1) I commented on elitism. Giving preference to one person because they are superior, or perceived to be so, in some way to an alternative is a form of elitism.
2) Intruding on a group in contradiction of its clearly stated goals and desires is rude and selfish. The community theater across the street from my home advertises ballroom dancing on the first wednesday of each month. It would be very rude and selfish of me to walk in and start square dancing.
5) If there is a word that you do not know being used then you should know to ask. If you are not willing to ask a question in a situation where you know that you are not in the know the consequences are your own.
Of course the expectation is in the mind. It is in the mind of the person who formed the group and labeled the LFG according to that expectation. It is in the minds of those who join a group so labeled. It should be in the mind of anyone seeking to join that group. This is not significantly different than a group labeled as needing one more for HotW and having someone join with the intention of doing AC. If the player doesn’t know what HOTW means he knows that he doesnt know, and has the option to ask. The same is true with a team advertising for a zerker. If a player doesnt know what the word zerker means he knows that he doesnt know and can ask. If I say to you, “Yggdrasil stands tall,” and you do not know what Yggdrasil means you will immediately know so and could ask.
I think that you are over psychoanalyzing the individuals looking for a faster path to game rewards. “Sometimes a cigar,” I mean an advertisement for a speed run, “is just a cigar,” I mean an attempt to complete an objective a bit faster.
#1: Guess again. Elitism is not based on preferences of performance, but exclusion of perceived deficiencies. The word itself is based on the notions of privilege being separated into the sole ruling class, and thus always manifests as an exclusion by standards. There is no “pick A or pick B” option in elitism, only a “don’t pick A”.
#2: As far as these people know and experience, the title is meaningless and thus garners no further expectations, because no one respects them anyway.
#3:You misunderstand how potent a lack of knowledge can be. Because they don’t know what the word means, they don’t know if it is important enough to ask about. The title might as well be the collection of random gibberish that spews out of map chat, and no one cares about that stuff. People go through life encountering unimportant words that have absolutely no impact on their life, and thus aren’t worth learning. Yggdrasil is one of those words.
The whole point of the list is the fact that, no, the speed expectation is not in the mind of people who join up on these groups, nor in the mind of people seeking to join these groups. Hell, sometimes it isn’t even in the mind of the people who form the groups, because they’ll just copy/paste what they see, or they’ll inherit the group from someone else who used those tags and don’t care to change them. While you have done a good job of saying that you hate people who do this, this doesn’t suddenly make it not true.
1) A preference of performance is an exclusion of perceived deficiency.
2) You are mistaken.
3) If you want to do something and that something is labeled as requiring, “X,” of you to participate then you know that it is important enough to ask the definition. A word that is listed as a barrier between you and your desires is by definition not unimportant (unless your desires are unimportant to you) to you and by definition has an impact on your life (at least insofar as the game does).
Are you sure that the speed expectation is not in the minds of the people who type that they are looking for a party composition that exists primarily for speed runs ? Are you sure that the speed expectation is not in the minds of the people who choose to join a group labeled as needing more speed run oriented builds ? What leads you to believe that you know the content of the thoughts of complete strangers, most of whom you have never met, sufficiently to justify an argument that contradicts the facts at hand.
For what it is worth, I do not hate anyone for their behavior in forming groups, joining groups, etc. I don’t hate people for being rude nor do I hate people for being elitists.
(edited by Ashen.2907)