This isn't a flame, or an attack, just read it if you wish and maybe you'll think twice next time you post...
So the question at hand...is it really necessary to reply to any/every team recruiting thread with "why bother make a new team, just join one?". Having a first person shooter background, I feel like making a team can be the best move made by someone. It not only gives someone the oppurtunity to take on a new role but it also gives players a responsibility, one of which to maintain a team, learn the game better, learn characteristic skills that maybe the outside world doesn't teach...
When I first made a "squad" while playing Black Hawk Down, back in, let's say early in 2004, we were a low key team. In time, people admired our skill, our compassion, and our friendliness to anyone who joined a server we were in. Everyone would hope on voice comms and when we weren't playing, we were just talking, talking about everyday life, talking to complete strangers that shared the same passion towards the game. I met a lot of great people in that time, most of which I still talk to, to this day. We were a successful team, we put many wins under a belt, but we had our setbacks, we didn't always win but we depended on one another to pull together and fix what we were doing wrong, and that's important in competitive gaming. It's a great chance for not only the younger generation but also the older, adult era to really get out there and feel like they have made something. Of course, not all teams can be successful and sure, many teams do fall short of becoming anything well-known, but you live and you learn.
Again, I didn't post this thread to start a debate but LFS has a pretty broad population, and within the population are different genres of racing. You have your regular straight up racing, drifters, rallyers, and on top of that, car classes. Finding someone who shares the same interest in cars and racing with you is a great feeling and it's natural to want to expand by finding more people who share the same values.
I guess the message I'm trying to get out there is let people do what they want to do, regardless if you think failure is right down the road for them, how do you think top name teams have gotten out there and made a name for themselves? I'm sure when they came up with the idea to make a team, many people shot them down and said the same thing some still say today....Regardless, it's an oppurtunity for someone to broaden their role in LFS, whether it's being a leader, learning how to treat individuals, or being a driver who must obey the leader, and listen, and learn, and progress with their experience and skills, whatever it is, it's a chance for the LFS population to grow and expand and all in all, it's a chance for an individual to gain not just racing skill but personality skills.
So the question at hand...is it really necessary to reply to any/every team recruiting thread with "why bother make a new team, just join one?". Having a first person shooter background, I feel like making a team can be the best move made by someone. It not only gives someone the oppurtunity to take on a new role but it also gives players a responsibility, one of which to maintain a team, learn the game better, learn characteristic skills that maybe the outside world doesn't teach...
When I first made a "squad" while playing Black Hawk Down, back in, let's say early in 2004, we were a low key team. In time, people admired our skill, our compassion, and our friendliness to anyone who joined a server we were in. Everyone would hope on voice comms and when we weren't playing, we were just talking, talking about everyday life, talking to complete strangers that shared the same passion towards the game. I met a lot of great people in that time, most of which I still talk to, to this day. We were a successful team, we put many wins under a belt, but we had our setbacks, we didn't always win but we depended on one another to pull together and fix what we were doing wrong, and that's important in competitive gaming. It's a great chance for not only the younger generation but also the older, adult era to really get out there and feel like they have made something. Of course, not all teams can be successful and sure, many teams do fall short of becoming anything well-known, but you live and you learn.
Again, I didn't post this thread to start a debate but LFS has a pretty broad population, and within the population are different genres of racing. You have your regular straight up racing, drifters, rallyers, and on top of that, car classes. Finding someone who shares the same interest in cars and racing with you is a great feeling and it's natural to want to expand by finding more people who share the same values.
I guess the message I'm trying to get out there is let people do what they want to do, regardless if you think failure is right down the road for them, how do you think top name teams have gotten out there and made a name for themselves? I'm sure when they came up with the idea to make a team, many people shot them down and said the same thing some still say today....Regardless, it's an oppurtunity for someone to broaden their role in LFS, whether it's being a leader, learning how to treat individuals, or being a driver who must obey the leader, and listen, and learn, and progress with their experience and skills, whatever it is, it's a chance for the LFS population to grow and expand and all in all, it's a chance for an individual to gain not just racing skill but personality skills.