I saw your first picture.
No doors.
Your argument means those are clearly unowned property, ripe for chopping apart.
Edit: make that first two. Third didn’t work.
Poor tauren have no property rights, per Treng.
I saw your first picture.
No doors.
Your argument means those are clearly unowned property, ripe for chopping apart.
Edit: make that first two. Third didn’t work.
Poor tauren have no property rights, per Treng.
There’s literally a door on the bank vault.
https://tenor.com/view/smirk-ryan-reynolds-grin-gif-4553503
But don’t you worry, I’m collecting the troll stuff next!!!
The totem pole?
ye
/10chars
edit: don’t you fib, you fibber. Third link absolutely works.
You know the totem pole is a good ways away from any buildings, nor is it a building itself. Right?
Not on my phone it don’t
oh thank christ for blizzard
i don’t have to travel the world for this.
We Amani was here before anyone!!
But have this anyway since I was already in Zandalar.
https://i.imgur.com/PFgcUyo.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/KQHUuWX.jpg
So clearly you believe the many troll and tauren buildings without doors, including ones present in some of your own screen shots, are legitimate targets for hacking apart.
After all, they have no doors, but door technology is present elsewhere.
To be clear, you’re assuming they don’t use doors because you don’t see them in game.
We see examples of doors in places where players aren’t intended to go. The rest of places, inns, auction houses, banks, whatever don’t typically have doors for whatever reason: less load time on old computers, didn’t see the point, etc.
There aren’t doors on Stormwind’s bank for instance, at least not as far as I recall. And nor on their inns, or taverns.
But when we find places we aren’t intended to enter, they have closed doors.
You’re devolving into a pedantic argument because you’re unwilling to accept that comparing a forest to a home won’t fly.
I decided to check for my favorite poster.
https://i.imgur.com/yrziYzF.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/iLS354M.jpg
(This used to be the action house’s entry door!!)
And to drive home why this is different with the night elves, the orcs are specifically stated to have found signs of nothing but spooooky wisps, and animals.
No. To be clear, I’m stating they do not always conform to your very strange, very arbitrary, very eurocentric view of property rights.
There actually are. They’re open.
Not at all. Yours is the pedantic argument, because it attaches purely arbitrary conditions to what does and does not constitute living property, conditions solely defined to force only your own view in spite of other races who also would not conform.
We could agree that in a fantasy work, if someone lives in it and calls it home, it probably is.
Try walking into someone’s home unannounced anywhere in the world.
Tell me how that turns out.
There’s nothing arbitrary about signs of ownership, and signs of denial of entry.
The night elves provided neither. The forest seemed empty, and the orcs had no means of knowing it wasn’t until it was too late and the elves decided to genocide the Warsong Clan.
Wow. Still going.
I wouldn’t have thought two missions in WC3 were this hard to parse, but here we are lol.
They aren’t hard to parse, people just wanna deny them for some misbegotten reason.
The orcs not knowing the night elves were there was an entire plot point.
See, I would imagine they would kill me. Especially if I was chopping it with axes.
I’m glad you see things my way.
When you decide “doors and gates” are required?
Yes. You are being arbitrary.
When they saw signs of a haunting, they knew officially it was not empty. They pressed on.
You have defeated your own argument today.
Thanks for playing.
I dunno, half a day of posts rehashing the exact same arguments implies otherwise. That tends to indicate people digging in heels and committing to the act of arguing over the argument itself.
That’d be more like if they entered the land within a mile of your home.
or more.
I don’t remember where the nelves were stationed, be it hyjal or darkshore, or astranaar. but it wasn’t within the orc’s traveling.
Signs? Fences? Verbal warnings? Carrier pigeons?
https://i.imgur.com/0sM3FMQ.jpg
If I own the land and I live on the land, it is part of my home. My front lawn is my property, part of my home. If you come 'round wrecking it, I am allowed to defend it.
The nelves gave the same warning as a barking dog would give. The orcs refused to heed it.
The orcs are at their own fault.
You’re comparing a front yard to a forest, but yes. You’re allowed to defend it.
But you’d go to prison if instead of defending it, you decided you’d use it as a trap to torment people before you killed them for entering your land which you in no way made known was yours occupied at all.
End of discussion. Thank you for agreeing that the night elves had every right to defend their lands after the orcs learned it was occupied and continued on.
This is by far the most interesting, entertaining, ridiculous discussion I have ever seen. Half a day of arguments about a sentinel’s laugh and doors.
Dreadmoore, I swear I almost want to print some of your posts, and put them on my fridge.