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Toxicity in games

Toxicity in games

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james1931
Junior Member
44
11-16-2023, 08:02 AM
#11
Yeah, I’ve had a similar experience in Rainbow 6. I’m a bit behind in the rankings, starting from silver and dropping all the way to copper 1, which isn’t great. I’ve been focusing a lot on Siege lately.
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james1931
11-16-2023, 08:02 AM #11

Yeah, I’ve had a similar experience in Rainbow 6. I’m a bit behind in the rankings, starting from silver and dropping all the way to copper 1, which isn’t great. I’ve been focusing a lot on Siege lately.

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Xytrixz
Senior Member
552
11-16-2023, 10:34 PM
#12
I’m okay with a casual style, but in competition I perform really well, yet my teammates don’t pull their weight... so I still lose.
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Xytrixz
11-16-2023, 10:34 PM #12

I’m okay with a casual style, but in competition I perform really well, yet my teammates don’t pull their weight... so I still lose.

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Rubicube59
Member
192
11-18-2023, 08:15 AM
#13
Plague Inc or city skyline visuals are both about simulating complex systems and creating immersive environments.
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Rubicube59
11-18-2023, 08:15 AM #13

Plague Inc or city skyline visuals are both about simulating complex systems and creating immersive environments.

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firemanshunny
Member
51
11-19-2023, 05:27 AM
#14
Looks like a really toxic situation unfolded. Probably someone on For Honor used an open mic—remember, it was my teammate. He claimed he was wealthy and top-tier, while I was seen as inferior, getting dragged around. Suddenly he dropped a racial slur and said I was a "n****" for how I played. I told him I wasn’t backing down and kept responding in chat when safe, without letting it hurt my team. He kept being rude, even saying he hated me. I stayed calm and communicated through text to avoid any fallout. The game itself was fast-paced, with quick respawns, making his performance seem even more lacking. I actually played perfectly and ended up with the highest score for my team.
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firemanshunny
11-19-2023, 05:27 AM #14

Looks like a really toxic situation unfolded. Probably someone on For Honor used an open mic—remember, it was my teammate. He claimed he was wealthy and top-tier, while I was seen as inferior, getting dragged around. Suddenly he dropped a racial slur and said I was a "n****" for how I played. I told him I wasn’t backing down and kept responding in chat when safe, without letting it hurt my team. He kept being rude, even saying he hated me. I stayed calm and communicated through text to avoid any fallout. The game itself was fast-paced, with quick respawns, making his performance seem even more lacking. I actually played perfectly and ended up with the highest score for my team.

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ThaBear
Member
224
11-27-2023, 12:45 AM
#15
It was my first battle in World of Tanks, but the lag was too strong. I had a slow fight, lost control of my tank, hit walls, and made too many turns. One of my early teammates who got destroyed was still watching and yelled rude things at me, saying things like "you noob, can't even drive the tank!" I tried to calm him down, saying it was my first battle and that my bad ping made me a noob, but he just turned off the game.
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ThaBear
11-27-2023, 12:45 AM #15

It was my first battle in World of Tanks, but the lag was too strong. I had a slow fight, lost control of my tank, hit walls, and made too many turns. One of my early teammates who got destroyed was still watching and yelled rude things at me, saying things like "you noob, can't even drive the tank!" I tried to calm him down, saying it was my first battle and that my bad ping made me a noob, but he just turned off the game.

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FIZZY258
Member
248
11-28-2023, 10:40 PM
#16
When someone acts in a toxic way, it can feel like they're intentionally provoking you. Their extreme behavior is hard to believe; achieving the top spot on the leaderboard is a clear form of retaliation.
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FIZZY258
11-28-2023, 10:40 PM #16

When someone acts in a toxic way, it can feel like they're intentionally provoking you. Their extreme behavior is hard to believe; achieving the top spot on the leaderboard is a clear form of retaliation.

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DanBarr2
Member
138
11-29-2023, 06:34 AM
#17
It didn’t really affect me much, and it didn’t change how I played at all. He left a few seconds before the game finished.
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DanBarr2
11-29-2023, 06:34 AM #17

It didn’t really affect me much, and it didn’t change how I played at all. He left a few seconds before the game finished.

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doctorh321
Junior Member
11
11-29-2023, 10:54 AM
#18
I've experienced numerous disappointing matches in Team Fortress 2, yet one particularly memorable moment stood out—a time when a team felt intensely frustrated after winning. Believe it or not, I can't explain it much better. It was probably frustration over everything else falling apart.
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doctorh321
11-29-2023, 10:54 AM #18

I've experienced numerous disappointing matches in Team Fortress 2, yet one particularly memorable moment stood out—a time when a team felt intensely frustrated after winning. Believe it or not, I can't explain it much better. It was probably frustration over everything else falling apart.

