Chicago Roleplay New Generation

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Tester Application

ardyyy

New member
Username: ardyyy

Please provide your name & discord name: ardyyy1467

Have you ever been staff in a serious server? Yes, I've been staff in Englewood Chicago Serious Roleplay, The Five Boroughs Roleplay. I was Game admin in TFB and tester in Englewood Chicago.

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. Id wish to be apart of the regular staff/support team, at first helping out with tickets and reports in game to help the community have trust in the staff which brings more players in to stay.

Please provide a example of a proper /me & /do. /me begins to search for anything illegal, taking caution for sharp objects.

/do How would the male react?

Please list your time zone and your availability. My time zone is PST and my availability is after 4:15 PM everday

Do you have any forums experience? Yes

Explain how to move a forums thread. First check the thread, then at the bottom it says move.

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? I would clip the situation and ban the person doing this. Making fun of tragedy's that happen in real life isn't something to be joking about, and could cause people to leave the server for good if seen. This can also harm peoples streams and possibly get them striked on twitch/kick.

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? It depends on the situation, if the player they messaged was in the city, in the middle of flying in, or isn't. If the player was in the middle of flying in or was in the city, it would be a ban but not permanent. Meta gaming shouldn't be allowed and is a huge problem to big fivem servers today.

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? It depends on the situation, whether the scene we were in involved shooting, killing, or even a big accident. If the scene wasn't important and it was a simple argument, then yes its valid. Everyone's character is allowed to have certain traits that they can be unique about. If it involved a serious important scene, then it would be different. No matter what you have to stay in the scene because it wouldn't be realistic to be shot or kill someone then say "My character doesn't care".

You notice a rule issue developing within a scene. How would you go about what your seeing in the scene? Depending on if the rule is big or small, I would explain the rule that the person is breaking, and tell him what to do next time. If it was something big that they obviously did on purpose while knowing, it would have consequences like a ban or strike.

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? Whether its clever roleplay or abuse that hurts the gameplay depends on what the male is doing. If the mechanic that they are spamming is obviously giving a huge advantage, its most likely hurting the roleplay for others and needs to have rules. If it isn't giving too much of a advantage, and they just found a little shortcut it should be fine.

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? No clip no case. I've delt with this many times before, if they both don't have a clip the scene gets voided completely. There is not much else you can do with no clips of the scene. People should always have a clipping software running and should be punished if they don't have viable clips when it is needed.

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? Again like I keep saying, it depends on the situation. The person could just be roleplaying with the wrong people and they keep deciding to report him because they simply don't like him, or he is the cause to a bigger problem. As a staff I would ask for everyone's version of the story and clips, to see what the real issue is and who is causing everything.

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 would explain to them respectfully that they made the decision to make a big risk, they should treat there character's as if its real life and don't make unrealistic big risks that you wouldn't make in real life, it is simply there fault and nobody else's.

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? I would review the clips to see what the cop exactly did and whether the extreme actions were justified or not.

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 example of poor roleplay and this is exactly what keeps people away from servers. First I wouldn't give the person any punishment I would simply just tell the male to keep roleplaying his injury and keep things realistic. If he doesn't comply and continues to fail the roleplay that's when punishments come in play.

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 would tell the male to talk to another staff member if they really believe It wasn't a fair verdict, but after that if they continue to argue and spam tickets it would be a discord timeout and possibly even a blacklist.

Some one in the discord makes a ticket regarding applications, how would you respond to their ticket? I would tell the person to not make tickets for staff to check on there applications. It ruins there chance of even being accepeted.
 
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