improve the game has its priorities on other things than getting players into raiding. It was stated a thousand times now and is still valid and important to keep in mind: Raiding is an absolute niche content and nothing where they'll put in more than just needed. So, from this point maybe you understand that such a system that has to be implemented from the scratch with taking every disadvantage into consideration beforehand would be such a huge investment they are not able to stem in the slightest. People have to prove me wrong but till the recent days we don't have: build templates, a dps meter or even repeatable rewards although they already mentioned it once but they have no answer to that. Seeing that it's more than unlikely, no, it's totally excluded for me personally that we get such a system or similar things in the game the next 12 months - at best.Honestly, my opinion rather is that they'll never put more than just an additional raid wing + cms for the 3-4 bosses in the game - when it's done. That's all what raiders will get in this game ever. And it's fine because the core community of this game has interest in different things like events, open world and yadda yadda. Nothing I'm completely addicted to but that's how the GW2 universe is working.

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@Vinceman.4572 said:

@zealex.9410 said:Ofc its gonna take hours of manpower but nothing comes free and if we are looking to improve the game without manpower then the game will run out of meaningful options real soon. Imo its better to put resources to the game and improve it than standing here argueing about it.

You don't want to hear it I believe but it is pretty obvious that Anet's effort to improve the game has its priorities on other things than getting players into raiding.

Never said it was about raiding, the first thong i thought of were actually dungeons and fractals.

Honestly, my opinion rather is that they'll never put more than just an additional raid wing + cms for the 3-4 bosses in the game - when it's done. That's all what raiders will get in this game ever. And it's fine because the core community of this game has interest in different things like events, open world and yadda yadda. Nothing I'm completely addicted to but that's how the GW2 universe is working.

Well they have at least 5 more fractals to add and the arguement about helping ppl with that and the possible reward that could entail aplies to it as well.

Theres systems that would really benefit raiding if they were added but thats not the only part of the game that could benefit from such systems existing. A mentor system is just one of them.

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So there is some great comments here, and others that miss the point. The conversation is good to have regardless, there is a few replies I want to make though.

@Illconceived Was Na.9781 said:There are two distinct issues:

  • What's in it for experienced raiders to slow down their first clear and/or to go without substantive rewards to clear multiple times?
  • What happens when there are additional rewards for multiple clears?The OP raises the first issue; ANet is worried about the second.When the game launched, and dungeons could be cleared regularly by experienced players, what happened was groups got very specific about comps to speed through and then they repeated them over and over again. They did not slow down for newer players to join & learn. Even as ANet added time gates to the rewards, this didn't substantially change: groups that repeat, repeat for speed, not for training.So the "reality" is that adding rewards for people willing to go again and again doesn't actually create a better space for training. Instead, it creates a reward structure that allows experienced players to earn more.(And no, it doesn't get much better by changing the requirements to include a minimum number of first clears, since there are plenty of ways to abuse that.)

What happens when you offer loot? People play the content, they play it more often and that means others have a chance to play with them. More players that are taught the mechanic means more loot for the raiders. When the game first launched the GW2 manifesto was against raids, against mounts and against grind so I think it is safe to say that it's no longer the same game it was 7 years ago. People rushed through dungeons to be the best and elitism stopped them allowing anyone joining until they realised how casual it was. Elitists moved on to what was most profitable or what was seen as the toughest challenge in the game to try create monopolies, it's what they do. With GW2 and it's horizontal progression system however, the elitists are in the same area as the casuals so need to artifically create that wall. But as they played these areas daily they had to bring new people in little by little, players base knowledge grew and everyone began gaining. Look at the first Teqatl revamp or Triple Trouble, those things were a mess on the first few days until players helped players. Character or account limit was fine as it was a day at the most, it didn't really matter if you did it twice in the one day as it was available several times that day. Jumping back to raids, the limit is per week and while they are available 24/7 that is not when the playerbase does them. You must get your wing done within the first 3-6 hours of reset or there is a high possibility that you will not even see a group in LFG at all. This system doesn't work for raids and after 4 years the raid system is only available to a tiny, tiny portion of the playerbase. What you call the "experienced players" don't necessarily constitute as people that would exploit raids, some might, but they already profit as they get their full wings done on day 1 and they sell raids all week long. They have filled the hole in their pockets, they always will and refusing to update a system that would benefit the majority of players because a small few "might" take advantage of it when they already are making money hand over fist, doesn't make the game better. Raid participation is broken and it needs a new system after 4 years of this.