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yolotech
Member
139
11-29-2023, 12:10 PM
#19
I played one match in Paladins where a player stood out. Toward the end, he kept spamming his Twitch stream. That’s fine. For fun, I listened to it. Then I started another game. It turned out I faced this same player again, but on the opposing team. I crushed them, and the match ended 4-0. The next game was the same—again they showed up, and I took them down 4-0. At that point, I wasn’t climbing the ranks, so I appeared as an unranked player. The person I beat twice in a row was a Grand Master, the top rank. They were really upset and raged for about 20 minutes, accusing me of cheating. That’s some good content!
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yolotech
11-29-2023, 12:10 PM #19

I played one match in Paladins where a player stood out. Toward the end, he kept spamming his Twitch stream. That’s fine. For fun, I listened to it. Then I started another game. It turned out I faced this same player again, but on the opposing team. I crushed them, and the match ended 4-0. The next game was the same—again they showed up, and I took them down 4-0. At that point, I wasn’t climbing the ranks, so I appeared as an unranked player. The person I beat twice in a row was a Grand Master, the top rank. They were really upset and raged for about 20 minutes, accusing me of cheating. That’s some good content!

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Kaydra_
Member
105
11-30-2023, 11:48 AM
#20
I've experienced a variety of situations over the years. I started in competitive CoD4, moved to public servers for BF3/4, and now play in Overwatch. The main challenge, particularly with OW, is that people often avoid addressing toxicity. In OW, if you're unfamiliar with a game, there are characters or heroes with unique abilities, making them valuable in different ways. Asking someone to change can be normal, but it quickly turns negative when criticism becomes personal (mostly because they aren't contributing enough). It escalates when names are called or stats are compared.

I've faced some problems too. One instance involved two players waiting together—essentially stacking roles. One was focused on DPS while the other was a tank. They kept criticizing one team member about not healing enough, suggesting they weren't playing well. I didn’t see any real issue with that player (it seemed the DPS was overextending). I told them to stop and let the others support them. Afterwards, I was labeled toxic for making fun of their reaction to feedback and lack of self-reflection. They claimed they reported me, which led to a support member quitting the match. I reported both for poor behavior.

The second time was worse. Usually I don’t get frustrated during gameplay—my main concern is personal performance and mistakes. But when I started noticing negative behavior, it became difficult. One player posted racist, homophobic, or discriminatory messages in chat from the start. I addressed it in voice chat, saying something like, “That was a good ulti… for a bad word.” The opponent retorted, “For a R-word,” and then left the match. Later, I stopped participating in OW due to ongoing issues.

I’m generally not bothered by others’ behavior once I’m playing, but I struggle with my own standards and making errors. Sometimes I feel like I’m just not living up to expectations, which makes it harder to stay motivated.
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Kaydra_
11-30-2023, 11:48 AM #20

I've experienced a variety of situations over the years. I started in competitive CoD4, moved to public servers for BF3/4, and now play in Overwatch. The main challenge, particularly with OW, is that people often avoid addressing toxicity. In OW, if you're unfamiliar with a game, there are characters or heroes with unique abilities, making them valuable in different ways. Asking someone to change can be normal, but it quickly turns negative when criticism becomes personal (mostly because they aren't contributing enough). It escalates when names are called or stats are compared.

I've faced some problems too. One instance involved two players waiting together—essentially stacking roles. One was focused on DPS while the other was a tank. They kept criticizing one team member about not healing enough, suggesting they weren't playing well. I didn’t see any real issue with that player (it seemed the DPS was overextending). I told them to stop and let the others support them. Afterwards, I was labeled toxic for making fun of their reaction to feedback and lack of self-reflection. They claimed they reported me, which led to a support member quitting the match. I reported both for poor behavior.

The second time was worse. Usually I don’t get frustrated during gameplay—my main concern is personal performance and mistakes. But when I started noticing negative behavior, it became difficult. One player posted racist, homophobic, or discriminatory messages in chat from the start. I addressed it in voice chat, saying something like, “That was a good ulti… for a bad word.” The opponent retorted, “For a R-word,” and then left the match. Later, I stopped participating in OW due to ongoing issues.

I’m generally not bothered by others’ behavior once I’m playing, but I struggle with my own standards and making errors. Sometimes I feel like I’m just not living up to expectations, which makes it harder to stay motivated.

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