LittleSoul wrote:What often puzzles me is when a player feels it's necessary to OOC message to the entire group that they made a mistake and their previous post was supposed to be a whisper. It's makes it seem like they expect your character to ignore it when it was clearly said out loud.
Why should that be expected of all the other characters? Why shouldn't that just be dealt with in character like they spoke so loudly by accident everyone could hear (like a group wide overheard whisper)? Even if the 'whisper' is acknowledged in game by other characters most of the time unless you're trying to take over the town or something people don't care, or don't understand the context of whatever your character said so they don't care anyways. If they -are- trying to take over the town, I'm pretty sure no one will care about an OOC message either - they're going to react to that 'whisper'.
So why bother? Seems like a very unnecessary use of OOC messaging to me.
Wow, sorry. Didn't expect backlash on that.
Let me explain it to you then. We're here to, what rollplay? something like that? And part of that would be, I assume, having characters whose characterizations are dictated more than by what button is where on a particular screen. So, if I want to have a character that's able to carry on a quiet conversation without accidentally shouting, because, you know, that's how normal people who don't have speech impediments work, then when I accidently shout, because navigating away and back changed the settings I had taken for granted, I don't see why the most reasonable thing to do is to assume that my character suddenly has the speech patterns of an excited 4 year old. Same reason people correct their typos. Sometimes they might cough or something, but come on, we all know what they're doing. If it bothers you that much, report it. That's what you're supposed to do with annoying OOC messages, right?