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Streamer Gets World First Level 85 in World of Warcraft Cataclysm Classic Despite Several Hotfixes A

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  • ValdemarJValdemarJ Member RarePosts: 1,378
    It's definitely not cheating by most definitions.  He did content available to everyone that didn't impact any other players or the economy.

    That isn't what defines an exploit. The user exploited an unintended flaw in the system for personal gain that was outside the design intention of studio. It absolutely does affect other players, but we can't necessarily quantify how wide or deeply that is.

    Games have rules and boundaries that apply to everyone.

    People with integrity report issues that can be exploited. People without integrity use the exploit for their own gain.
    Scot
    Bring back the Naked Chicken Chalupa!
  • TheocritusTheocritus Member LegendaryPosts: 9,976
    achesoma said:
    Somehow this turned into a Kyleran appreciation thread.

    43000+ posts and still going strong......
  • WargfootWargfoot Member EpicPosts: 1,406
    I hate Kyleran with a burning passion.

    As for the guy who got the record first 85, I'll file that along with all the other firsts in video games that I recall over my 25 years of gaming.  I'll file it alongside.. uh... there was that one time... um... the guy who... eh... oh nevermind.
    KyleranKidRisk
  • vonryan123vonryan123 Member UncommonPosts: 514
    I don't even play wow and the only gamer 1st I remember is Leeroy...so to the world 1st w/e it was "cool story bro".

    image
  • TillerTiller Member LegendaryPosts: 11,449
    Wargfoot said:
    I hate Kyleran with a burning passion.

    As for the guy who got the record first 85, I'll file that along with all the other firsts in video games that I recall over my 25 years of gaming.  I'll file it alongside.. uh... there was that one time... um... the guy who... eh... oh nevermind.

    Well I mean cats and dogs have beef so no surprise there xD
    KyleranWargfoot
    SWG Bloodfin vet
    Elder Jedi/Elder Bounty Hunter
     
  • KyleranKyleran Member LegendaryPosts: 43,975
    Tiller said:
    Wargfoot said:
    I hate Kyleran with a burning passion.

    As for the guy who got the record first 85, I'll file that along with all the other firsts in video games that I recall over my 25 years of gaming.  I'll file it alongside.. uh... there was that one time... um... the guy who... eh... oh nevermind.

    Well I mean cats and dogs have beef so no surprise there xD
    As I often told my children when they said they hated me, "Good, you are supposed to." ;)


    Scot

    "True friends stab you in the front." | Oscar Wilde 

    "I need to finish" - Christian Wolff: The Accountant

    Just trying to live long enough to play a new, released MMORPG, playing New Worlds atm

    Fools find no pleasure in understanding but delight in airing their own opinions. Pvbs 18:2, NIV

    Don't just play games, inhabit virtual worlds™

    "This is the most intelligent, well qualified and articulate response to a post I have ever seen on these forums. It's a shame most people here won't have the attention span to read past the second line." - Anon






  • KyleranKyleran Member LegendaryPosts: 43,975
    edited May 25




    ValdemarJ said:





    Kyleran said:


    Somewhere in the world someone is impressed by this achievement.

    I just stopped by to mock and smirk.

    ;)






    Somehow I feel it's on the same level as have 43,000+ posts on mmorpg.com (most of which I assume are as inane as this one.)



    But I guess I'm probably wrong, because someone with forty-three THOUSAND posts on mmorpg.com will clap back with something like "one post troll noob" or "you made an account just to say that so you're worse than me" *huehuehue adjusts fedora and adds emoji while sweating profusely*




    Naw, no clapback. But this might help your burning itching frustration



    Wow very original. My 74 yo dad makes jokes about preparation H. I guess you both missed the memo that those stopped being clever or funny about thirty years ago. Oh well



    One for the modern age then.

    Something to sooth your 


    Keep coming back.  :D
    ValdemarJTiller

    "True friends stab you in the front." | Oscar Wilde 

    "I need to finish" - Christian Wolff: The Accountant

    Just trying to live long enough to play a new, released MMORPG, playing New Worlds atm

    Fools find no pleasure in understanding but delight in airing their own opinions. Pvbs 18:2, NIV

    Don't just play games, inhabit virtual worlds™

    "This is the most intelligent, well qualified and articulate response to a post I have ever seen on these forums. It's a shame most people here won't have the attention span to read past the second line." - Anon






  • NeoyoshiNeoyoshi Member RarePosts: 1,450
    edited May 25
    For some clarity on the actual world first for Cataclysm. 

    WF lv 85 Retail Cata  - Athene & Co.

    WF lv 80 Retail WoTLK - Athene & Co.


