Warcraft Teens: Finding A Raiding Guild That Fits
- Do you have TIME to raid?
- Sharing your computer and having to jump off with little notice because parents or siblings demand it is a great way to lose online raiding friends and gain a bad reputation
- Ignoring real world responsibilities (chores, homework, bedtime) and leaving a dungeon or raid party in the lurch as a result is another great way to lose friends and gain a bad reputation.
- Are your professions levelled up?
- A nice chunk of the best equipment for level 70s these days is crafted from Tailoring, Leatherworking, Blacksmithing and Engineering. Don’t just rely on dungeon runs to gear yourself up
- How about your secondary professions?
- Sometimes, grinding out “boring levels” in Fishing, First Aid and Cooking can pay off quite nicely when making an application to a Raiding guild. Advancing these secondary skills not only provides free healing and nice buffs that you can share with guildmates, but it shows a dedication to the game that a lot of leaders are looking for when tackling the harder game content
- Do you know how to earn Warcraft Gold without having to ask others?
- Asking for cash from virtual strangers is extremely bad form, even in guilds that are nowhere near tackling End Game content. It’s important to support yourself or lean on Real Life friends
- Raiding guilds and those tackling Heroic 5-man content at level 70 all have on thing in common: When learning new encounters with a new group, repair costs are high, and consumable costs are high. The more you can farm materials for your consumables, the less you have to buy from the Auction House. The more gold-earning strategies you’ve devised before applying for the raiding guild, the better as well
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Getting Control of a Guild with an Absent Guildmaster
After One Month Of Inactivity, Petition a Game Master
Taking over a guild and being the one selected as new Guildmaster requires a few things:
1) One month or more of inactivity by the Guildmaster
2) Yourself to be one of the highest ranking members within the guild as it stands (by Rank not popularity)
3) A petition to Game Masters
The petition can be as simple as “The Guildmaster for XYZ guild has been absent for over 30 days and we wish to have one of our active members promoted to Guildmaster so we may continue building our guild”.
There is no need to go into a big long story in your petition, for the reason described in the next section…
No Guarantees
Unfortunately, because there’s no way to allow a guild membership to “vote” on a new leader, the one who submits the petition may not be the one promoted to Guildmaster. An active player will be promoted, and from there you’ll need to go through the regular procedures for changing the Guildmaster if the “wrong” person gets the reigns.
Don’t Ninja The Guild
As a final comment about this process, I’d like to remind folks that while you may be promoted to the Guildmaster rank due to your Guildmaster’s absence, if it is done without the knowledge and consent of the rest of the guild, you will likely face backlash from the membership.
Be smart - if the Guildmaster is away for a length of time that slows forward motion of your guild, you may wish to /gquit and find or start a new guild with some of your current guildmates. If, however, you are the new “de facto leader” and most of the membership turns to you as they did the Guildmaster, you may wish to bring up the topic of having the GM reigns handed over to you to see what the response is.
At any rate, it’s possible to keep a guild going after the GM disappears, and since the Guildmaster does have different functions for maintaining the guild than even the highest level and highest permission Officer does, it’s important to have an active GM
Good luck!
Tags: world of warcraft, wow guildmaster, taking over warcraft guild, guildmaster away, running a guild, warcraft guilds, becoming guildmaster, absent guildmaster










