I feel that this should be removed as they are able to heal other players and remove there potion effects. There are people that abuse this when pvping. Or they should not be able to heal other players.
No support. People spent their money in order to get that add-on. Some people donated just for that, so you shouldn't take it away. There has already been lots of threads talking about this.
I was fighting out in the pvp zone and got healed and then the user killed me cause he was able to keep is potions.
Matt, I agree with you, people abuse it too much. What they should do is make a rule if the user with /heal heals someone else in pvp they should get a temp-ban or get it removed completely only if they abuse it
We paid good money for these perks, and yeah it is 'donating' but still, if you take these commands away, it would be a little unfair. Besides, there is a cool down in factions and OPfactions.
Ha, I love this thread. Hate on me all you want, but your just jealous. If you got healed you would not be complaining.
First things first. I am Elite. I did NOT pay or donate any money to the server. #RankTrades. Do not remove /heal plz :3 i don't want something removed. I don't know what i just said :eek::t:
No support. People spend money on this and try to chill because it's just a game. If someone were to post this thread and if you were a god rank you wouldn't want /heal to be removed. Plus people donate 100$ just for the perks. You know you could buy a lot of things for 100$ so they should deserves their perks and commands!
No support, people spent money on pixkels to have acces to type /heal, so why remove when they first bought it... doesn`t make sense :3
No support, sorry. The player gave money to the server for that perk. Taking it away would be scamming.
@BuilderNicky1 No, you didn`t " buy " the rank, you donated, and the server have the ranks to make people donate ofc :P Donating and buying is two different things, so, no, it wouldn`t be scamming taking /heal away. But then again, I do not support this idea