The
Den collects articles of general wisdom, from philosophical musings
to the examination of game mechanics, to simple tales of great
hilarity. This one is about miners, things that go "bump",
and high-sec mentality.
The times, they are
a-changing
One of the biggest changes
coming to our little slice of EVE this December is the overhauled
Crimewatch system with a new "suspect" flag. If you do
something illegal, everyone in EVE can shoot you for fifteen minutes.
This opens the door for vigilantes, "white knights" or
whatever you want to call them to come to the aid of a mission runner
and asplode your boat. Even opportunists sitting at gates or stations
might take a shot. This makes ninjering a whole lot more dangerous
than it was.
Oh shit I got a flag! |
Me, I'm not worried. I believe the vast majority of high-sec residents simply don't have the chutzpah to actually get up and do something with this new flag. Allow me to illustrate.
James 315 and the New
Order of High Sec
You may have heard about
this whole miner bumping business which has gradually been picking up steam over the last few months.
If you don't follow the official EVE Forums (which you probably
shouldn't) you'll have missed some hilarious shitstorms which have been stirred up by miners who are really, really angry.
Angry and utterly incapable of helping themselves.
The "too long, didn't
read" of it is that James 315 came up with a new way of
torturing miners after the hitpoint buffs to mining barges and
exhumers made suicide ganking impractical. An overpowered ship can
bump a miner out of range of his rocks and, with persistence, keep
him out of range indefinitely. This might be classed as harassment
were it not for the New Order offering the miners a way out: pay 10
million ISK and adhere to a code of conduct to be left alone for a
year.
Whether you buy into the
New Order's professed ideals, or consider it simple extortion, a
donations scam, or even just a clever facade to keep the petitions at
bay – it works. The New Order has collected billions of ISK in donations from
entertained players. And tears. Mighty rivers of sweet, sweet tears
the likes of which haven't been seen since Hulkageddon.
One angry miner. |
Have a look at their
bingo card and spot the similarities to some of the things mission runners throw
at us. "This is an exploit?" Check. "Try working for
your ISK honestly?" Check. "I know powerful people in
null-sec?" Check. I love that last one. It's a well-known fact
that the major null-sec coalitions are all about keeping high-sec
carebears safe and unmolested. Heh.
Resistance is futile
Compare the success
of the New Order to its counterpoint, the Proveldtariat.
It is composed of exactly one bloke with a blog. It has achieved
exactly nothing, save for some mildly entertaining reading. It has a
list of suggestions to counter miner bumping and they're actually
pretty good, but no-one is employing these techniques. But why? Why
do miners not take some of the simple precautions that could
safeguard their operations? Why do they not band together, even if
just to share intel? Why do they not stand up and do something to
protect themselves?
Here's why. |
The answer is simple –
these people don't want to play with others. And the majority of
high-sec mission runners is like that too. I have no statistical data
to back that up of course. I say this from experience, having
encountered hundreds of them. Old players who've never been out of
their NPC corps. Players who have no idea how to fit a ship (the fact
that they can run missions in them being a testament to how borked
EVE's PVE is). Players who couldn't find Local if you wrapped it
around a trout and slapped them in the face with it. They're out
there in great numbers. And they don't want to play with you or
anyone else. Not even to help themselves.
Point me for sacrilege if you wish but much of CrimeWatch 2.0 has a good feel to it; and I say that as a criminal ninja. Post 2.0 you’ll probably be hesitant about thieving off the Jita undock (but, hell, that was mostly traps and ambushes already). Nonetheless the dark corners and back alleys (mission dead space) remain pretty much unchanged. Bears that call in white knight post 2.0 vigilantes are the same belligerent bears that escalated pre 2.0. The only real difference is the new necessity to keep to the back allies while the suspect flag is up. Orca safe spot anybody?
ReplyDeleteThe biggest annoyance I see is the new weapons flag preventing venerable “Surprise, surprise, I’m not a Merlin, I’m a Hurricane” ship swaps. While a joy to pull out of the criminal toy bag, it was a brutal mechanic pushing belligerent bears into, “I shoot, I’m dead” passivity. If we are to prey on the innocent, the innocents must believe they can safely win the encounter (they’re bears – they’re all about safety). 2.0 might bolster that belief.
EvEolution takes away with one hand and hands back with the other.
DireNecessity