    Sorry but non-retail/classic doesn't count, because a World first is only done once, that's why it's called a 'World First'. 
    Kyleran


    Fishing on Gilgamesh since 2013
    Fishing on Bronzebeard since 2005
    Fishing in RL since 1992
    Born with a fishing rod in my hand in 1979
  • ScotScot Member LegendaryPosts: 24,273
    edited May 25
    ValdemarJ said:
    It's definitely not cheating by most definitions.  He did content available to everyone that didn't impact any other players or the economy.

    That isn't what defines an exploit. The user exploited an unintended flaw in the system for personal gain that was outside the design intention of studio. It absolutely does affect other players, but we can't necessarily quantify how wide or deeply that is.

    Games have rules and boundaries that apply to everyone.

    People with integrity report issues that can be exploited. People without integrity use the exploit for their own gain.
    I see where Frodo is coming from about "not effecting players or the economy" but what he is forgetting is that by being max level this guy is effecting the game. He will win in PvP over those of lower level, he will incite players to get to max level as quickly as possible with dubious ways to do so if they can. There are degrees of how badly players are cheating, but this is still cheating.
    Post edited by Scot on
    ValdemarJ
  • FrodoFraginsFrodoFragins Member EpicPosts: 6,050
    ValdemarJ said:
    It's definitely not cheating by most definitions.  He did content available to everyone that didn't impact any other players or the economy.

    That isn't what defines an exploit. The user exploited an unintended flaw in the system for personal gain that was outside the design intention of studio. It absolutely does affect other players, but we can't necessarily quantify how wide or deeply that is.

    Games have rules and boundaries that apply to everyone.

    People with integrity report issues that can be exploited. People without integrity use the exploit for their own gain.
    Still not "cheating" in my book.
  • fearufearu Member UncommonPosts: 292
    This isn't an exploit, it's just a clever use of game mechanics.
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  • [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 0
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    Post edited by [Deleted User] on
  • ScotScot Member LegendaryPosts: 24,273
    tzervo said:
    The problem with this approach is we cannot really leave the interpretation of the studio's designs to the players - both the player doing the content and those judging him. Because exactly like it is happening here, some will say it was an exploit, others will say it was not. Some cases are clearer (duping bugs are universally considered exploits), this is not, unless the company publicly announces it as such.

    After Blizzard tuned the content, there is now a different optimal path (it eould just take slightly more time to max lvl). Is this now an exploit?

    Sirlin wrote a lot about this in his (brilliant imo) guide:

    https://www.sirlin.net/ptw-book/how-far-should-you-go-to-win

    Edit: relevant snippet:

    Mysteriously, some games do expect the player to divine the will of the designer, and expect him to adhere to a set of behavioral rules on top of the actual rules of the game. This is the fundamentally flawed concept embraced by most massively-multiplayer online games. Consider World of Warcraft as an example. In a town, you can go on rooftops and you can fight against other players, but you can’t fight other players while on rooftops, or you’ll receive a warning. (Actually, this was totally legal before 3/11/2005 at 9:44 PM PST, but not legal after.) You can kill the same monster all day every day to “farm” in-game money for yourself (in fact you practically have to), but you can’t farm “too much” or you’re labeled as a gold-farmer and banned. If you break your line of sight with a monster, he often has trouble getting to you, which allows your friends to kill him much more easily. Smart play or grounds for suspension? Answer: grounds for suspension. If a monster is chasing you, you can go into a lake where he can’t follow and wait for him to give up. Smart play or grounds for suspension? Answer: that one’s smart play. The complex web of made-up rules is not unlike the shackling self-imposed rulebook of the scrub.

    Tzervo, this streamer guy knew exactly what he was doing as he switched from one exploit to another as Blizzard closed them down. He did not have to "divine the will of the designer, and expect him to adhere to a set of behavioral rules on top of the actual rules of the game."


    ValdemarJKyleran
  • [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 0
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  • FrodoFraginsFrodoFragins Member EpicPosts: 6,050
    edited May 26
    Players will always go to the most rewarding spots.  If they are streaming it they are not keeping it to themselves.  

    If Blizzard felt they were cheating they would have at least sent an in game warning not to continue.  They instead just hotfixed what he found and let him do his thing as it was THEIR mistake.

    If what someone else in the thread said is true, this occurred when cata launched as well.  Which makes it doubly funny.

    I find this "exploit" less problematic than the one used for classic launch where players could change layers by grouping to get an area with mobs already there.  Rather than waiting for a respawn in their own layer/shard.

  • FrodoFraginsFrodoFragins Member EpicPosts: 6,050
    ValdemarJ said:
    It's definitely not cheating by most definitions.  He did content available to everyone that didn't impact any other players or the economy.

