<Snipped quote by ArenaSnow>
I see, well actually I just posted on my status as I'm not familiar with what would be a "journal" entry on this forum. I mostly wanted to advise this as I felt it becoming an issue. Sorry, I just wanted to really address why I did things a certain way in my starters.
The reason I wanted to do it out of OOC is because I feel that it's cleaner that way, and I'm sort of versatile on how you create a character. Characters to me are not set in stone and they adapt and become better overtime. At least, in my past experience abroad and off this forum. Thus I didn't really want to force people into a final draft that could potentially just be edited and corrected instead. It's sort of my lenient roleplaying nature, but I believe a character can be better if they're just adjusted to the RP instead of just outright saying 'no'. Another thing is I feel OOC was supposed to be reserved for discussions and not just about characters, but plots and information as well. Thus I wanted to keep it as the lifeline of the roleplay and have characters just edited as we went along in the character section. I mean, I guess I could switch but I feel like for me to just go flat "no" and force others to a final draft of a character that may well just need some tweaking to be a bit of a disservice to my participants. I'd rather just have characters adjusted than just have to go "no" and shut off my players.
And that is a perfectly viable system. I believe there are people on the outer fringes of my memory who have done systems like that, and they are both perfectly valid and supported in the system.
But that is the key here. They are both supported, neither is truly correct, which leaves one area to post your system - right into your roleplay, in the first post you expect people to read when starting off, so it is (theoretically) clear immediately what your expectations are. If you do that, any issue (ideally) goes away, and if people still miss it despite you explicitly stating what you want in your main post that people should read to understand anything about your roleplay, then it is on them, and it is your right to deride/correct them for it as you see fit. It's really no biggie. People aren't even entitled to an explanation why you do it because it's really such a minor change that it should simply be respected,
as long as you make it clear in your main post. If people fail to follow your post after you've done that (is that the case here?), then you are the victim of the guild's widespread reading comprehension blindness. Little to be done about that I'm afraid.
In short, my points in this thread are these;
- Your system is perfectly valid, despite the alternative being more widespread and thus probably why people are using it by default instead
- I'd like to know if you've already made it explicit what you want in the roleplays themselves, or just now started saying something
To go further, it would be good to clarify how much you've done beforehand, as the final answer to this thread changes based on what you did. If you've done nothing else besides make a status and make this thread, then it is simply not good enough - you
must state what you want in your roleplay threads from the beginning if you want it to be done. If you've already done that, I don't accuse the guild of being collectively bright. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ You'll either need to put your foot down or be accustomed to gently guiding people into doing the things they should have been doing in the first place. It's an individual problem with no clear solution, and I don't think you'd see any cultural changes by trying to get the guild to collectively understand things better if you've already done your part in the threads - which, as noted above, is your first and last line for seeing progress.
As far as the status bar goes, it's unique in that it's basically the place where most people just throw little tidbits that are usually pointless or slightly humorous. There's not much unity as far as the role of the status bar (and several times there's been petitions for it being outright deleted). Back on topic, the only context I can think of where people will actually look into your profile for a status/information is
- if they're a 1x1 player trying to learn your darkest secrets
- if you've been gone for a month and they go 'did he say something about leaving?'
- if they're a magical unicorn that is actually interested in following profiles, believe me, very uncommon here >.>
It's a fair assumption to think that a profile might have more merits to players in your games, but generally speaking, what appears on your profile is highly unreliable for reaching your players, even if you are a GM, unless you actually tell people in your OOC to stalk your profile (in which case I'd suggest putting whatever you want to say into the OOC in the first place so people can get the information directly). I'm not even counting the status bar itself, the real place where your messages are displayed in the 'public arena' so to speak. I'll out on a limb and say a good portion of the active guild just never sees what you post in time, another portion ignores it, and comparatively a few people actively pay attention to it for the comedic value or random curiosity.
I'm afraid there's no real mechanic built in for a personal blog of any kind, though depending on what you want to post, other mechanics can try to fill that role. I suppose if anything, what you posted would technically be most appropriate for the status bar - unfortunately, I don't think that's too effective, as compared to simply stating what you want in the roleplay itself.
Blimey I'm wordy today.