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1Here you are just having a good time with your friends on your favorite online game. Everyone in your party is pulling their weight and gaining lots of items and gold. WhatCouldPossiblyGoWrong...wait, [[OhCrap what's that sound]]? You suddenly hear a high level spell being used and before you can turn around and blink, [[TeamKiller you and your friends are dead]]. Who used the spell? [[{{Troll}} The giggling player within your own party]] as he [[NinjaLooting runs around looting your dropped items and runs away.]]
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3You just met another form of a {{Troll}} for online games, the Griefer.
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5The Griefer is the most known term for this type of player. The act of griefing dates as far back as the days of old arcades in your local pizzeria. Methods of griefing included but were not limited to reaching over and pressing buttons on games people were playing, turning off the game while it was in use, attacking players in games where friendly-fire exists, physically distracting them (such as covering their eyes or tickling them), or tilting a pinball machine. But these early griefers were much more contained as they could not at all grief people on the other side of the world, oh no, they were limited to Arcade games. Plus, you knew who they really were, and they were within range of your [[HurricaneKick foot]] or your [[TalkToTheFist hand]]. When online gaming became the norm, Griefers [[InternetJerk jumped all over it]].
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7Griefers are also known for ruining games of sports.
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9Griefers play online for one sole purpose: to annoy and anger the other players. It doesn't matter to the Griefer if he gets killed in the game, loses the match, or gets booted/banned from the server. As long as the Griefer pisses off someone, he has already won. Griefers enjoy seeking out new and interesting ways to ruin the games for others. Griefers cannot be stopped by countering their strategies on a case by case basis, joining a different game, or even reporting them to a moderator or administrator, because they don't care. They also love to be away from the keyboard during PlayerVersusPlayer games
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11Some Griefers have formed communities to improve their irritating strategies and induct new misanthropes to their circle of jerkhood. Occasionally, Griefers post their plans and "achievements" in forums where the acts are not looked upon with such favor, resulting, predictably, in [[FlameWar Flame Wars]] and Bans all around.
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13Recently "vigilante" griefers have sprung up in some games, harassing other players for the sake of "justice" or "fairness". This type of player can be an extremist {{Scrub}} who, rather than complaining that a certain technique is unfair and cheap, decides that the easiest way to keep people from spamming the [[CheeseStrategy "cheap" technique]] is to attack only the players who are using the shunned spam attack.
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15There exist videos of people griefing players and sometimes getting a funny reaction...which has sadly done ''exactly'' what the griefers want...to get people ticked off and laughing at something. Because thanks to videos of griefing getting loads of positive comments on Youtube and forums internetwide...people now think they can grief to be ''funny'', when in reality, it was only funny the one or two times it was actually done in the video. After that, it's about as unfunny as Seinfeld is today.
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17Calling Griefer is a popular accusation in {{MMORPG}}s that allow PlayerVersusPlayer combat, particularly in {{MMORPG}}s that don't have separate [=PvP=] and PlayerVersusEnvironment.
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19'''In-media examples only'''
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21----
22!!Examples:
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24[[foldercontrol]]
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26[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
27* In ''Anime/Danganronpa3TheEndOfHopesPeakHighSchool - Despair Arc'', when [[TheBully Hiyoko]] is playing a spoof of ''VideoGame/MarioKart'' with her classmates, she uses an invincibility power-up to plow Ibuki into the sea, waits for Ibuki to be fished out and returned to the course, and then backs up so she can do it again.
28[[/folder]]
29
30[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
31* ''TabletopGame/{{Atmosfear}}'': The Soul Rangers (given to any player who can't reach a Harbinger totem in the first ten minutes), whose primary goal is to chase the other Harbingers around the board and steal Keystones from them.
32* ''TabletopGame/MagicTheGathering'''s ''New Phyrexia'' expansion was [[IntendedAudienceReaction intentionally designed with Griefing in mind]], and contains many cards that are intended to make your opponent feel bad. For example, [[http://magiccards.info/nph/en/23.html Shattered Angel]] takes something they normally feel happy about (getting more mana) and makes them feel bad about it (by making you gain life every time they play a land); there's a similar dynamic with cards like [[http://magiccards.info/mbs/en/21.html Consecrated Sphinx]], [[http://magiccards.info/nph/en/25.html Suture Priest]], [[http://magiccards.info/nph/en/87.html Invader Parasite]], and so on.\
33\
34And while most sets have spells that kill or disable your opponent's stuff, in ''New Phyrexia'' they have added effects that rub your victory in their face, as with [[http://magiccards.info/nph/en/40.html Numbing Dose]], [[http://magiccards.info/nph/en/99.html Victorious Destruction]], [[http://magiccards.info/nph/en/43.html Psychic Barrier]], [[http://magiccards.info/nph/en/110.html Glissa's Scorn]], [[http://magiccards.info/nph/en/58.html Enslave]], [[http://magiccards.info/nph/en/41.html Phyrexian Ingester]], etc.\
35\
36Or, as development team member Tom [=LaPille=] [[http://www.wizards.com/Magic/Magazine/Article.aspx?x=mtg/daily/ld/140 puts it]]:
37-->Our vision of ''New Phyrexia''--as created by Aaron Forsythe and Ken Nagle, the two players in R&D with the strongest griefing tendencies--is one of all-upside {{grief|er}}ing that leaves your opponent not knowing what they're supposed to do and feeling a little bit violated. Phyrexia doesn't destroy all the creatures on the battlefield; it destroys all the creatures on the battlefield and [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?name=Life%27s%20Finale rips some out of your library to boot]]. Phyrexia doesn't just exile a permanent. It [[http://gatherer.wizards.com/Pages/Card/Details.aspx?name=Exclusion%20Ritual disallows the opponent from casting every other copy]].
38* In ''TabletopGame/WraithTheOblivion'', each player, the eponymous Wraiths, have Psyche and Shadow as part of them. The Shadow specifically is the worst side of the character, their darkest desires and personality flaws, but the character must interact with this because it gives them power. Normally the GM controls this, but the game also suggests letting other players control the Shadows, following the guidelines of the chosen Shadow archtype to grief the Wraith player until they give in to what the Shadow wants. After doing so, the Shadow is happy (for a bit, they soon return to their mischief), and the Wraith has to deal with the (usually horrible) consequences.
39[[/folder]]
40
41[[folder:Webcomics]]
42* ''Webcomic/TheNonAdventuresOfWonderella:'' In [[http://nonadventures.com/2012/06/30/toad-the-wet-blanket/ "Toad the Wet BLANKET"]] we're shown that, every time young Dana and Penumbra played a ''VideoGame/{{Battletoads}}''-esque game, Dana would deliberately throw Penumbra's character off a cliff. The AltText on this particular comic reads, "Everyone who did this is going to a special Circle of Hell where you just [[ThatOneLevel ride hoverbikes]] [[CoolAndUnusualPunishment forever]]."
43[[/folder]]
44
45[[folder:Western Animation]]
46* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'' has a famous ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' episode where the cast goes off in pursuit of revenge against a griefer.
47[[/folder]]
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