Honestly in the end I agree with you @MorbidMagus, as my only real concerns are (a) producing interesting, engaging, worthwhile content for 180-250 to match the cap increase without subjecting the game to further power creep (which we can only wait to see what happens, though as I said in my first post in this thread, given Nexon's track record for the past decade, good luck with that), and (b), what @KhainiWest said in response to your quoted response to me, to which you agreed.
Just please note as well, before you go exploding someone's post into a million points to counter, consider where you're breaking them and what has already been said. If you read all of my responses in this thread, for example, you'll know I agree with you that (1) playing MapleStory for as long as we did back then was "unhealthy and an obvious obsession" (I freely admit I was addicted throughout high school and lost a portion of my social life because of it), and (2) "The fact that you have to do something else entirely while playing a game to enjoy it shows there is an issue with the entire damn system."
I mean hello duh to that second point. I didn't like it but I did it anyways because I wanted to contribute to the scare content that was available so badly. Ultimately all I'm really trying to say is, again, what you and KhainiWest agreed upon: I was addicted to a game and played my heart out for 3 years to reach 200, and set a number of other accomplishments in my time (soloed Papulatus like 200+ times before mid-2009, was the first F/P ArchMage to solo Zakum in GMS), but as things have changed over the years, essentially all of those have become worthless and meaningless (so don't tell me that facet of life because pineappleing duh I've lived it here, in addition to everywhere else in my life). The ranks as they are now are all I and several others have left to show for the time and sacrifice we put in, and to have them wiped basically shows a scene of a company we devoted all our free time and hundreds to thousands of dollars to, who are now laughing and spitting on us as they walk away.
Therefore, to correctly amend what you said about life (which is true, it's all about change, ask any evolutionary biologist), the human race is, like KhainiWest said, respectful and honorable of the work of those that came before us. In addition to artists, like he mentioned, I'll use your example of "experts in fields laughing at accomplishments made 30 years prior." Actually, I would imagine most experts would be humbly respectful of said accomplishments, because in any field they're building from them. After all, the work of Nobel laureates from the early 20th century, for example, is the basis of much scientific progress today. And go figure, the world didn't forget or erase those earlier advances.
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