Username: Spazz
Please provide your name & discord name: KJ my discord lilspazz424
Have you ever been staff in a serious server? yes I was staff in Oakland Chicago and the tfb v1
All staff are required to be apart of a department. Please provide a department that you wish to be apart of upcoming joining the team. tester to start off to show you guys Ik how to role play.
Please provide a example of a proper /me & /do. /me would reposition the firearm in his waistband . /do the male would have multiple cuts and bruises on his face.
Please list your time zone and your availability. EST
Do you have any forums experience? No
Explain how to move a forums thread. N/a
A new player joins with a realistic-looking name, but it’s clearly meant to mock a real-world tragedy or group. They claim it’s “just dark humor.” As staff, how do you handle this and why? Well you kick them or provide a name changed because you don’t that person to see it and it causes hate to the server or get the server shut down because of the real event.
During a robbery scene, a player messages another outside the game to warn them what’s about to happen. The scene continues normally. As staff reviewing the report, what concerns you most and how do you handle it? First this is called meta gaming and if the scene play out normally he still warned someone out of game which can mess up someone storyline or even immerse.
A player walks away from an active RP situation without saying anything and later claims, “My character wouldn’t care.” How do you judge whether this was valid character choice or roleplay avoidance? Was the player already involved in the scene?
If they were directly engaged in a tense situation argument suddenly walking away may be avoiding consequences rather than genuine character behavior.
You notice a rule issue developing within a scene. How would you go about what your seeing in the scene? I’d try to handle it in the least disruptive but most effective way possible while keeping the RP fair for everyone involved.
A player repeatedly uses mechanics to gain advantages but technically follows the scripts correctly. How do you decide whether this is clever gameplay or abuse that hurts roleplay? I’d look beyond whether the mechanic is “allowed” technically and focus on intent, impact, and server standards.
Just because something works within the script doesn’t automatically make it healthy for RP. The real question is whether the player is using
Two players give completely different versions of a scene. Both seem confident and neither has video. How do you investigate and make a fair decision as staff? I’d stay neutral not a debate about who sounds more convincing.
You notice the same player appears in multiple reports—not always guilty, but always involved in messy situations. At what point does this become a concern, and how should staff address it? This becomes a concern when you start seeing a pattern of repeated involvement in unstable or rule adjacent situations as staff we should as a team choose what the best option is whether a ban or wtv the case is.
A player takes a huge risk in a dangerous situation and loses their character as a result. They complain that it was unfair. How do you explain consequences while still being respectful and professional? I’d focus on separating emotion from rules, and explaining the outcome in a calm, factual way without dismissing how they feel.
A civilian resists police in a situation that realistically would not justify extreme actions. How do you judge whether the player acted realistically or just wanted an outcome? Whether it’s done in the real world or not using real life logic or events
A player roleplays severe injuries during a scene but is completely fine an hour later with no explanation. How should staff handle situations like this to maintain consistency? This is a consistency issue that affects RP credibility and consequence integrity. Even if no one is “lying,” sudden injury reversals without explanation can break immersion and fairness.
You make a ruling that a player strongly disagrees with, but it’s fair and consistent. They continue arguing. How do you handle this while maintaining authority and professionalism? I’d keep it calm, consistent, and avoid turning it into a back and forth debate.
Some one in the discord makes a ticket regarding applications, how would you respond to their ticket? First, I’d let them know I’ve seen it:
* “Hey, I see your ticket regarding applications.” Then redirect them to the right place to ask that question.
Please provide your name & discord name: KJ my discord lilspazz424
Have you ever been staff in a serious server? yes I was staff in Oakland Chicago and the tfb v1
All staff are required to be apart of a department. Please provide a department that you wish to be apart of upcoming joining the team. tester to start off to show you guys Ik how to role play.
Please provide a example of a proper /me & /do. /me would reposition the firearm in his waistband . /do the male would have multiple cuts and bruises on his face.
Please list your time zone and your availability. EST
Do you have any forums experience? No
Explain how to move a forums thread. N/a
A new player joins with a realistic-looking name, but it’s clearly meant to mock a real-world tragedy or group. They claim it’s “just dark humor.” As staff, how do you handle this and why? Well you kick them or provide a name changed because you don’t that person to see it and it causes hate to the server or get the server shut down because of the real event.
During a robbery scene, a player messages another outside the game to warn them what’s about to happen. The scene continues normally. As staff reviewing the report, what concerns you most and how do you handle it? First this is called meta gaming and if the scene play out normally he still warned someone out of game which can mess up someone storyline or even immerse.
A player walks away from an active RP situation without saying anything and later claims, “My character wouldn’t care.” How do you judge whether this was valid character choice or roleplay avoidance? Was the player already involved in the scene?
If they were directly engaged in a tense situation argument suddenly walking away may be avoiding consequences rather than genuine character behavior.
You notice a rule issue developing within a scene. How would you go about what your seeing in the scene? I’d try to handle it in the least disruptive but most effective way possible while keeping the RP fair for everyone involved.
A player repeatedly uses mechanics to gain advantages but technically follows the scripts correctly. How do you decide whether this is clever gameplay or abuse that hurts roleplay? I’d look beyond whether the mechanic is “allowed” technically and focus on intent, impact, and server standards.
Just because something works within the script doesn’t automatically make it healthy for RP. The real question is whether the player is using
Two players give completely different versions of a scene. Both seem confident and neither has video. How do you investigate and make a fair decision as staff? I’d stay neutral not a debate about who sounds more convincing.
You notice the same player appears in multiple reports—not always guilty, but always involved in messy situations. At what point does this become a concern, and how should staff address it? This becomes a concern when you start seeing a pattern of repeated involvement in unstable or rule adjacent situations as staff we should as a team choose what the best option is whether a ban or wtv the case is.
A player takes a huge risk in a dangerous situation and loses their character as a result. They complain that it was unfair. How do you explain consequences while still being respectful and professional? I’d focus on separating emotion from rules, and explaining the outcome in a calm, factual way without dismissing how they feel.
A civilian resists police in a situation that realistically would not justify extreme actions. How do you judge whether the player acted realistically or just wanted an outcome? Whether it’s done in the real world or not using real life logic or events
A player roleplays severe injuries during a scene but is completely fine an hour later with no explanation. How should staff handle situations like this to maintain consistency? This is a consistency issue that affects RP credibility and consequence integrity. Even if no one is “lying,” sudden injury reversals without explanation can break immersion and fairness.
You make a ruling that a player strongly disagrees with, but it’s fair and consistent. They continue arguing. How do you handle this while maintaining authority and professionalism? I’d keep it calm, consistent, and avoid turning it into a back and forth debate.
Some one in the discord makes a ticket regarding applications, how would you respond to their ticket? First, I’d let them know I’ve seen it:
* “Hey, I see your ticket regarding applications.” Then redirect them to the right place to ask that question.