Sorry, but this does nothing for the PvE players [snipped]
Two points…
1. Activity of a server (whether certain individuals participate or not) in WvW expresses itself server wide in the form of bonuses that are material to the entire server community.
World Bonus’s dont really matter to me if I can’t get to do the content I wish, with the people I wish to be with.
2. You are uninformed as to the organizational design (specifically, the development teams supporting and expanding Guild Wars 2), how work gets assigned, and the process paths through which any concept is eventually implemented.
The premise of your argument rests on the assumption that Arena Net’s commitment in one area is mutually exclusive to commitment in another. This assumption is overly narrow and completely contradicts the express direction outlined by Colin.
I’m aware of how the team works. I would also expect there to be someone who has the final go. no go on any patch or content change. While there are seperate teams to do different stuff, these teams will often have conflicting priorities. So again these priorities need to be scheduled, assigned budgets and effort by the arenanet PMO. The underlying team structure is less important in a way than the overall programme management. Even then then the decision as to what to include or exclude is not the PMO’s call.
What I was saying, was that world transfers do not just affect WvW, but the entire game which is still having numerous issues and can only be resolved by changing server.
As someone mentioned above, the actual server you play on should be de-coupled from the world/team/faction you represent.
TLDR: The game is much bigger than WvW, and the community more varied than a single game type. That being the case, issues that are hurting the normal everyday player and stopping their progress should imho be resolved first. As someone mentioned above. Block the ability of the player to WvW for 7 days, not the ability of the player to get other stuff done.
Guild Leader of DVDF www.dvdf.org.uk since 2005