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#51
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#52
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Feels so much more classic on red without recharging. It really trivializes so much.
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#53
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/rofl
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#54
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#55
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Any 100% perfect classic set server will not be true classic experience because people simply know too much what they didn't 12-14 years ago. Just because elite few discovered how to recharge or how to MQ epics, doesn't mean 90% of the population did. Today everyone knows where, what and how. Therefore, it will never be "classic".
The best you can hope for is to create a decent reasonable environment with "whats better for the server" idea in mind. Of course everyone has his own ideas what that is, but mine would be very strict view on: -No boxing -No MQ -No recharging -No class XP penalties
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#56
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-full corpse-item duping -plat duping -player charming in Duels/PvP -exploits that allowed to get mobs stacked while players could keep beating on them with no retaliation. and many other exploits...
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#57
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The whole point of what the Dev's are doing, I think, is trying to make it as classic as possible.. Therefore everything on that short list above should be allowed as it was classic, which it already is less boxing.
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< Knights Who Say Ni >
Qeynos questing and leveling (all quests nerfed) | Off the beaten path 24-40. | |||
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#58
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ffs do you have to spell out every intention when you say anything here? this isn't a design meeting its just people talking.... I was just bringing up some good sides to the soulfire that I stressed were my opinion. Let me have my opinion without trying to trick me into being wrong. Here, here is a list of things that I like with as much detail as possible so as not to get some petty argument with a stranger: COUNT LEO NIKOLAYEVICH TOLSTOY was born August 28, 1828, at the family estate of Yasna- ya Polyana, in the province of Tula. His moth- er died when he was three and his father six years later. Placed in the care of his aunts, he passed many of his early years at Kazan, where, in 1844, after a preliminary training by French tutors, he entered the university. He cared lit- tle for the university and in 1847 withdrew be- cause of "ill-health and domestic circum- stances." He had, however, done a great deal of reading, of French, English, and Russian novels, the New Testament, Voltaire, and Hegel. The author exercising the greatest in- fluence upon him at this time was Rousseau; he read his complete works and for sometime wore about his neck a medallion of Rousseau. Immediately upon leaving the university, Tolstoy returned to his estate and, perhaps inr spired by his enthusiasm for Rousseau, pre- pared to devote himself to agriculture and to improving the condition of his serfs. His first attempt at social reform proved disappointing, and after six months he withdrew to Moscow and St. Petersburg, where he gave himself over to the irregular life characteristic of his class and time. In 1851, determined to "escape my debts and, more than anything else, my hab- its," he enlisted in the Army as a gentleman- volunteer, and went to the Caucasus. While at Tiflis, preparing for his examinations as a cadet, he wrote the first portion of the trilogy, Childhood, Boyhood, and Youth, in which he celebrated the happiness of "being with Na- ture, seeing her, communing with her." He al- so began The Cossacks with the intention of showing that culture is the enemy of happi- ness. Although continuing his army life, he gradually came to realize that "a military ca- reer is not for me, and the sooner I get out of it and devote myself entirely to literature the better." His Sevastopol Sketches (1855) were so successful that Czar Nicholas issued special orders that he should be removed from a post of danger. Returning to St. Petersburg, Tolstoy was re- ceived with great favor in both the official and literary circles of the capital. He soon became interested in the popular progressive move- ment of the time, and in 1857 