Except, the meta in this case is silly. There’s so little gain in most cases that it’s at best flat.
Silly is a subjective word, and unless the gain is exactly zero I don’t think you get to be the sole authority and set the threshold for what is or isn’t trivial.
Back on point, though: we’re profiling. Asking for “zerker meta” is more likely to get us a player who knows the encounter, knows how to use combo fields, has gear specced for optimal DPS, has utilities and traits beneficial to the group (or at least a player with a few of these things).
I’m not even sure you can keep a serious face while telling me that a group of “CoE P2 all welcome” will finish in about the same time as “CoE P2 experienced please”, and even “CoE P2 meta zerker ping gear”.
And if it turns out that we did get a troll who joined without meeting our requirements in LFG, then we’d be justified in retaliation up to and including kicking him at the last boss because he was never legitimately a member of our group.
It’s the internet, of course I get to say :p
I think the profiling thing is spot on, except it’s not a great profiling tool, and for most runs you don’t need to profile… except people think they do. It’s this self-fulfilling and self-defeating act that people just go with, and it’s harmful.
The zerk meta is a classic false meta because it’s mainly there because we say it’s there. Pug dungeon runs aren’t competitive (which drives pvp and raiding metas) and the content isn’t so hard that meta builds are even remotely required.
“The zerk meta is a classic false meta” – this is a blatant lie.
I’ve been recently trying to finish my CM collection ( done yesterday) and have been doing CM for quite a bit.
Did P3 yesterday with a “no requirements, no stress, no zerker” group just to see what it’s like.
It too 18 minutes for a p3 of CM. Good players will know what that means.
Nobody went afk and the lowest AP was 7 k or something which meant people at least weren’t new to the game.
Had I gone with a meta full zerker PUG group we’d have been done in less than 9 minutes.
That’s 9 minutes of my life wasted because people want to “play how I want”.
So no – it’s not a made up concept.
An average of 8 minutes extra per dungeon run if you do 5-6 dungeons does matter. You could watch a TV show in the extra time it will take because of non-meta people.No, the term ‘meta’ has just been warped by people that are desperately trying to make it something it’s not.
There are no completion gear requirements for these dungeons, and there’s no competitive reactive element. Either of those could lead to the creation of a true meta.
In most games the meta refers to something competitive, and it can easily be put into 2 grand categories:
1) This style maximizes my chance of winning.
2) This is something I have to be aware of or else I can get destroyed by it.To clarify the second example, let’s step out of GW for a second; If you play Netrunner, a Jinteki trap deck isn’t one of the top ‘meta’ decks in the first sense. It’s good, but not as good as a NBN astroscript or a RP deck. It’s part of the meta because if you aren’t aware of the deck and how it works, you’re most likely gonna lose.
ahem
Anyways, neither of those categories apply to GW2 PVE. You can optimize to various degrees if you everyone’s on the same page and knows what they’re diong, but it’s not required to compete and it’s not required to ‘not lose’.
People are competing against their own lack of time. That’s where the pressure factor is.
Meta means an optimal strategy.
Optimal to win, optimal to go fast, optimal to give you the best chance. Just the best way to do it.
Completing and not losing aren’t the only goals here. People who care about their time in this game have the added goal of : let’s do it as fast as possible while not losing.
I know you’re not actually saying it, but the way you word your argument seems to be to give your goals priority or importance by stating “people who care about their time spent in the game” as if the people with a contrary point of view somehow “don’t care about their time spent in the game” which I disagree with.
Granted that’s not what you said but it’s possible to get that tone from your post.