Time for MMO companies to collaborate against RMT/gold-selling (for Anet!)

Cacheelma

Cacheelma

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Quote:
Originally Posted by enter_the_zone
The point is, Anet can drive the goldsellers out of business because it costs Anet nothing to be cheaper than them, since they have no operation cost associated with acquiring the gold.

I would assume the ban stick would also be wielded more heavily, since they would have the funds to find and ban everybody involved in a dodgy trade.
Yeah, let's ruin whatever we have in the game so that we can drive goldsellers out of business, hooray!

And please don't try to say "People only buy vanities in GW so selling in-game gold is fine", guess what, the only things people in WoW would need gold for are VANITIES (mounts, epic mounts, flying mount, epic flying mounts). You CAN'T buy the best equipment in WoW no matter how much gold you have. (Unless you count paying some 24 people to raid for you and let you loot the items as "buying equipments")

Ec]-[oMaN

Ec]-[oMaN

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Gold sellers/power lvl make money off of MMos and MMos make money off the gold sellers. They want it to stop?

Fril Estelin

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Let me remind the few people that defend RMT or try to draw dishonest parallels of the conditions of some of the RMT employees (if you want to talk about HYPOCRISY, talk about supporting an industry that exploits poorly paid and trated Asian workers and the addiction of MMO players!):
http://www.mmobux.com/articles/746/i...rmers-in-china
Quote:
What are your thoughts on news reports about "chinese gold farmer sweatshops"?

It is true and what the news says are far from what I actually experienced. These sweat shop are very poorly managed in terms of hygiene, quality of living or food. The farmers meals are basically 1-2 RMB (0.12-0.0.2 USD) each. These meals are made out of the garbage collected from various dinning places in the city and re-cooked. Some materials might not even be a overnight but actually days or weeks old.
Another interesting read from the most successful Chinese MMO (this is to illustrate the very sad and unfair consequences of legalising RMT, and btw it's not because life is unfair with poors that we have to dismiss this point):
http://www.danwei.org/electronic_gam...away_in_zt.php

Anyway, let's close this door that was more like a troll moment than a moment of deep truth. (it's funny, I though that to be trolling like this you'd either have to be a gold-buyer, a gold-seller or an anarchist who likes to mess with people)

Back to topic: no one believes that an industry-wide action would help?

I think that hallomik made the strongest point with the cigarette ban (the UK actually realised since last year that the consequences of excessive alcohol drinking leads to billions of sterling pound of damage control, cleaning and other accidents management, which obviously adds to the physical and psychological impact of binge drinking), i.e. that if enough pressure is put collectively, not only from the government but because people accept it, there great results can be achieved.

I think that people don't really care until it touches them directly. Several people were very correct to highlight Blizzard's statement that RMT harms the gameplay of non-gold-buying players and is linked to the undergroung hacking market (this is the worst part, you end up being part of illegal money trafficing which is also linked to those horrendous and disguting markets of child and women abuse). We need to make people aware of the indirect consequences for them. As reported by RTSFirebat, this (and duping) is the reason why the high-end tier of GW's economy is MAD. (exactly like the high-end tier of professional football in European countries ... can you imagine one guy paid in one day more than what you earn in one year? and little kids in Asia paid 0.01$ a day for 12h of exhausting work? sorry for the off-tracking again)

So what are the MMO companies waiting for?

Fril Estelin

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ec]-[oMaN
Gold sellers/power lvl make money off of MMos and MMos make money off the gold sellers. They want it to stop?
Wrong analysis (and surely in this thread, MMO companies are not talking, we customers are): RMT costs money to MMO companies. It's the old discussion of "Does banning bots bring additional revenue to Anet?"

It costs more money to ensure a fair game in the sense of the EULA.

Do people forget that MMOs are GAMES created for FUN? Where's the fun in a game where money can buy you everything?

So anyone for a "No RMT in my MMO" label and the CMCAR (Coallition of MMO Companies against RMT)?

X Ice Man X

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Join Date: Aug 2007

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fril Estelin
So what are the MMO companies waiting for?
They aren't waiting for anything. They have better things to do with thier time than try to push a snowball up a never ending hill.