he decided to go abroad and study the educational and munici- pal systems of other countries. That year, and again in 1860, he traveled in Europe. At Yas- naya Polyana in 1861 he liberated his serfs and opened a school, established on the principle that "everything which savours of compulsion is harmful." He started a magazine to promote his notions on education and at the same time served as an official arbitrator for grievances between the nobles and the recently emanci- pated serfs. By the end of 1863 he was so ex- hausted that he discontinued his activities and retired to the steppes to drink koumis for his health. Tolstoy had been contemplating marriage for some time, and in 1862 he married Sophie Behrs, sixteen years his junior, and the daugh- ter of a fashionable Moscow doctor. Their early married life at Yasnaya Polyana was tranquil. Family cares occupied the Countess, and in the course of her life she bore thirteen children, nine of whom survived infancy. Yet she also acted as a copyist for her husband, who after their marriage turned again to writ- ing. He was soon at work upon "a novel of the i8io's and *2o's" which absorbed all his time and effort. He went frequently to Mos- cow, "studying letters, diaries, and traditions" and "accumulated a whole library" of histori- cal material on the period. He interviewed survivors of the battles of that time and trav- eled to Borodino to draw up a map of the battleground. Finally, in 1869, after his work had undergone several changes in conception and he had "spent five years of uninterrupted andjgxceptionally strenuous labor Tnnierthe IbesfcondUtions of life/' he published War and Peace. Its appearance immediately established Tolstoy's reputation, and in the judgment of Turgenev, the acknowledged dean of Russian letters, gave him "first place among all our contemporary writers." The years immediately following the com- pletion of War and Peace were pa**efl in a great variety of occupations, none of which Tohtoy found satisfying. He tried busying VI BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE himself with the affairs of his estate, under- took the learning of Greek to read the ancient classics, turned again to education, wrote a series of elementary school books, and served as school inspector. With much urging from his wife and friends, he completed Anna Kare- nina, which appeared serially between 1875 and 1877. Disturbed by what he considered his unreflective and prosperous existence, Tolstoy became increasingly interested in religion. At first he turned to the orthodox faith of the people. Unable to find rest there, he began a detailed examination of religions, and out of his reading, particularly of the Gospels, gradu- ally evolved his own personal doctrine. Following his conversion, Tolstoy adopted a new mode of life. He dressed like a peasant, devoted much of his time to manual work, learned shoemaking, and followed a vegetari- an diet. With the exception of his youngest daughter, Alexandra, Tolstoy's family re- mained hostile to his teaching. The breach be- tween him and his wife grew steadily wider. In 1879 he wrote the Kreutzer Sonata in which he attacked the normal state of marriage and extolled a life of celibacy and chastity. In 1881 he divided his estate among his heirs and, a few years later, despite the opposition of his wife, announced that he would forego royal- ties on all the works published after his con- version. Tolstoy made no attempt at first to propa- gate his religious teaching, although it attracted many followers. After a visit to the Moscow slums iri 1881, he became concerned with social conditions, and he subsequently aided the suf- ferers of the famine by sponsoring two hun- dred and fifty relief kitchens. After his meet- ing and intimacy with Chertkov, "Tolstoyism" began to develop as an organized sect. Tol- stoy's writings became almost exclusively pre- occupied with religious problems. In addition to numerous pamphlets and plays, he wrote IV hat is Art? (1896), in which he explained his new aesthetic theories, and Hadji-Murad, (1904), which became the favorite work of his old age. Although his activities were looked upon with increasing suspicion by the official authorities, Tolstoy escaped official censure until 1901, when he was excommunicated by the Orthodox Church. His followers were f re- quently subjected to persecution, and many were either banished or imprisoned. Tolstoy's last years were embittered by mounting hostility within his own household. Although his personal life was ascetic, he felt the ambiguity of his position as a preacher of poverty living on his great estate. Finally, at the age