Exactly. It's a game. If one is taking it that seriously and that personally, one needs to take a deep breath and follow Elsa's lead. Now I shall go fling some snow about in true Elsa style
Edit: Wil, one more thought to ponder here - earlier in the thread you were essentially harping on me because the 'literal' meaning behind the way the Mistvale rules was worded wasn't 100% accurate, and made other statements to the effect that you were able to misinterpret the "not repeatable" rules because the phrasing was not, in your opinion, accurate enough.
Yet, you then make statements such as that I have "brutalized" players. Clearly you wanted to incite a certain feeling with that phrasing, yet the word's actual definition:
https://www.google.com/#safe=on&q=brutalized
So, since you've expressed you want us all to be literal, I'm to understand that you've told an admin that they've attacked a player in a violent or savage way? Really? Some people who play on this shard have had experiences in life that genuinely qualify for that term, but having your excess cloaks and sashes taken away, or players being jailed after infractions, is
not even in the same universe as that.
Also good to note - the Mistvale wiki's got rules listed, which explain about the non-repeatable quests:
http://www.uoex.net/wiki/Mistvale#Rules
and in case you'd like to say that it was a recent update, here's the page as it was in June, with those rules already shown:
http://www.uoex.net/w/index.php?title=M ... oldid=3350
I understand that you've taken the whole matter personally and that you've had a hard time moving on from it, but you were not brutalized or treated unfairly. You are letting it affect your enjoyment of the game, that is a decision you make for yourself. I sincerely hope you'll be able to get past it, now that you've had your say once again. We can agree to disagree, if it pleases you, but nothing good will come of continued behavior like you've been displaying. In the long run of your game-life - let alone your real life - is it really so monumentally important? I think, if you really get some distance and think about it, you'll realize it's not.