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Anywho, I generally only comment on articles if I feel like I have something to say (and, uh, occasionally when I don't!). I certainly have been keeping up on reading and don't think quality has dropped or anything. I've also liked a lot of the non-gaming diversions. It makes the place seem more personal and such.
I wouldn't be surprised if it wasn't an effect of the time of year.
Maybe, people visit your site because it was the first blog they started reading and your current topics aren't something they have an opinion on, but still feel obligated to visit or read your blog. There are several blogs, not yours, on my reader that don't cover things I'm currently interested in anymore, like a lot of my WAR blogs, but I still watch and read them, because sometimes they discuss other things I'm interested in.
This seemed rather wordy for a simple matter...but I still read your blog. Course, I might just be posting to get traffic to come to my blog site....lol
I have to register or log in? Oh I guess I can be unclaimed.
If you want people to comment, your posts should start with the words "X_____ SUCKS!" or some equivalent. World of Warcraft, MMOs in general, the dog next door who won't stop barking, whatever. People hardly ever comment, I find, if they agree with you.
What was wrong with the old commenting system, btw?
I come here via Bloginati and I'm there for the design posts. Or the entertaining carnage in the case of Jennings.
You are still the first blog on my google RRS feed when I open my browser.
As for not commenting myself, its more to do with my agreeing with you on posts like Prop 8 and I figure you covered it and also too lazy to click the link.
#2 There aren't a whole lot of interesting topics floating around currently to comment on. And when there are, 10,000 blogs divide the audience. It's probably tougher to get a critical mass of community together in one place. My own "daily reading" list is now stupid long ... I should probably trim it so I have more time to comment rather than reading 200 people's opinions on the same issue. I think the MMOgosphere is aging too. Precious few new topics are taken up and I'm less inclined to participate in the same old discussions.
That said ... more design posts. Take a radical view. MMOgdom still needs to be shaken up. Or we should all self-organize into blogging collectives to bring back the critical mass of community.
and im sure you smell great :-)
You don't have to post in-depth design or be controversial if I enjoy the tone of your blog and the content of your posts, gaming related or not. I myself have enjoyed your posts on Prop 8 and applaud your position on such a backward-facing piece of legislation.
I know my own blog gets about 0 comments, but I'm pretty sure I have one or two readers.
I don't never comment. I rarely comment. Partly because I don't find gameplay reports even remotely interesting unless the game is particularly exotic. Also, though, if you look back at your recent posts, there isn't much that seems like the opening of a discussion. Some might prompt a "thanks for the cool link", but most are the kind of thing which have only one appropriate answer, "good for you."
I find that if I have anything to say, I'd rather put my own spin on it and post it to my own blog.
I do disagree with you about Prop 8 and those posts were a turnoff, but it's your blog - the idea is to post about things you care about, so I certainly don't blame you there. And it didn't prevent me from posting.
Don't worry if something comes up where I feel I can add a few more pennies to the pot, then you'll see me again ;)
Anyway, I might be wrong, but if your site has changed much over the past year, I'd say it's that you do more journaling of your game experiences... like Tipa is prone to do. Since I'm not playing the games you are, I can't say much about them.
My impression is that emotional posts attract the most comments. That can mean writing about personal stuff, sharing interests, attacking something, etc. A post can be thoughtful, but if it doesn't suck people in emotionally then it won't get many comments.
Controversial posts generate interest, but I don't read that stuff unless it's insightful somehow. Controversy for the sake of controversy is irritating. The Prop 8 stuff and some of your other posts are fine, because you weren't just trying to be controversial; you were just talking about touchy issues.
Personally whether I comment on something may also depend on when I am reading something, in any blog. Sometimes I just browse through some blogs quickly to see what is there, but even if there is something I would like to comment on I might not feel I have the time to write a good comment and just skip it.
I have never had any large amount of comments on my blog, so I could not say that it has decreased. I don't expect comments on a lot of what I write either, in particular if I describe my game sessions.