Off-Topic > The Lounge

The first Clan that you joined?

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Queso:
I will always hold the Baron's Pub group close to my heart. They were a tf2 server that had one of the strongest online communities I have ever been a part of. It was a shame to see it fall apart years ago. Still have a ton of friends from there though. They were the first people I played GoIO with.

The first real clan tag I wore though was the Muse tag. Never properly joined a clan. I was an honorary Grim though for a while. Clans are never really my speed. There will always be people in them that I don't want to be around, and always be people I like that others don't. I'd rather just have friends and call it a day.

Arturo Sanchez:
First joined a clan named MLGD named after the community I hailed from.

It died and I founded my own clan, named .hack. Tagged [.hax]

It was later renamed [AI] when I realised how dumb and gullible people were back in the day when AIs looked like players.

Koali:
Didn't people notice that most AI aren't called Ceresbane?

Anyhoo, I took on the tag of [SLUG] when I met Cheeseness and his all Artemis Mobula. That was an interesting match, where we sniped components from miles away but dealt no real damage. Thing is, it's Steam Linux User Group, but I'm on a Mac.

BlackenedPies:
Recruited by Smollet and Frogger.

Squidslinger Gilder:
Helped found The Bully Boys and BFS, never left, they just play other games now. Can thank Muse for that...sigh

If you want to go back to first clan ever joined, thats easy. Clan MacAddict, Omega Squad. Good ole UT99 days. Was actually active there till the magazine went to hell and became too hip for forums or crazed Mac gamers. Sad day, I almost had made 10k on my postcount too. Led a brief start up of a Ghost Recon division while in it. Entered one tournament but members flaked so, that was the end of that. Now I game on PC and find Macs shoddy pieces of used teepee and find most Mac users not much better. Granted there are some decent folk still but when Apple got hip, the global Mac User community shifted with it. From quirky weirdos with hardware superiority complexes to superiority complexes who need to pay quirky weirdos to figure out where the power button is.

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