This page holds sections of information that will be helpful for members to find and understand better about what the Dark Jedi Brotherhood offers for gaming. The Fist of the Brotherhood oversees all things that are gaming.
Rites of Combat
The Rites of Combat apply to all Gaming Nights and other gaming competitions. - They are the rules to all gaming in the Dark Jedi Brotherhood, failure to comply to these rules may result in bans from the activity.
Gaming Nights
Gaming Nights are Brotherhood-wide events that run 24 hours a day from Sunday to Saturday every week and is the standard competition for when submitting matches. After completing your match(es), you and your opponent will decide who will report and that person will login to the DB Website and submit the scores from the administration option "Submit Gaming Activity". Clusters of Fire are recommended over the weekend and are rewarded depending on which platform was played and how many players were involved.
Each week is also an opportunity for a member to earn a Pendant of Blood.
Supported Games
DB Gaming Telegram Rules
DB Gaming is the official room for all DB gaming related activities. As such, DB Gaming differs from the other telegram rooms in the club in that it is not for general chat. DB Gaming is specifically for members to find people to game with, set up matches, interface with the DJB Fist Bot, discuss supported AND non-supported games, and interact with the Fist and his or her staff.
Chat Rules
- Topics in DB Gaming Chat are restricted to games members are playing or would like to play. Tangential gaming culture, hardware, movie, or meme usage / discussions should occur in DB Chat.
- This chat is text based only. This includes links. Upon joining DB Gaming, an admin will manually change your posting permissions to “text posts only."
- While members are encouraged to post links to their streams, repeated solicitation of viewers is not allowed.
- No “console war” posts. PS4 is not better than XBox, or vice versa. Consoles are not better than PCs. Those are opinions. Play on the system you like.
FIST-o-matic Bot
A bot was created thanks to James. This bot allows you to join a queue for PvP games and report scores directly from Telegram. Here are the commands for the Fist-o-matic.
Dark Jedi Brotherhood Guilds and Clans
See respective platform on the Supported Games Wiki.
Gaming Submission Approval
- All gaming activities submitted will be processed by the Fist staff in 24 hours or less.
- The gaming period is a seven-day period that begins and ends at Site Reset on Fridays. To simplify: when you get the “Cluster and Pendant Digest” email from Fist, that means the reset has occurred.
- At this point, all Clusters earned during the week will begin to accumulate. There are daily caps in place for all PvE and PvO activities. PvP activities reported through the Fist-o-Matic are uncapped. If you submit over the daily cap for a specific game, any clusters over the cap will roll forward to the next day.
- Using Diablo 3 as an example (Daily Cap, 30 CE. Weekly max: 210):
- Member submits activities that equates to 180 Clusters of Earth on the first day of the week. As Diablo 3 has a daily cap of 30 Clusters of earth, this 180 equates to six days of “max clusters”. This member can submit for the remaining 30 Clusters of fire in order to fully max the available Clusters of Earth for Diablo 3 for a single week.
- Should the member submit for MORE than 210 Clusters of Earth, any additional Clusters earned will NOT transfer over after the weekly site reset
New Game Approval
The Fist of the Brotherhood is the proponent for all supported gamings platforms in the club. Adding a game to the DB's library is a relatively simple yet detailed process. When considering a game for support, the Fist considers the following:
- Overall interest in a game across the club. Most of the time, this is done when a new game comes out. There have been examples of older games being added for support. The key is OVERALL INTEREST. Fifteen to twenty members playing a game regularly is a good metric for determining interest. Three people playing a game is not, no matter how much they discuss it in DB Gaming.
- If there is enough interest in a specific game, The Fist will look to see if it is feasibly supportable. If there are no methods for validating which members played, how long they played, whether or not they ACTUALLY played, etc, then the game will never be added to the gaming library. There must be a clear method for validating a submission, generally done by submission of a screenshot. Some games have server logs that are used in the validation process (Jedi Academy).
- Once a game is determined to have the right amount of interest and clearly defined metrics for validation, the game will generally enter a test phase. Sometimes games bypass the test phase and have immediate support upon launch. This normally happens when a beta release was available for early testing, and very few games get this type of support (Star Wars games will always get this level of priority).
- While the Fist monitors upcoming new releases for potential options for DJB gaming, he/she relies heavily on the community to bring potential platforms to his/her attention. Overwatch and Heroes of the Storm are both prime example of games that had a lot of community support prior to addition.
- Sometimes support for a game goes in the other direction. The Division is a key example. It had a great deal of support and even became a supported platform. But it was almost impossible to validate screenshots, and the game itself became increasingly unpopular with the member base. It lasted about two months before it went from supported to unsupported.
Game Removal
- If a supported game does not see sustained activity for a period of six months, the Fist will consider it for removal from the gaming library. Sustained activity is not one submission inside a six month window.
- There will be a two to three week window where a game can be "saved" from removal. This time period is for members to re-energize interest in a platform. One match inside that window is not enough to save a game. The Fist will make the final determination on a game's status after the probationary period expires.
- Once a game is removed, it can be returned to active status if activity begins to rise again. This normally happens when an older game releases a popular DLC or other update. If enough people want a game reinstated, the Fist will consider it based on the Overall Interest criterion.
Rites of Combat
The Rites of Combat apply to all Gaming Nights and other gaming competitions. - They are the rules to all gaming in the Dark Jedi Brotherhood, failure to comply to these rules may result in bans from the activity.
Cluster Values
Clusters of Fire and Earth are earned by Gaming with other DJB members. For specific information on how to earn Clusters for each platform, refer to the Gaming Platforms page.
All games have capped daily cluster values. Star Wars games are capped at 50 Clusters of Fire and Clusters of Earth daily, Non-Star Wars Games are capped at 30 Clusters of Earth and Clusters of Fire daily. If a member exceeds the daily cap, any clusters earned will roll over to the following day. Any Clusters still in the queue at site reset (Friday) will not roll forward to the following week.
Gaming and Voice Servers
Refer to the Gaming Servers and DJB Voice Server Wiki page for a full listing of any servers which are supported by the DJB.
Grand Master's Royal Guard
The Grand Master's Royal Guard or GMRG for short, is the Dark Jedi Brotherhood's gaming society. Through gaming, you are able to earn robes, lightsabers, and fictional perks. Take the GMRG SA Course and with an 85% or higher you will become a member.
Advancement within the Guard is determined based on total Clusters of Fire and Pendants of Blood that a member has earned. Place in the top ten to earn one of the Dark Council Guardsman Accessories.