of eighty-two, with the aid of his daugh- ter, Alexandra, he fled from home. His health broke down a few days later, and he was re- moved from the train to the station-master's hut at Astopovo, where he died, November 7, 1910. He was buried at Yasnaya Polyana, in the first public funeral to be held in Russia without religious rites. CONTEXTS BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE v The Principal Characters in War and Peace Arranged in Family Groups xv Dates of Principal Historical Events xvi BOOK ONE 1-5. Anna Sche'rer's soiree i 6-3. Pierre at Prince Andrew's 1 1 9. Pierre at Anatole Kurdgin's. D61ok- hov's bet 15 10. A name day at the Rost6vs' 18 11-1*4. Natasha and Boris 20 15. Anna Mikhdylovna and Bon's go to the dying Count Beziikhov's 26 16. Pierre at his father's house; talks with Boris 27 17. Countess Rost6va and Anna Mikhay- lovna 30 18-19. Dinner at the Rost6vs'. Marya Dmitri- cvna 31 20. S6nyaand Natasha. Nicholassings.The Daniel Cooper 35 21. At Count Bczukhov's. Prince Vasfli and Catiche 37 22-23. Anna Mikhdylovna and Pierre at Count Bczukhov's 41 24. Anna Mikhdylovna and Catiche strug- gle for the inlaid portfolio 45 25. Bald Hills. Prince N. A. Bolkonski. Princess Mary's correspondence with Julie Kardgina 47 26-27. Prince Andrew at Bald Hills 51 28. Prince Andrew leaves to join the army. Princess Mary gives him an icon 55 BOOK TWO 1-2. Review near Braunau. Zherk6v and D61okhov 60 3. Kutuzov and an Austrian general. ^Le malheureux Mack. Zherk6v's fool- ery 65 4. Nicholas and Denisov. Telydnin and the missing purse 68 5. Nicholas in trouble with his fellow of- ficers 72 6-8. Crossing the Enns. Burning the bridge. Rost6v's baptism of fire 74 9. Prince Andrew sent with dispatches to the Austrian court. The Minister of War 81 10. Prince ( Andrew and Billbin 83 1 1. Hippolyte Kuragin and les ndtres 86 12. Prince Andrew received by the Emper- or Francis. Bilibin's story of the Tha- bor Bridge 87 13-14. Prince Andrew returns to Kutuzov. Bagrati6n sent to Hollabriinn. Napoleon's letter to Murat 89 15. Prince Andrew reports to Bagrati6n. Captain Tiishin. Soldiers at the front. D61okhov talks to a French grena- dier 94 16. Prince Andrew surveys the position. The first shot 96 17. Bagration in action. Tiishin's battery. Setting Schon Grabern on fire 97 18-19. Battle scenes. Quarrelsome command- ers. Nicholas injured 99 20. Panic. Timokhirfs counterattack. D6- lokhov's insistence. Tiishin's battery. Prince Andrew sent to order him to retreat 104 2 1 . Withdrawal of the forces. Nicholas rides on a gun carriage. Tiishin called to account by Bagrati6n. Prince Andrew defends him. Nicholas' depression 106 BOOK THREE 1-2. Prince Vasfli and Pierre. A soiree at AnnaPa vlovna's. IMene'sname day. Pierre's marriage 1 1 1 3. Prince Vasili and Anatole visit Prince N. A. Bolkonski. Princess Mary's ap- pearance 119 4. Lise, Mademoiselle Bourienne, Mary, Anatole, and old Bolkonski 122 5. Her father's opposition to Mary's marrying. She finds Mademoiselle Bourienne and Anatole in the con- servatory; declines marriage 126 6. A letter from Nicholas. S6nya and Na- tasha 128 7. Nicholas visits Boris and Berg in camp. Nicholas tells of Schon Grabern. His encounter with Prince Andrew 131 8. The Emperor reviews the army. En- thusiasm of Nicholas 135 9. Boris visits Prince Andrew; at Olimitz. Prince Dolgoriikov 137 COUNT LEO NIKOLAYEVICH TOLSTOY was born August 28, 1828, at the family estate of Yasna- ya Polyana, in the province of Tula. His moth- er died when he was three and his father six years later. Placed in the care of his aunts, he passed many of his early years at Kazan, where, in 1844, after a preliminary training by French tutors, he entered the university. He cared lit- tle for the university and in 1847 withdrew be- cause of "ill-health and domestic circum- stances." He had, however, done a great deal of reading, of French, English, and Russian novels, the New Testament, Voltaire, and Hegel. The author exercising the greatest in- fluence upon him at this time was Rousseau; he read his complete works and for sometime wore about his neck a medallion of Rousseau. Immediately upon leaving the university, Tolstoy returned to his estate and, perhaps inr spired by his enthusiasm for Rousseau, pre- pared to devote himself to agriculture and to improving the condition of his serfs. His first attempt at social reform proved disappointing, and after six months he withdrew to Moscow and St. Petersburg, where he gave himself over to the irregular life characteristic of his class and time. In 1851, determined to "escape my debts and, more than anything else, my hab- its," he enlisted in the Army as a