Russian abusing of report in AV

I tend to agree with you. Imma tell you right here and now that i am ALWAYS reporting afk-ers in bg and no , i am not russian.

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Well, sorry to say, but the cyrillic area, wich has been painstakingly argued by you and yours, covers Russia and several other countries… that technically gives you a vast enough pool of people to sport a healthy playerbase.
The fact that it doesn’t, well unfortunatly for you then… but if that’s the case, then let it die. That’s no reason to harass the EU players with the problem.

And if people will migrate to the EU, use a normal language and not that cryptic cyrillic, then they’d be integrating into the EU playerpool… using english (wich btw is not my native tongue either - not even one of my three native languages) to communicate in Bg’s and suffer the same randomness in matchmaking through the xrealms system… well, then it’s fair grounds.
You get to play amidst the chaos of full randomness instead of ganging up with your local neighbourhood vs the unorganized masses.

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For some reason you think that all “cyrylic” region knows russian and plays on rusian servers.
Rusian servers and client are made for rusians

That’s the arguement the RU players were giving, that it’s not just russians playing there. Just saying, that if that’s the case, then they should definatly be regionalized seperatly. Don’t punish EU because wow is a dying game in that region.

Ah, sorry. So they got you with their propaganda…
Wonder why rusians mass transfered ti gehenas and firemaw? They dont want to play with rusians

Let me tell how it will be in a reality: all russian exiles will team up on a single server, will create a russian-language guilds and Discord premades will be almost a mandatory thing.

Region lock. Such a great invention.

VPN exists, you know.

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Those are harder to set up, atleast for bigger bg’s like AV and SotA, if they do other premades, fair game, people on EU servers can run 5 man premades too (and are in fact doing that as well).
All that does is even the playing field, and if they want to integrate better, they’ll have to speak english in bg chat to organize, just like the rest of us.

However if they really don’t want to integrate, then that’s why you have your RU realms, go on there and play with Russians.

Honestly, the only thing distillable from all these RU arguements boils down to Russian only wanting to keep their advantage and their privilidge.

There are plenty of french, dutch, german speaking guilds… that’s hardly a problem, but you’ll have recognizable names, a normal alphabet to allow communication and you’ll be subject to the exact same matchmaking rules as the rest of EU… I doubt anyone would have issues with that.

Except the fact that most people just really don’t like Russians nowadays :stuck_out_tongue:

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Great arguments, 10/10 brainwash complete.

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You don’t need a 40 ppl for premade in AV. In a fact all the premades you can face in AV never, I repeat - never - consist 40 ppl from the same discord, just because of the reasons you just mentioned. This is how it looks like: about 10-30 ppl que at the same time, and wait 'till enough players get a BG proc, then party leaders of the ones who got it types in a chat how many ppl they do have in they group, it looks like “5, 5, 4, 2…”, so a typical AV premade is about ~20 ppl, often less.
And this is how it will be in case of mass migration of russians to EU servers. It will be the same “Warsong 2007” thing all over again.

That’s less of an issue, that’s the same as any EU server can do (or try to do), right now you have a guarantee to play with servermates, wich is a vast and unmistakeable benefit.

Also, removing the cyrillic and subjecting them to communicate in english and being recognizable to the EU players will alleviate those issues too.

Just think it’s funny that how the arguement went from “RU never does premade, it’s all pugs!!!”
To “we will just premade the same on a EU realm, lolz”

I mean, no offense, but the hypocrisy is almost cringeworthy… then again, that’s RU mentality in a nutshell.

You can learn the cyrilic alphabet in like 15 minutes, maybe 30 if you are slow. Then you can go about your life just as if their names were written in the latin alphabet, since it seems a lot of your problems boil down to : " that’s hardly a problem, but you’ll have recognizable names, a normal alphabet to allow communication"

Why should I learn their dribbly language? They’re not part of the EU, they don’t belong in the EU battlegroup.
Ours is a latin based one.

Right now, the biggest peeve is that being on the one cyrillic realm is offering the effective advantages and benefits, while partaking in a BG group they firstly don’t belong in, and secondly, does not have equal advantages.

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While they are not part of the EU , they are part of Europe, whether we like it or not. So by all means, they should have the right to play. Understandably, i also don’t like it when they speak in russian, but I can’t blame them for choosing their names in their native language.

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It wouldn’t be learning the language it would be learning the alphabet so you can sound out the words.
There’s lots of reasons it would be a positive thing to learn.

Isn’t Bulgaria part of the EU and has Cyrillic alphabet?

There are players who never participated in a sinlge premade, and the premade themselves don’t run 24/7/365. You overestimated the rate of premades just because you assuming that any game vs russians from Flamegor is against premade, which is far from reality.

You can’t name a character in latin on russian server, otherwise there will be a plenty of them. I can see an english words in their names spelled in cyrillic left and right.

I actually learned cyrilic in Bulgaria, because i got fed up with not understanding the words while i had to work over there for several months. Was very pleasantly surprised to see that once you get past the alphabetical difference, the words are very easy to understand and quite similar to my own language. Learning a new alphabet can shed some light on all our similarities instead of bringing to front our differences.

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