Wow, have I missed a lot in the two weeks I was off.
Shroomy, I do hope that after posting what you did, you then came back to read what we have written. And even though this is lengthy, that you will read my comments as well.
Let me preface by saying that I love Neopets. We all do--or we wouldn't be wasting our time writing about it. And we wouldn't be wasting our time playing it. When I first joined a year and a half ago, I thought it was the best thing since "sliced bread."
For me, it's like taking a trip to Disneyworld. The artwork is fantastic and the number of different games to play is astounding. For the most part, it is a safe site that you can feel comfortable letting your kids play. And, after getting a nasty virus on my computer from a pop-up ad that I got while surfing the web, I can really appreciate the fact that it is pop-up and virus free.
The game is extremely well thought out so that it appeals to people from all walks of life and all ages--and so that anyone can be successful at it. My 11 year-old daughter plays the game just as well as my husband, who is the COO of a company. And because of the variety of things that you can do on the site, you can easily find your own little niche--whether it be chatting, battling, collecting, restocking, art contests, games, HTML on your pet's pages--the list of things to do goes on and on.
But I also have complaints about Neopets. It's not the advertising. That doesn't bother me in the least. It's a necessary evil--just like TV and radio, the sponsor ads pay the bills. And, it isn't the staff. You guys work your butts off and deserve a round of applause.
But shapu hit it right on the head:
shapu wrote:
its the suits of TNT. I'll reiterate: a corporate mentality harms the users. Simple as that - and that's what you've got over there. Not your fault, but that's the way it's coming out. And the suits have a responsibility to raise money, sure, and turn a profit, but they also have a responsibility to at least pretend that they care about John Q. User - and I haven't seen much of that over the last couple of years.
It's not the artists, mods, support staff, receptionists or even the programmers that i am upset with. It's the "suits"--i.e., the head honchos of Neopets. They are the ones who make all of the decisions about how Neopets is run and they are the ones who are making all of the money. And, they really give the appearance that they care more about their sponsors and the money they are getting from them than they do about their players.
First off, the suits decide what kind of computer hardware and software to install. And, it seems with all of the glitches that have arisen in the past year, that they are skimping on both software/hardware and programmers. There should be enough servers to handle all of the players and anytime you anticipate getting new players, like from the McDonald's promotion, you should have enough servers installed in place before the promotion begins.
And, there should be a fail safe program on the system to catch the errors that occur when an item doesn't make it to its destination. The technology is there to be able to do this--financial institutions have it, human resource and financial management programs have it, on-line merchants like ebay have it, on-line stock trading programs have it. Neopets should have it too. Don't we deserve this?
There should be technical staff on 24/7--we shouldn't have to wait until 9 am California time for a glitch to be fixed, which often appears to be the case.
And there should be communication between the technical staff and the support staff--so when your system's "scammer" programs are incorrectly set and people are erroneously frozen due to these incorrect settings, your support staff knows to automatically unfreeze these people. And, please don't say there are no "bots." You know darned well that you have programs on your system to catch people who use automated programs to cheat at games and at restocking and to see the number of times an IP address obtains a freebie, such as the Advent Calendar. Maybe the computer doesn't do the actual freezing, but it sends a report to a staff member, who then pushes the freeze button.
Secondly, the suits have decided to keep the site running while installing new hardware/software rather than take the site down completely for that amount of time required to do the installation. Anytime, my company's CIO needs to do anything with respect to our site, he warns us ahead of time, gives us the exact time it will be taking place, and takes the site down. It should be the same for Neopets. Warn us ahead of time (you used to do so in the news when the site was new) and take the site down when you are monkeying with it.
But you don't do that and you have had major glitches in the past few months that have affected a great number of players. I can only wonder if it has something to do with the sponsors. Putting a warning in writing would give the sponsors a whiff of reality, eh? That all is not right in Neopia? And Downtime = no sponsor ads during that downtime = no money from those sponsors during that downtime. And when the glitches occur we don't even get the whole story anywhere in writing, let alone a sincere apology. Why? Is it possible that Neopets doesn't admit to anything because any written admission of a problem with the site could cause the sponsors to get nervous and pull their ads? See, Shroomy, where people might get the idea that the owners of Neopets care more about their sponsors than they do about their players?