gentleman- volunteer, and went to the Caucasus. While at Tiflis, preparing for his examinations as a cadet, he wrote the first portion of the trilogy, Childhood, Boyhood, and Youth, in which he celebrated the happiness of "being with Na- ture, seeing her, communing with her." He al- so began The Cossacks with the intention of showing that culture is the enemy of happi- ness. Although continuing his army life, he gradually came to realize that "a military ca- reer is not for me, and the sooner I get out of it and devote myself entirely to literature the better." His Sevastopol Sketches (1855) were so successful that Czar Nicholas issued special orders that he should be removed from a post of danger. Returning to St. Petersburg, Tolstoy was re- ceived with great favor in both the official and literary circles of the capital. He soon became interested in the popular progressive move- ment of the time, and in 1857 he decided to go abroad and study the educational and munici- pal systems of other countries. That year, and again in 1860, he traveled in Europe. At Yas- naya Polyana in 1861 he liberated his serfs and opened a school, established on the principle that "everything which savours of compulsion is harmful." He started a magazine to promote his notions on education and at the same time served as an official arbitrator for grievances between the nobles and the recently emanci- pated serfs. By the end of 1863 he was so ex- hausted that he discontinued his activities and retired to the steppes to drink koumis for his health. Tolstoy had been contemplating marriage for some time, and in 1862 he married Sophie Behrs, sixteen years his junior, and the daugh- ter of a fashionable Moscow doctor. Their early married life at Yasnaya Polyana was tranquil. Family cares occupied the Countess, and in the course of her life she bore thirteen children, nine of whom survived infancy. Yet she also acted as a copyist for her husband, who after their marriage turned again to writ- ing. He was soon at work upon "a novel of the i8io's and *2o's" which absorbed all his time and effort. He went frequently to Mos- cow, "studying letters, diaries, and traditions" and "accumulated a whole library" of histori- cal material on the period. He interviewed survivors of the battles of that time and trav- eled to Borodino to draw up a map of the battleground. Finally, in 1869, after his work had undergone several changes in conception and he had "spent five years of uninterrupted andjgxceptionally strenuous labor Tnnierthe IbesfcondUtions of life/' he published War and Peace. Its appearance immediately established Tolstoy's reputation, and in the judgment of Turgenev, the acknowledged dean of Russian letters, gave him "first place among all our contemporary writers." The years immediately following the com- pletion of War and Peace were pa**efl in a great variety of occupations, none of which Tohtoy found satisfying. He tried busying VI BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE himself with the affairs of his estate, under- took the learning of Greek to read the ancient classics, turned again to education, wrote a series of elementary school books, and served as school inspector. With much urging from his wife and friends, he completed Anna Kare- nina, which appeared serially between 1875 and 1877. Disturbed by what he considered his unreflective and prosperous existence, Tolstoy became increasingly interested in religion. At first he turned to the orthodox faith of the people. Unable to find rest there, he began a detailed examination of religions, and out of his reading, particularly of the Gospels, gradu- ally evolved his own personal doctrine. Following his conversion, Tolstoy adopted a new mode of life. He dressed like a peasant, devoted much of his time to manual work, learned shoemaking, and followed a vegetari- an diet. With the exception of his youngest daughter, Alexandra, Tolstoy's family re- mained hostile to his teaching. The breach be- tween him and his wife grew steadily wider. In 1879 he wrote the Kreutzer Sonata in which he attacked the normal state of marriage and extolled a life of celibacy and chastity. In 1881 he divided his estate among his heirs and, a few years later, despite the opposition of his wife, announced that he would forego royal- ties on all the works published after his con- version. Tolstoy made no attempt at first to propa- gate his religious teaching, although it attracted many followers. After a visit to the Moscow slums iri 1881, he became concerned with social conditions, and he subsequently aided the suf- ferers of the famine by sponsoring two hun- dred and fifty relief kitchens. After