There's a problem with that, though.
If incoming members feel that they shouldn't be required to do a little bit of research on their own (we're talking about reading a FAQ or two, or a quick search on google) then it actually hurts the community over all.
The reason for this is that the majority of the community's resources are spent answering the same questions over, and often because you're answering with the same thing repeatedly, your answer tends to be shorter every time you answer it.
It's very much like the old proverb about giving a man a fish, and you've fed him for a day, whereas teaching him to fish for himeself feeds him forever.
People, when they know they can use us for quick answers, often fail to actually understand those answers. So, instead of getting a forum where people are asking new and interesting questions, we get the same "Is this a cheat?" "What's an aimbot?" "<insert weapon> sucks!"
It's because of the fact that most of the conversation here tends to involve the same repeated questions and answers, and doesn't encourage a little self-help, that causes people to feel the "alright, I've gotten all I can from this forum, time to move on" feeling that many have expressed as their reason for leaving.