Third, the suits decide its customer service policies. They have decided to have poorly written, vague rules about what is allowed on the site--instead of a complete set of clear, concise rules to cover every situation. They have decided to freeze people's accounts for any violation of these vague rules--instead of instituting a warning system for lesser offenses. Yes, I agree that anyone who puts porn on your site should be frozen and IP banned (and I think you should go one step farther and arrest him or her). But, should that same type of punishment also be applied to the 10 year-old who just started to play, who doesn't know all of the rules because most of the rules are unwritten, and who innocently sends a chain letter or posts off-topic on the chat boards. And if one kid in a family scams, should you really institute an IP ban that affects his innocent brothers and sisters?
The suits also have decided to have a policy of not returning any items lost during their computer glitches. This alone makes them look like they care little about their players. And, though I feel for your loss, I can't accept your argument that you are in the same boat as the rest of us about lost items (you aren't--you work for the company so you really have to support the game regardless of the glitches). Nor does it matter that that the items are not real or that the site is free.
The point is that the item or nps lost represents a portion of a user's time. It took the user x hours to make y nps to buy a certain item. If that item is then lost to the glitch, that person has, in essence, lost x hours of time. And that time is valuable. And the suits should respect the user who devotes his valuable time to this game, which in turn puts food on the suit's dinner table. In return for giving your company our valuable time when we could be watching TV or playing a Nintendo game, we should have the assurance that the game is reliable and glitch-free--or if not, glitch-free, the assurance that anything lost during the glitches will be returned to us.
The fact that the suits won't even contemplate returning a user's lost items or nps to that user makes them really look like they don't give a hoot about their players. The roll-back glitch that occurred two weeks ago affected at least 1/6th of the players and if you were unlucky enough to have a user name on that line of the shop wiz you were affected. But, we are just supposed to suck it up, deal with it, get over it, and return to the game. And keep looking at the ads which in turn put food on the suit's dinner table. Shroomy, are you able to see why people might be a little upset? Everyone in this world wants to feel valued and, as players, we don't get that feeling from Neopets' owners.
If Neopets can't or won't install the proper computer programs to automatically catch the lost item glitches, why can't they at least institute a system where a person can report all of the details regarding a lost item and then a staff member goes through the log of error messages to investigate this and, if the log checks out, returns the item to the user. And, if you are afraid of people filing false claims, institute a policy of freezing people for false reporting.
Fourth, the suits decide how many people to hire. And it is pretty obvious that you need more people:
You need someone to write out the rules so that they are clear and concise. You have no idea how helpful that would be the your staff in the long run. If the rules are clear and detailed about what exactly can and cannot be done, there would be less people frozen, less people writing you about being frozen, less letters for your staff to review, etc.
You need more people to review the emails and reports to you about wrongful freezings, missing petpets, lost items, etc. and perhaps, if there were a few more people around, some of the staff members would feel less stressed and be a bit nicer to the users who do write. Not everyone who writes you is a liar and a cheat. Not everyone is a sophisticated English-speaking adult who can write well. And, maybe your staff ought to realize that.
And, I must admit that I have nothing but good service from the staff members that I have dealt with. I have had two family members that have had their accounts wrongfully frozen. And, luckily, both got them back--but only after my husband and I wrote detailed letters to your staff about it and basically argued our cases. And, personally, I think the unfreezings had a lot of do with the fact that we are well-educated middle-aged adults with the ability to write well and with somewhat impressive backgrounds (my husband signed his letter as the COO of his company on company letterhead and I wrote that I had gone to Northwestern Law School). I don't think the "average joe" has much of a chance in getting his account back.
And, you need a lot more people to monitor the boards and any place people can put html--particularly during those times when there are a lot of people playing--like the weekends and any time the snowager is asleep.
Last weekend, I saw something in a new member's guild that shocked the bejesus out of me--and even though I and countless others wrote support about it--it sat for at least an hour before someone finally froze this guy's account and his guild. And, I mean it was extremely graphic porn that I saw and I can only thank my lucky stars that my daughter didn't see it. If this kind of stuff had been shown on TV, the TV station's owners would have been arrested. And, Neopets should be very careful about this kind of porn being shown on their website because sooner or later it could adversely affect them--if you get my drift. If a sponsor happened to catch sight of that guild's page, you'd have one less sponsor.
I don't know anything about this Day of Action or the article, but I do see why people could get so upset with Neopets that they would want to take some type of action.
Obviously from the responses to this topic, not everyone on PPT thinks alike. But we are all allowed to express our opinions--fully and freely. Which makes PPT a really great place to be! I wouldn't still be playing Neopets if PPT wasn't around.