    That isn't what defines an exploit. The user exploited an unintended flaw in the system for personal gain that was outside the design intention of studio. It absolutely does affect other players, but we can't necessarily quantify how wide or deeply that is.

    Games have rules and boundaries that apply to everyone.

    People with integrity report issues that can be exploited. People without integrity use the exploit for their own gain.
    All cheats are exploits but not all exploits are cheats.  This exploit is not a cheat.  Like at all.
  • ScotScot Member LegendaryPosts: 24,273
    tzervo said:
    And why is this considered an exploit? See the snippet from my quotes above. Am I missing something? What rule did he break?

    From the original article: "After running some spells and buffs math, LMGD finds the next good thing that max-level chasers need to win a race like this – a way to absolutely exploit the system."

    These were exploits, that's why Blizzard kept fixing them, that's the "rule" he broke. Since when do gamers need to be told, "using exploits is breaking the rules"? 
  • [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 0
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  • SensaiSensai Member UncommonPosts: 222
    tzervo said:
    Scot said:
    tzervo said:
    And why is this considered an exploit? See the snippet from my quotes above. Am I missing something? What rule did he break?

    From the original article: "After running some spells and buffs math, LMGD finds the next good thing that max-level chasers need to win a race like this – a way to absolutely exploit the system."

    These were exploits, that's why Blizzard kept fixing them, that's the "rule" he broke. Since when do gamers need to be told, "using exploits is breaking the rules"? 
    That's no rule, that's a random writer calling a strategy an exploit (he even slips and calls it a strategy elsewhere).

    Blizzard fine tuned the levelling with its fixes and that's fine (all live games do that all the time without labelling the changes as exploits), which means his strategy is no longer optimal. And I repeat, would the new optimal be now "the exploit"? Are we not allowed to optimize? And who decides it? You or that writer? Please.

    And you "assume the sale" by saying "Since when do gamers need to be told, "using exploits is breaking the rules"?".

     All I see is a guy optimizing their levelling experience through choices and help from team members. I see no rule being broken.


    Is this some new millennial math or something? Getting to 85 in 3 hours is not optimized leveling due to insight into the game world. It's amazing the mental gymnastics people will perform to not admit something is wrong.  Knowingly exploiting a bug or design failure is cheating, full stop. Let me guess, you think soaking isn't sex either,  right?
    Scot

    image

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  • FrodoFraginsFrodoFragins Member EpicPosts: 6,050
    edited May 26
    Scot said:
    tzervo said:
    And why is this considered an exploit? See the snippet from my quotes above. Am I missing something? What rule did he break?

    From the original article: "After running some spells and buffs math, LMGD finds the next good thing that max-level chasers need to win a race like this – a way to absolutely exploit the system."

    These were exploits, that's why Blizzard kept fixing them, that's the "rule" he broke. Since when do gamers need to be told, "using exploits is breaking the rules"? 
    what rule? 

    Why do you think Blizzard didn't punish him?  It's because it was 100% their mistake.
  • ScotScot Member LegendaryPosts: 24,273
    Sensai said:
    Is this some new millennial math or something? Getting to 85 in 3 hours is not optimized leveling due to insight into the game world. It's amazing the mental gymnastics people will perform to not admit something is wrong.  Knowingly exploiting a bug or design failure is cheating, full stop. Let me guess, you think soaking isn't sex either,  right?
    I agree with you but lets not start trading insults.


    tzervo said:
    That's no rule, that's a random writer calling a strategy an exploit (he even slips and calls it a strategy elsewhere).

    Blizzard fine tuned the levelling with its fixes and that's fine (all live games do that all the time without labelling the changes as exploits), which means his strategy is no longer optimal. And I repeat, would the new optimal be now "the exploit"? Are we not allowed to optimize? And who decides it? You or that writer? Please.

    And you "assume the sale" by saying "Since when do gamers need to be told, "using exploits is breaking the rules"?".

     All I see is a guy optimizing their levelling experience through choices and help from team members. I see no rule being broken.
    It was a strategy of using exploits if that sits grammatically better with you.

    what rule? 

    Why do you think Blizzard didn't punish him?  It's because it was 100% their mistake.
    Far more likely not punished because he was a streamer, but we are trying to read the people at Blizzard's mind here, so who knows why?
  • cheyanecheyane Member LegendaryPosts: 9,386
    I feel Blizzard should take away the achievement since it was achieved by exploiting and not done fairly and in the interest of all the other players who might have attained it without exploitation.

    Pretty callous of Blizzard to worry about the streamer over all the other players that play the game without doing this and trying to achieve the same achievement. This completely cheapens the achievement and the method you can use to attain it. They should be proper punishment by the removal because then others will be less inclined to use this exploit.
    Scot
    Garrus Signature
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