Posted 26 October 2014 - 12:28 PM
Well one.. it is the game. Valve used DoD:S as a test bed for engine features to be used in TF2 and CS:S(and later CS:GO). The core of the game is broken, and has had a rough history. Most DoD players tried it once, then went back to DoD as it was less random, more skill. The competitive scene mostly died out with CAL when CPL was bought out by Dubai and they had a market crash. I'd say a fairly large number of players are banned from most servers. Then there is the rift between vanilla and realism mods.
Two, admins. I was the last admin picked up for the game(12 February 2013). No problem at first as we had at least four admins on from 5 to 10pm every night. Due to various reasons, the seniors moved on to other things. This meant no more admins could be brought on. Admins, due to their own reasons, began to move on as well. The strict rules in place prevented any of the few remaining admins from bringing on new ones because we weren't allowed. The roles for seniors were never filled, and the last effort I know of ended in complete failure. I can further explain this but not publicly.
Also, some admins were allowed to do things very unbecoming of a Moon admin. Changing maps to intentionally kill the server, changing maps to rid themselves of certain players, changing maps to suit their class's strengths, permanent bans for players who could have been muted, bans for iffy names, bans for being better aka 'hacking'(and allowing those bans to stand with no real evidence). If that ban list has carried over to the current server, I would clean it out and take out the trash as needed.
Three, the server. When Moon became my 'go to' server in August/September 2012, there were two public servers and one locked. The server that saw all the action was the "Mostly Stock" server. Yet all that ever got played was custom maps. To top that off, things like medic mod destroyed what little balance the game had left. Meanwhile, the server called "Kustom Kettle" got no attention, had no players, and ran stock maps with the only mod on it being the pistol mod(that I recall), which also throws game balance out the window by giving all classes pistols. For fear of change causes harm to the player base, no changes ever got made to get the second server going.
Only two people had access to the server, and one wasn't around much. Getting a server reset could be next to impossible. The server settings could use some changes as well. Players are forced to use cl_interp(prediction), while allowing players to use sv_pure custom skins(which can be used for exploits) and allowing wait commands in scripting sv_allow_wait_command. The server musical chairs lost us players, and the last one we were at had terrible latency issues. Once it went down, we were lights out for too long, and when it did come up... most of us were with family on holiday. Pretty much no advance notice. Then the attention went back to other things. Loss of good admin tools was the kicker, though I suppose out of our control.
The map rotation was never changed from default. This was a big one. Its hard to judge anymore because the player base is so splintered. Some are just fine with stock maps, whether because they know and like them, or because their computer can't handle poorly optimized maps. Some are tired of stock maps, and only want to play custom. But an easy change was needed for two maps. Every time, EVERY time, these maps run back to back, they would kill the server. This did not change because only one person could do it. There was the fear that change would harm the server. And no group decision could be made because only a couple of people had input, the rest shot it down for fear of it no longer being "Moon's" server but that small group of admins' server.
This is all that comes to mind right off. I apologize for the wall of text. It is not proof read so it may not flow well. The community gets smaller and smaller every day, and is controlled by a handful of servers. Really great chances were passed over when a few communities fell apart.
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Captain John H. Miller, gensolo and Thumper like this