But the real workhorse in the nexus is the uncharitably named “minion”, or even more uncharitably “creep”. Minions appear at each team’s base, then march along two or three lanes towards the other team’s core, until they are inevitably obliterated. Then a new wave begins.
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"All right lads! Just remember your training and show the enemy what for!" |
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"Uff.. puff... almost at the front line lads" |
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"Attaaaaaaaaaaaack!" |
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"The monk killed Steve! I'm a goner! Tell my wife I said – aaaaAARGH!" |
Heroes of the storm is so classist.
A fine example of one of these fat cats exploiting the downtrodden underdog is Azmodan. Each Heroes of the Storm character comes from one of the past games made by Blizzard, and Azmodan is from the Diablo series. He is the Lord of Sin and one of the Great Evils from the Burning Hells (who writes this rubbish?) though officially he is a resident of the Cayman islands, and sits on the board of several companies and is suspected of having accounts in every tax haven in all three realms.
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Azmodan: Lord of Sin, and also of Delegation and Astute Career Choices |
Azmodan specialises in heightening the effectiveness of the afore-mentioned minions, by summoning extra warriors and “motivating” the normal ones through his evil powers. He can summon demon lieutenants on any allied minion, and this proud member of the hell-spawn officer class will then empower all nearby minions, presumably through team training exercises and pay-based incentives.
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The demon lieutenant "encouraging" the troops. |
That’s not to say that Azmodan is useless in a team fight. In fact, a bad Azmodan player will focus only on destroying the enemy defences, leaving the rest of his allies a man short during team fights, then when they inevitably get killed, he will call them “noobs” and claim that he is the better player. This is because destroying enemy defences will give you a high score on the all-important “XP contribution” board, though a high score does not necessarily imply good play.
He has two hero-damaging abilities, both fittingly suited to a particularly sadistic form of play.
Azmodan revels in toying with his foes. When fighting the enemy, he’ll usually hang back because of his bad mobility (and general distaste of hanging out with the hoi polloi), but in the right circumstance he can start blasting an enemy with a laser beam and even follow them around (if you upgrade him correctly). The longer the beam lasts, the more damage it causes, and the more maniacally you, the player, begin to laugh.
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I begin to attack a player called "scandal", playing an angelic warrior known as Tyrael, with my hand laser beam |
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Tyrael tries to escape, but there's no escaping Azmodan's laser beam. hehehehehe |
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heheHEHEHAHAHAHA! NO ESCAPE!! MWWOHAAHAHAHAAHAA!! |
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Oh... he escaped... :( |
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Tyrael makes a mad dash for his base where he can recover his health |
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But wait... What is your hero, Awoogamuffin, (me) doing? |
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Why he's firing a giant ball of death of course |
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I love this game |
So what life lessons does this king among demons have to teach us?
Well Azmodan is very clearly part of the one percent and a metaphor for the growing inequality being felt in the developed world. This malaise (I choose a French word intentionally) resulted in Thomas Piketty’s book, Capital in the 21st Century, rocketing up to Amazon’s top selling list, even though it’s an economics book well over 600 pages, written by a Frenchman no less.
The key is that Azmodan can be profiting from his minions even while he’s back at his base, recovering health and mana and enjoying the benefits of a company fact-finding mission in the Bahamas. Most heroes, however, have to actually be on the battlefield doing damage to advance their cause. It’s like the distinction Piketty makes between those with capital (which produces wealth for the Lords of Capitalism even while they’re on the crapper) and those who only earn money for the hours they work (most of us). Azmodan knows which group he's in.
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Minions at an Occupy Wall Street march |
As I said, he separates the world into two groups: people with capital, and people who work for their money. What’s worse, the rate of return on capital is increasing faster than wages are, so the problem is only getting worse. Remember this: “r > g”, whatever that means.
Now in my last blog I failed to include a podcast, which makes me feel dirty. So here are a couple of short ones.
First have a video from the BBC saying exactly what I’ve just said (though not as skilfully, obviously):
Guide to Piketty book: Capital in the 21st Century
The economist magazine’s podcast “the economist explains” focusing more on Piketty’s explanation for the problems and possible solutions, as well as reactions to the book:
And here’s another from All Thoughts Considered where Alex Bloomberg, from the great “Planet Money” podcast, and now the even greater “Gimlet media” company that he set up, discusses the book’s inspiration:
Mystery Of Mounting Inequality Might Find Answer In Brand-New Tome
Picketty’s solution? Tax the rich! Might be a little bit more complicated than that, but it sounds sensible enough.
It seems that the next great battle, and a worthy one, is that of inequality. That said, some people go overboard in their hatred of the rich, many of whom want to solve the problem too.
I’d love to know what it is like to have a steady income that comes in regardless of how much work I actually do that month, be it interest, dividends, or royalties. Nowadays, with all the rich-hating ‘politics of envy’, I have to admit, I do envy Azmodan.
I want to be the Lord of Sin too.
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ReplyDeleteWell, apparently no cheesy picture for you, but nonetheless, I, as well, have been quite charmed by Azmodan's charisma and know-how-to-get-things-done style. I also like Trump. Yay Azmotrump!
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