Is it just me or does Guild Wars 2 do everything that it possibly can to keep you from playing with your friends?
I have a few IRL friends that also play GW2. We made a guild together at launch, but 4-5 people isn’t really enough to sustain a guild full time, so I had to join another more active guild to actually glean benefits like guild perks and a pool of people to recruit for dungeons. Since then, I’ve found that it’s basically impossible to play with my friends without setting up pre-arranged playtime through out-of-game means, because the game itself does absolutely everything in its power to get in my way.
1. I seldom have any idea if my friends are even online. As a rule, I don’t spend all my time compulsively bringing up the friends list, so there’s no way to reliably find out. In theory, the game notifies you when your friends log in/out. In practice, this notification is buried in the Game Messages section of chat, which also contains loot, and no sane person keeps it as a part of their main chat window.
2. Even if I somehow discover they’re online, there are some serious limitations on what we can do together. None of us are very into PVP, so that leaves PVE content. We only manage a full party of 5 once a month or so, so it’s mostly world PVE. For any given group of characters that we might want to play at the moment, it can be very hard to find content both that’s within the acceptable level range for the lower levels in the party and not something the higher levels have already done.
World PVE (pre-80) centers around map completion, and I’m sure I don’t have to tell you how skull crushingly boring it is to tag along with someone else while they work on a map you’ve already finished. Aside from the occasional event it boils down to babysitting them, or sometimes simply sitting around twiddling your thumbs while they do some of the less combat-intensive hearts. Especially since many hearts actively bar you from participating after you finish them. This is not exactly engaging or rewarding stuff, so we often end up going our separate ways.
3. When we’re doing separate things, I can’t easily talk to them. Since guild chat requires you to represent the guild you want to chat with, even if I swapped to representing my friends/family guild there’s no guarantee they would be representing it (in fact, it’s fantastically unlikely). It would be annoying to have to individually contact each one of them and beg them to represent just to have a casual conversation, not to mention that they might not want to be pulled out of whatever conversation they’re having with the guild they are representing. This makes it basically impossible to have the sort of friendly background banter we’re accustomed to in other MMORPGs.
This whole mess gives the game a very solitary feel, and really turns me off from playing as much as I otherwise would. It’s hard to find motivation to log on randomly when I know my odds of meaningful social interaction are so low. Does anyone else feel this way?