29 Feb 2008 at 17:26 - 70
First point I'd like to make is this: Buying a magazine for mini-pet codes is different than going to an RMT site to buy in game gold. Why is it different? One is promoted by the game company while the other is not. Skills and bonus mission packs; also other games with premium item malls, while technically can be "RMT", it is not the same as 3rd party website RMT services.
The one key point many people over look is the 3rd party RMT sites, the ones who spam us, bot, steal accounts, and steal identities are dealing in trading items (Gold included) that do not belong to them. Those who buy off these RMT sites are paying real money for items (Gold included) that do not belong to them. There would not be much difference if I walked into anyone of your homes and starting selling your "stuff" and pocketing the money.
It has and always will be a legality issue for game companies and rejection of RMT trading by 3rd party sites will always stay. To support it means that the game company opens itself up, wide open, for lawsuits in the event an RMT service cheats its customer(s). Allowing it also means they support people buying and trading in property that does not belong to those users.
Would I support Anet, or any other game company, starting their own parental RMT service as it deals directly to Gold? No. Guild Wars economic function is not even remotely close to that, of say, Project Entropia.
It really boils down to greed and lazy players. Where we live in a world of instant gratification, if we can't have it now, we find ways around the system to get what we want as quickly as possible and with minimal effort. Having large amounts of gold in this game serves no purpose, other than social status, which also serves no purpose.
While I like what Blizz has done with their message, as well as other sites that have done similar, the truth of the matter is that it won't make much of an impact by itself. The unfortunate thing about online gaming is that, again, greed and laziness will trump common sense. Common sense already tells us, without the pretty web page, that buying online gold and eBay trading items, hurts the game, gives more money to the RMT'ers that can put more funds into their spamming, their bot accounts, offsets the amount of gold in use in the game, and impacts game economies. Common sense also tells us if that buying gold and items with real money is "OK", why is being done by 3rd party websites and not the actual game company itself?
Without Taxes and a Federal Reserve that can control the physical amount of money in x-economy, it takes much less change to offset the game economy.
To be honest, I'm not sure what the solution is. You can't rid the world of greed (on both sides of the equation). Even after lawsuits by certain gaming companies, RMT and spamming still continues and is much worse in F2P games such as Scions of Fate in which you can have half a dozen bots spamming the chat all at once. Steps can be taken to control and limit the amount of abuse, something GW has and is doing, but like a flu season, with all the prevention, you can't rid all of the virus.
Here in GW we at least, as players, have some tools to help control it. We have a report function that's easy to use. We have a Game Staff that does communicate and does take action. We're fortunate in that we as players do have the ability to say, as a collective, if you spam us, you bot around us, and try to harm our game, we will report it and we will help put an end to it. It can act like a neighborhood watch, to residents who give a damn about their community, to watch out for the health and welfare of each other who share that same community.
Anet has also done the same by swinging the perma-ban hammer to those who spam, bot, and take part in the trading of RMT services. That's a lot more than other games out there that sit on their hands and shrug their shoulders, or slap players wrists with a 5 day ban. Yes, those games exist, where truly, 100%, nothing is done.
If Anet wants to follow in the tracks of other companies who have posted such pages on the impacts of using RMT, that's great, but it's not going to serve much purpose, or provide much impact, if any at all. It's with good intentions, don't get me wrong, but the problem is much larger than simply posting a notice.
Perhaps a better notice to be posted would be a "Call to Action" notice for players. One that outlines, especially to new players, how our report feature works and give that report feature a clear checkbox option related directly to RMT spamming, buying and trading. It should encourage players to report these specific actions. That it's not "noob", or foolish, to report. That your report is helping your community and helping to prevent future harm.
Right now the greatest defense we have against RMT by 3rd parties is ourselves. A collective community, operating on the same page, with the tools at hand, against RMT, is takng a stance and is working with Anet to help in this battle.
The Game and its Company doesn't exist without its players. The players don't exist without its game and its company. When they both work together it can be a wonderful thing.