Short of selling gold them selves at such a low rate than the ebay based companies can compete with. There is nothing they can do which will be affective. Its a fact of life, no system is perfect and every system has a way around it, which people will find.

EDIT: Fixed spelling mistakes.

Fril Estelin

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ctb
I would like to see some mechanism for trusted users to be "deputized" in-game as a volunteer police squad.
I would support that. It's a form of democratic GM, like GWG's moderators. Of course impossible in GW1 without significant effort that Anet won't make, but may be in GW2?

(I'd even introduce meta-moderators to moderate moderators, as is done on Slashdot.org, it would be necessary at first to make sure that this police squad would agree on rules, since Anet can't really fix the rules of something so subjective); Slashdot.org karma system would work great too, by ensuring that this police squad is not always made up of the same people)

Ctb

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Quote:
I think that hallomik made the strongest point with the cigarette ban (the UK actually realised since last year that the consequences of excessive alcohol drinking leads to billions of sterling pound of damage control, cleaning and other accidents management, which obviously adds to the physical and psychological impact of binge drinking), i.e. that if enough pressure is put collectively, not only from the government but because people accept it, there great results can be achieved.
Your wording is not very clear, so I might be confused as to your point, but it seems you're drawing a parallel between the government imposing a smoking ban on the public and the MMO makers lashing out at the farmers.

If that's the case, it's not a very good comparison. A government leverages its power by virtue of the fact that it maintains an armed force which can coerce people into following its rules. Companies are limited to battling each other within the confined of local, provincial, and national laws and trade agreements and the like. The only way that the MMOs could impact the gold farmers in China in a manner similar to your example would be if the MMOs can somehow lean on the Chinese government to clamp down on the process (or get their own governments to do it for them).

Stopping RMT from places like China runs into the same problems as the wider problem of piracy in those areas: unless the governments of the nation involved is willing to cooperate with the victims of the criminal activity - and often they're not - there's little you can do to outright FORCE a change in behavior.

Fril Estelin

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Quote:
Originally Posted by X Ice Man X
There is nothing they can do which will be affective. Its a fact of life, no system is perfect and every system has a way around it, which people will find.
Imperfection should not prevent anyone from trying to do better, should it?

It was said nowhere in this thread that perfection is the aim. Rather than MMO companies (well I'm currently the only saying it ) should step up and do better, join in the common fight against RMT.

I know that some company won't see it the same way, as highlighted for EVE and Sony. But yet, they'll realise as Blizzard did that the downside of the having RMT is that it is linked to the underground hacking and credit card fraud communities.

enter_the_zone

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cacheelma
Yeah, let's ruin whatever we have in the game so that we can drive goldsellers out of business, hooray!

And please don't try to say "People only buy vanities in GW so selling in-game gold is fine", guess what, the only things people in WoW would need gold for are VANITIES (mounts, epic mounts, flying mount, epic flying mounts). You CAN'T buy the best equipment in WoW no matter how much gold you have. (Unless you count paying some 24 people to raid for you and let you loot the items as "buying equipments")
Actually, I've said numerous times that this wouldn't work with GW, as they are too far down the road. The resentment it would engender in those who got their armor/items the hard way would be immense. I'm just using Anet and GW as an example of how it could be implemented since this is one of the few MMO's I currently play.

Saying it can't work, at all, ever, is also blatantly false, since Grando Espada and Everquest 2 implement this in some form. The point about rampant inflation is probably somewhat valid, though an inevitable cap will happen, since people are spending real money, not duped ambraces.

I would, however, say that allowing almost all IG items (all armors, all weps, no rare/crafting mats etc) to be traded for RL cash and make them customized and unsalvagable (basically like /bonus items) probably makes better sense. Minipets could be available but are dedicated immediately.

Again, this isn't going to happen in GW1, nor should it, I'm just using it's terms and items as an example of how this could be done in a new game.

EDIT: I should add that this can only work in a game like GW, where armor art or "elite" weapons etc gain you no substantial advantage in game play. I forget this isn't the case in most MMO's, since my background is substantially SP-RPG.

EDIT 2 : I also think we should be drawing a distinction between blackmarket RMT and RMT in general. RMT as implemented by Sony and EVE doesn't harm people. Goldsellers are little better than slavers.

