After being away from the real world, which paradoxically includes access to virtual reality, for a month, I am now back here to annoy, hassle, condescend, nitpick, goad, troll, and generally make life miserable for all of you. IOW, business as usual. And my first question is: How many times did Wordforge die while I was away? (I would hate to think that all the "Wordforge is dying" reports have turned out to be false once again.)
Totally false. I made a pretty good bid to drive everyone off this weekend, but nope. They're still here. The fools.
Wordforge has more lives than a litter of cats. Which is to admit that the entire place smells like ammonia and tuna farts.
Not dead. Self-absorbed shitsmears spamming up the board with whine threads, trying to whip up controversy over nothing, but that never managed to kill the board before.
A question that's never answered: What is the critical mass of posters needed to sustain a board? In the oft-repeated "WF is dying 'cause we can't attract new members!" meme, no one ever seems to know why this is so important.
Spambots we've gotten pretty good at keeping out. Once in a while one will pop up, but by and large we stop them at the door.
So, okay, what's the optimal number of posters for long-term sustainability? I'd have thought quality mattered more than quantity, but...
Wordforge has been dead for ages. We're the remnants of the past, destined to walk the lake of fire for eternity.
As long as there is someone willing to pay for it and someone willing to post on it, Wordforge will live.
So you're saying that once I buy the board from Lanzman, it'll just be me and baba posting here, huh? I'm okay with that.