I think that you misunderstand me. I wasn't necessarally saying that bringing back people's characters would fix it. I'm talking about something deeper and more troubling. It's not about character loss. That sucks, but it happens. It's more... the total
feel of the current FH environment. It's not the game it used to be. And that is not to say that growth and change are not a natural part of any larp environment. It's something else. It's an attitude. It's the fact that PC's honestly feel that the GM staff could give a shit about their feelings. It's that Aaron and Reid, god knows I love the boys, and I really do, seem to be running the show at present. I know this all sounds harsh, but I'm being completely honest and just telling you what I have heard discussed MANY times in the last few months with MANY people. They all say the same thing; they're not sure if FH is the kind of game they wanna play anymore.
*sigh* I hate saying this stuff. I want everything to be happy and good again. I don't want to be sad every time I think about FH. I don't want to worry that I'm spending money for nothing. I want to feel secure in the fact that I will have a good time like I used to. I don't want to hear all the bitching and unhappiness that has become a regular lart of EVERY FH conversation I've been a part of for the last five months.
GM_Chris wrote:
As for moral? Brining people back from the dead is not the way to regain moral. You need to send the elves packing which would be a good way to honor their deaths.
Why? Why the hell would we EVER go back there? Everything we had and loved is gone, ashes. Why the uphill battle for a little scrap of land? We have a new home now, and have to make the best of it, because the elves kicked our asses, with the help of people we trusted. There is nothing there to go back to. Honestly. From a character POV, it's better to fortify ourselves against something like that happening again rather than risk destruction again. I understand the nature of a hero is to overcome impossible odds. Well, we believed we could, if we just stood together. We learned, to our sorrow, that it's not enough. Your friend might well turn and slaughter you. And did, in fact.
If this sounds like whining, forgive me. It's not meant to be. I'm trying to express, though poorly, what so many others have said over the last months.
Now, as Doug rightly pointed out, there is the new season. The same folks who are hurting and unhappy are going to give it a chance to be better. I hate to say it, but there is so very much riding on this first event of the new season. People need to feel like there's hope, like there's a reason to live this character's life. Because, frankly, we all have enough sorrow and hardship in our real lives. Most of us will be damned before we pay for it in our fantasy lives.