@Illconceived Was Na.9781 said:It costs ANet to change the status quo. Arguing that "this wouldn't really make things worse" isn't an incentive to change things.

Worse, it actually costs ANet something more than dev time to implement because now they have to balance rewards to take into account the speed-clearing contingent. It's not impossible to do so; it's just another headache for them.

So the game should stay perpetually the same is your point here? It's not like videogames are really that expensive, especially ones with microtransactions. GW2 'boasts' 11 million accounts and if you break that down to let's say 5 million active players, let's say 1 million of those buy a salvage-o-matic for $10, that means Anet made $10M on just a single item alone and there is many, many more items in that cash shop. I'm rounding off the numbers very roughly here but you get my point, they can afford it. I know people were let go recently but that is a management decision from above and not by choice of the GW2 team. They probably are busy on things we don't know about cough expansion; and yet still that doesn't change that their are systems in the game right now that do not work. Look at balance patches, they take time and are headaches too but are essential to the health of the game. When you are siphoning off 95% of your playerbase away from the content you create then it's a problem. Especially if all that work was such a headache to begin with, why lock it way to a minority? It needs to be updated.

@"Vinceman.4572" said:Many players & raiders have more than one account. Those would be picked first to rerun things and get the rewards before people would help newer players. You would need a completely new implemented system to assure that only beginners are getting help. Repeatable rewards alone wouldn't solve the issue it only makes the rich people richer and here Anet has no interest in and me neither tbh."Just add" is simply said but not easily done. Implementing such a system would take gazillions of hours of manpower. And we all know how this is going in GW2. We still don't have an ingame DPS meter or build templates. Not to speak about things like an additional SAB world or major improvements for festivals. I don't thinkthey are even capable of delivering such a mentor system in the slightest.

Many people do have multiple accounts whether they multibox or play each legitimately, they still have to play those raids, they still earn their rewards. Speaking of rewards, almost all rewards in raids are account bound anyway so it's not like they would get much profit. Who cares if they run their alt accounts first, once they are done and out of the way, it means they will eventually have to help other players (based on a reward system for first time clears). The people that really care about DPS meters already use one out of game, build templates are on the way and while a mentor system seems very complicated, nobody is saying that is how it should be done. The point raised in the OP is that the current system is not working for 95% of the game, this is wasted development time if your players cannot even access it 4 years later.

@Illconceived Was Na.9781 said:A more likely scenario is for ANet to find ways that help support the existing mentoring communities. Build templates would help. As would an in-game DPS meter with logs available through a robust API. And an official, opt-in gear inspection tool (the API already allows for this and some of the mentoring communities have built API tools to make it work).

That would make it easier for people on the fence about helping out to decide to jump in.

Sorry, I know I have quoted you three times now but it's not personal haha. I disagree completely here, a gear inspect tool.... this isn't (that MMO we won't name) and doing so will increase the elitism in the game, it will just shift kill proofs to gear check and gear has nothing to do with skill, more so in GW2 where all gear is horizontal and content is balanced based on exotic gear. Not counting agony resistance as it's a unique addition but you can get through every bit of content in this game with exotic gear if you can play your class well, Anet pride themselves on that. I think both kill proofs and gear inspect should be booted to the curb as it goes agaisnt what GW2 envisioned itself to be, all inclusive.

@"Astralporing.1957" said:In short, while the issue might have a solution, the cost of implementing it would probably end up way too big, ending in a net loss.

Just ask yourself, how much would you want to be rewarded for putting up with 2 hours of raid fight wipe clownfiesta that doesn't end in a kill? How much you would want to be rewarded to put up with it more than few times?And how would those rewards be balanced if you found out a way to guarantee that kill (and in GW2, you would have found it)?

As I said above, the cost is miniscule and if it's so big of a net loss to create it then why bother with the creation of raids for the 5% of players? That is a net loss, developing a game that people don't play. People already play for 2 hours with pugs and get a few measly shards for a fail, that is the ones lucky enough to get a group that either 1) doesn't fall apart every 10 minutes when someone drops and 2) manage to get a group past the first few hours of reset. How would they be balanced? Well that is Anet's job isn't it? You can't stop people from finding the most efficient route but you can stop them from exploiting it and blocking other players from playing content.

You also mention that "Raiding is an absolute niche content" well I gotta say "what an absolute waste of development time then". What is the point of making content that 95% of your playerbase cannot get a group for except for 3-6 hours after reset if they are not already in a static group otherwise they have to buy raids. The current system is very flawed.

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