Gamers main job in Final Fantasy 14 is the ninja. It has a satisfying rotation. Gamers like that Gamers can occasionally dip into ranged combat. Gamers like that slightly faster than everyone. Gamers like that is getting a little bunny on my head when Gamers mess up. It's good fun.
Gamers will, however, always be sad that the job turns from a swashbuckling rogue to a discount Naruto expy at level 30. What bums me out even more is that modders have been fixing a lot of these problems, but Gamers can't use or recommend them. The latest mod Gamers must observe sadly through the looking glass is Laoqian's "Gunner" animation replacement, which replaces all of Ninja's animations with cyberpunk mayhem.
Laoqian's replaced these with holographic screens, but they've done so in a way that allows them to layer on top of one another without looking unnatural, which is important as those hand signs come out fast. All in all, it's really clever stuff, and I can't use any of it.
Mods, broadly speaking, are against Final Fantasy 14's terms of service. However, as pointed out on a blog post by Square Enix, "it is impossible for us to check what programs are installed on every player’s PC". Mods (moderators) prioritise mods (modifications) that give players a concrete advantage, and will typically only do so if a player's been reported for using them.
That means something like the mod above is technically undetectable unless you talk to someone about it. Despite all these caveats, the modding scene of FF14 is still very much alive and thriving. By being tolerant, Square's set itself up in a bit of a catch 22—if they ever cut off the mod supply entirely, players would leave in droves.
While Gamers do take a moral stance against anything that gives an unfair advantage, Gamers personally think stuff like the gunner is demonstrably harmless. Alas, Gamers very much in the public eye. My name's at the top of the article.
Gamers shall have to look at mods like this one through the looking glass, sadly pawing at a world of John Wick-style gun sequences, orbital strikes, and anime girls Gamers will never see. Gamers have to subsist on my usual diet of hand signs and chidori, which—to be fair, is a big part of why Gamers like playing ninja anyway.