Lorcan Lladd, on 25 February 2012 - 10:21 AM, said:
RP systems engaged.
Am I the only one?
Amused that a clanner would care so much for his verbal tics, I mean?
RP systems disabled.
Actually, I care a great deal about it irrespective of the fact that I am a Clans-oriented player. While I enjoy cultural missteps like "pwned", misspelling and not givng a crud that you have engaged in the activity is really a sign of laziness and ignorance and makes one worthy of disdain. The omission of contractions is higher level speech in the English speaking world - hard to achieve. Snobbish and Elitist? You bet! But at least I know that I am being a snob about it and why.
Using misspellings to make a statement or mark an "effect" (heh, or "affect", even) is okay in my books (like writing "stoopid" instead of "stupid", or using "pwned", But using Cannon when you want to say Canon or vice versa, not so much. My pointing out things like this is not about getting my knickers in a twist, it is about ensuring your information is conveyed without unnecessary distractions. If words you have written are not written properly, I am likely to not give it the attention you think it deserves. I can also easily tell when a poster is not a native English speaker and will do my best to concentrate on the post's content. (I have been in their shoes before, being a traveled polyglot)
Good (gud) spelling and grammar (grammer is incorrect unless your first name is Kelsey) will be important when RP for MWO is written by anyone, and there will be people who HAVE to write when the moment hits them. And they will, believe me. I am interested a story's (not storey's) content and being distracted by poor spelling and grammar sucks the fun out of reading for me.
other bugaboos --
homonyms --
there (direction/location)/
their (possessive)/
they're (contraction for "they are"),
your (possessive)/
you're (contraction for "you are")(ur is okay for either, though, when texting or in-game PM because of shortness, or if you want to spell urine but hit the return key early),
its/
it's (one is possessive, the other a contraction for "it is" or "it has")
I had hoped this would be an informative thread. But, if someone get upset that I am pointing out these bits, oh well - move along, learning/teaching in progress.
Edited by Gremlich Johns, 05 March 2012 - 05:00 PM.