Syntax: who lists all players that you can see
who <#1> <#2> lists players between level <#1> and <#2>
who <class/race> lists players of the specified class/race
who <clan/religion> lists players of the specified clan/religion
who clan/religion lists players in YOUR clan/religion
who male/female/neuter lists players of the specified gender
who helper lists players who are marked as HELPER
who immortals lists visible immortals
who remort lists players who have remorted at least once
who pkill lists all the player killers (and war targets)
who tag/red/blue lists players who are playing tag, or just the red/blue team
Any of the above arguments may be combined, in any order.
whois <player> displays info about the player, if they're online and visible
finger <player> displays detailed info about any player, online or not
WHO and WHOIS show people who are currently in the game. Some people may be online
but not visible, and unless you are affected by detection spells, you won't see
them with either who or whois. (Imms can choose to be invisible to everyone below
their level, and no detection spell exists that can see through it!)
With arguments, WHO can show a subset of the players currently in the game, as described
above in the syntax. Some examples:
who 90 lists all players of level 90 or above
who 35 50 lists all players between level 35 and 50
who cleric lists all clerics playing
who cleric 70 80 lists all clerics between levels 70 and 80
who elf cleric lists all elven clerics
who sisters cleric lists all clerics in the Sisters of Mercy religion
who helper q lists all helpers from the Q clan
who pkill 50 60 lists all valid pkill targets between levels 50 and 60
The WHOIS command can list all players with a name that matches the name given
as the argument. It can also be used to list all players beginning with a certain
letter or group of letters (nice when you can't quite remember the person's name! :P)
The FINGER command (which is not meant to be disgusting or suggestive: it just happens
that this command takes its name from a unix command that does the same thing) tells
information about any player, whether logged in or not. The name must be spelled out
in full. The display includes the last time the person has logged on.
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