his meet- ing and intimacy with Chertkov, "Tolstoyism" began to develop as an organized sect. Tol- stoy's writings became almost exclusively pre- occupied with religious problems. In addition to numerous pamphlets and plays, he wrote IV hat is Art? (1896), in which he explained his new aesthetic theories, and Hadji-Murad, (1904), which became the favorite work of his old age. Although his activities were looked upon with increasing suspicion by the official authorities, Tolstoy escaped official censure until 1901, when he was excommunicated by the Orthodox Church. His followers were f re- quently subjected to persecution, and many were either banished or imprisoned. Tolstoy's last years were embittered by mounting hostility within his own household. Although his personal life was ascetic, he felt the ambiguity of his position as a preacher of poverty living on his great estate. Finally, at the age of eighty-two, with the aid of his daugh- ter, Alexandra, he fled from home. His health broke down a few days later, and he was re- moved from the train to the station-master's hut at Astopovo, where he died, November 7, 1910. He was buried at Yasnaya Polyana, in the first public funeral to be held in Russia without religious rites. CONTEXTS BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE v The Principal Characters in War and Peace Arranged in Family Groups xv Dates of Principal Historical Events xvi BOOK ONE 1-5. Anna Sche'rer's soiree i 6-3. Pierre at Prince Andrew's 1 1 9. Pierre at Anatole Kurdgin's. D61ok- hov's bet 15 10. A name day at the Rost6vs' 18 11-1*4. Natasha and Boris 20 15. Anna Mikhdylovna and Bon's go to the dying Count Beziikhov's 26 16. Pierre at his father's house; talks with Boris 27 17. Countess Rost6va and Anna Mikhay- lovna 30 18-19. Dinner at the Rost6vs'. Marya Dmitri- cvna 31 20. S6nyaand Natasha. Nicholassings.The Daniel Cooper 35 21. At Count Bczukhov's. Prince Vasfli and Catiche 37 22-23. Anna Mikhdylovna and Pierre at Count Bczukhov's 41 24. Anna Mikhdylovna and Catiche strug- gle for the inlaid portfolio 45 25. Bald Hills. Prince N. A. Bolkonski. Princess Mary's correspondence with Julie Kardgina 47 26-27. Prince Andrew at Bald Hills 51 28. Prince Andrew leaves to join the army. Princess Mary gives him an icon 55 BOOK TWO 1-2. Review near Braunau. Zherk6v and D61okhov 60 3. Kutuzov and an Austrian general. ^Le malheureux Mack. Zherk6v's fool- ery 65 4. Nicholas and Denisov. Telydnin and the missing purse 68 5. Nicholas in trouble with his fellow of- ficers 72 6-8. Crossing the Enns. Burning the bridge. Rost6v's baptism of fire 74 9. Prince Andrew sent with dispatches to the Austrian court. The Minister of War 81 10. Prince ( Andrew and Billbin 83 1 1. Hippolyte Kuragin and les ndtres 86 12. Prince Andrew received by the Emper- or Francis. Bilibin's story of the Tha- bor Bridge 87 13-14. Prince Andrew returns to Kutuzov. Bagrati6n sent to Hollabriinn. Napoleon's letter to Murat 89 15. Prince Andrew reports to Bagrati6n. Captain Tiishin. Soldiers at the front. D61okhov talks to a French grena- dier 94 16. Prince Andrew surveys the position. The first shot 96 17. Bagration in action. Tiishin's battery. Setting Schon Grabern on fire 97 18-19. Battle scenes. Quarrelsome command- ers. Nicholas injured 99 20. Panic. Timokhirfs counterattack. D6- lokhov's insistence. Tiishin's battery. Prince Andrew sent to order him to retreat 104 2 1 . Withdrawal of the forces. Nicholas rides on a gun carriage. Tiishin called to account by Bagrati6n. Prince Andrew defends him. Nicholas' depression 106 BOOK THREE 1-2. Prince Vasfli and Pierre. A soiree at AnnaPa vlovna's. IMene'sname day. Pierre's marriage 1 1 1 3. Prince Vasili and Anatole visit Prince N. A. Bolkonski. Princess Mary's ap- pearance 119 4. Lise, Mademoiselle Bourienne, Mary, Anatole, and old Bolkonski 122 5. Her father's opposition to Mary's marrying. She finds Mademoiselle Bourienne and Anatole in the con- servatory; declines marriage 126 6. A letter from Nicholas. S6nya and Na- tasha 128 7. Nicholas visits Boris and Berg in camp. Nicholas tells of Schon Grabern. His encounter with Prince Andrew 131 8. The Emperor reviews the army. En- thusiasm of Nicholas 135 9. Boris visits Prince Andrew; at Olimitz. Prince Dolgoriikov 137 | |||
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Last edited by iruinedyourday; 07-23-2014 at 06:36 PM..
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#59
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__________________
< Knights Who Say Ni >
Qeynos questing and leveling (all quests nerfed) | Off the beaten path 24-40. | |||
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