Believe it or not,
DC-Con 7 was the
first real LAN Party I've ever attended that I didn't help run. A lot of
people are surprised at this -- but you have to realize that I'm talking
large, organized LAN parties. You know, anything larger than the group we
can cram into Mojo's place for his MiniMojo events.
My first impression was: this is smaller than I was expecting. The
space didn't appear to be any bigger than the larger of the two rooms we
used at F.R.A.G. v5.0 (which was about 40x50 feet). I was expecting a
little more from a party that claimed an attendance of 450 at their 4th
party -- and 150 at their fifth event. Most of the people I went there
with estimated the crowd at about 80 or so. The frustrating part was how
cramped the setup was, even though some entire tables were empty. It was
often difficult to work your way through the aisles, because people were
sitting on both sides and there wasn't a lot of distance put between the
tables.
My second impression was: fuck, it's cold in here. And that never
really changed (except on the few occasions when I snuck back to the
thermostat and adjusted it myself). Everybody, I mean everybody,
complained about the cold but nothing got done about it. The few times we
brought it to the attention of Lunch (the main staff member), we were told
"I like it cold" and then placated with "I'll turn it up a few degrees",
and once that there was some issues with the servers running hot. Uh,
yeah. I came down Saturday morning to find the thermostat set to
FIFTY-TWO DEGREES. Everyone in there would have died if I
hadn't turned it up. The only thing I can deduce is that Lunch simply
gets warm at temperatures others find comfortable and that he (and maybe
other members of the staff) didn't care about the rest of the attendees or
just didn't get how cold it was. Granted, the server/staff area wasn't as
cold as the rest of the room, but that didn't make me feel any better as
my teeth were chattering.
I was relatively lucky enough to avoid the power outages that plagued
the event on Friday. There were still a few circuits getting tripped
after I got there, but none hit my area. This was apparently the result
of bad planning, as they were running too many people off of a really
small breaker that simply couldn't handle it. They seemed to have it
resolved by Saturday. I think. Though, it may have had something to do
with why they had the lights out for the entire party, even when we
were leaving. There wasn't a lot of info forthcoming from the staff. In
fact, there wasn't much interaction with them at all. When others of my
group made inquiries or had problems with servers, they were told to wait
while the staff members finished their games of Quake 3. Maybe the
attendees were introduced to the staff before I got there, but it seemed
that there was more F.R.A.G. staff there than DC Con staff.
I guess I should have gotten a bit more info about the party before I
agreed to go. It was almost exclusively Quake 3, with a few players
starting up a Counter-Strike server. Since I'm not a big Q3 guy, I played
some CS with the rest of them and Diablo II with Bad Mojo, Smeg, and
Gouki. In fact, as it turns out the major purpose of the party was as a
Q3: CTF qualifier round for some large (inter?)national competition.
Everything else was (or at least felt) secondary. We got to listen to one
particularly loud clan scream at the top of their lungs to their teammates
sitting five feet away as they played in the Capture-The-Flag
tournament. This is when they weren't trash talking to the enemy team at
their maximum volume possible. And I am completely serious when I say
that. It's a wonder they weren't spraying blood from their injured larynx
all over their monitors. The staff wasn't about to tell them to keep it
down, because this was the big tournament, the big money maker, and the
team in question was one of the best ones there. So the rest of us were
treated to the deafening shouts of "ENEMY QUAD" and "GO TO RED!
GO TO FUCKING RED! GET TO FUCKING RED RIGHT NOW". What a wonderful
way to spend a weekend.
The highlight of the weekend was the unfortunate forced extraction of a
younger player by his grotesquely obese mother. From what she said,
she'd been trying to contact him for several hours Saturday evening.
Apparently the hotel wasn't able to get through to the gaming room for
some reason (I didn't even know there was a phone in there, and if there
was, it doesn't explain why the hotel couldn't physically send
someone to the room if they were having problems contacting the
staff). So she shows up, angry and irate, and proceeds to berate her
kid in front of everyone, telling him that the game he's playing is sick
(I don't know what he was playing... probably Quake 3, like everybody
elese). She calls her husband, telling him this, and when she's done
she stands there and rant dementedly about how what we're doing "is
sick", and how "this is a road to nowhere." Over and over, she stands
there are exclaims "This is sick." Some people tried to reason calmly
with her, telling her it was just a hobby. "This is no hobby," she
responded hotly. "This is sick. This is just sick." She likened the
setup to a "vampire room" because the lights were all out. All of us
who were there were on that "road to nowhere" and we'd "never get on
Wall Street." Uh, sure, whatever. Apparently the only yardstick of
success is to be on Wall Street. And any activity that doesn't actively
serve to get you there is a waste of time. There must be something
going on at all those fishing trips that I just don't know about. "You
ever heard of a company called Merrill Lynch? That's who my husband
works for. He flies all over the country." Who cares? How is that a
measure of success? Simply working for Merrill Lynch means you're
successful? Simply flying all over the country? Unfortunately, there
was no reasoning with the massive land whale of a woman, which is pretty
characteristic of the closed-minded masses when presented with something
they don't understand. To them, it really is as simple as [
Success = Merrill Lynch ] or [ Unfamiliar and
Incomprehensible = Fear and Hatred ]. Somewhere along the line
these people's minds were irrevocably closed to anything beyond what
they were taught was "good" and "normal". But I've strayed way beyond
the scope of this document's original intent. Suffice it to say that
that particular scene will be discussed for a long time to come.
In the end, I think it was a good experience for me to see what other
LAN parties are like. Will I go back? Nope. I don't think it was a very
enjoyable party, but then my perspective isn't likely shared by the
majority of the people attending (who were quite happy playing Quake 3 for
the entire event). At the very least, I thought it was a good opportunity
to see how a party turns out when you make a lot of bad choices.
(Updated Thursday, September 23, 2004 10:46 AM)