vguerin wrote:[OOC]Many don't think your forum stance is very neutral but...
Go back and read the ones from Infinty days
. When Atys Wayfarers went over to Kara side, we had long meetings discussing whether we'd go to. If one holds the opininion that domination by one side is detrimental to the game, then it necessarily follows that the dominated are in a far weaker position to effect game than the dominators. My stance has always been to make it harder to dominate. Let's say OotN and GoJ were to "do an Atys Wayfarers" and switch sides just cause "they want a challenge". I'd then see a note on the forums posted by a kami saying my forum stance isn't very neutral cause kamis own more than their fair share OP's.
My 17 year old son always says "You always take his side". But again, when the 17 year old is smackin the 10 year old, what other position can I take ? GF erred in thinking that OP's wouldn't turn into a faction thing. My first preference would be that GF "fix it" by making it progressively harder to take and hold OP's in non-native lands.
For example, on holding......it would seem to fot the lore that say Jena's powers would be weakened over time in a kami native land where she holds less sway. So say when in an OP battle in Fyros, why not have Jena's blessing (your damage / heals / whatever) reduced by 1% or so for each RL day. After two weeks of ownership, defense would be a bit harder by 1/7th. Jena's power would regen at the same rate from the lack of drain and in two weeks be back at full strength again. There's many other methods which have previously been posted.
If GF doesn't fix it, I would hope that the players would fix it. If I was hangin with my street buds from brooklyn, we'd prolly do something to the effect where we'd take an OP in a non native land for a week. Then hand it back. Next month we'd take it again....that would give the dominating side one week's worth of OP bennies and leave the other side with 3 weeks worth. After a while one would hope that comity would be reached and the somewhat hollow "I want a challenge" would, in many cases, no longer be a euphemism for "I want to win" or "I want all the pie".