IM trying to do gambit. i need the trinket there its my BIS. so far every group iv gotten for the second boss cant really do it and its been rough to get past it which is fine.
but every time someone in the group that knows what to do explains it nobody listens. keeps doing the same mistakes and we keep wiping. then just start blaming me as the healer or the tank when the groups wipe constantly despite the fact people are going “no your doing it wrong” i dont get it.
It is overwhelmingly the case that if you can get your own key (without paying for a boost) to a particular key range, you are in most cases “able” to run it. Whether you should is a different question but this is true for most ilvls.
This comes with the caveat that one has to be self-aware and be willing to say “I didn’t do as much/as well as I could in that dungeon, I gotta work on myself!” If you can do that, you are literally better than half of every other player participating in endgame content at least, likely higher than that.
You can easily run 10s with 699 and lower. But you have to be aware and be willing to discover your own limitations when playing in this way. It is however the best way to improve as a player the fastest; both skill-wise and gear-progression-wise.
Some people see WoW as a game, not a job or a calling. They don’t care how well they do, they are just doing it for fun. Others have a different idea how they want to play.
That’s just the nature of PUGS. They are quite literally PickUp Groups of random people with random reasons for playing.
There is an adverb that means in or at that place . There is also used as a pronoun introducing the subject of a sentence or clause:
She is there now.
There is still hope.
Their is the possessive case of the pronoun they , meaning belonging to them:
They left their cell phones at home.
Someone left their book on the table.
In this particular instance, the word is being used to refer to a location…
…ergo, that is correct usage.
The amazing part however is the fact that you guys got so fixated on there/their, that you completely missed the far more obvious one: your/you’re.
Your is a possessive adjective used to show ownership.
Your hair looks great today!
I wish I had your energy.
You’re is a contraction of the phrase you are .
You’re my best friend!
I think you’re the perfect match for the job.
In the following case…
…the quote/word is NOT being used to refer to something in someone’s possession. That is incorrect. In that instance, they correct usage would be “No, you’re doing it wrong.”
If you guys are going to take it upon yourselves to be the grammar police, at least know what you’re talking about first, otherwise you’re only going to look foolish