Fril Estelin

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ctb
Your wording is not very clear, so I might be confused as to your point, but it seems you're drawing a parallel between the government imposing a smoking ban on the public and the MMO makers lashing out at the farmers.
No, I was talking about gold-sellers.

Quote:
The only way that the MMOs could impact the gold farmers in China in a manner similar to your example would be if the MMOs can somehow lean on the Chinese government to clamp down on the process (or get their own governments to do it for them).

Stopping RMT from places like China runs into the same problems as the wider problem of piracy in those areas: unless the governments of the nation involved is willing to cooperate with the victims of the criminal activity - and often they're not - there's little you can do to outright FORCE a change in behavior.
The first paragraph above answers the second one, and it's actually what forced the Chinese government to introduce the law against staying too long in front of computers: become it harmed the gaming companies (not MMO) and they successfully lobbied.

That's why I'm here pointing at a lobby of MMO companies. Obvisouly, this won't happen easily, not until the RMT threat gets too big for the vast majority of them.

Or the consumer pressure gets bigger. (exactly like Microsoft and the security issues)

Ctb

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Interestingly, there already is an effort to form a PAC in the games industry: The Video Games Industry Goes Political

I think MMOs are such a big part of the picture that they wouldn't even need their own PAC, they could probably wield significant influence in this one - especially Blizzard and SOE.

Cacheelma

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I'm not sure about how it works in EQ2, but Granado Esprada uses an item mall system (and somehow allow the items to be traded in-game; something most other item mall-based games don't allow), and such business model is based on "whoever rich in real life can buy better items" already. Doing something like this in such game of course won't hurt it.

I don't know about anyone else. But I don't like the item mall-based free2play business model one bit. With that said, I don't think I'm going to like "real world money for in-game currency"-based business model either.

And judging from the popularity of these kind of game (i.e. non-existent anywhere outside asia), I don't think I'm the only one.

Oh, an exception would be Project Entropia and maybe Second Life? But those games have something normal MMORPGs don't, so I don't think they count.

zwei2stein

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fril Estelin
So what are the MMO companies waiting for?
To know that, you must examine gold buyer:

Buying ingame gold for reall money means that you take game seriously ... seriously enough to push it past just leisure activity. Or that you are filthy rich IRL. Or that you are spoiled brat with CC.

Any of that means that you will buy everything official you can: Campaigns, account enhancements, you name it. You release it, he buys it without thinking twice. Perfect customer. Maybe even has multiple accounts. Accounts for whole family? Who knows how hardcore he is... Also, once you make commitment of buying egold, canceling subscription becomes harder to justify.

Basically, by disabling him access to easy egold you are saying NO to business from him ... and he is good business.

Its quite logical to care more about customer that pays you more. Maybe it turns out that ebayers are best customers and people who complain about egold are not really worth it.

Seriously, what did WoW do? It put webpage there to make anti-ebay person happy by confirming what he knew to be true (bad, bad, wicked farmers.). That seems just like cheap pacifier if you think about it. Its not like anyone who does ebay would pay any attention to it.

Who knows?

Fril Estelin

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Quote:
Originally Posted by zwei2stein
TBasically, by disabling him access to easy egold you are saying NO to business from him ... and he is good business.
The cost-benefit calculation is fairly easy, isn't it? He and his gold-buying friends have, say, 2% of buying power with regards to Anet's income.

And RMT leads to CC fraud which is worth probably more by itself. And there's the added cost of banning RMT accounts, appeasing and educating the general population, as Blizzard did. And if Blizzard, with its 40% profit margin, then it probably means that it's even more important for all MMO companies.

Of course there's a short vs. long term calculation comparison I'm escaping here.

Ctb

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Quote:
Seriously, what did WoW do? It put webpage there to make anti-ebay person happy by confirming what he knew to be true (bad, bad, wicked farmers.). That seems just like cheap pacifier if you think about it. Its not like anyone who does ebay would pay any attention to it.
Blizzard, last year, took a LOT of steps to stop RTMs in WoW. They swung a very heavy ban hammer at a very large number of both botters and buyers, they put some heavy restrictions on chat, and they invested heavily in anti-exploit and anti-botting fixes. I went back to WoW for a month after they reduced the leveling times (and promptly realized that knocking something down 30% that was 500% screwed up wasn't a big deal... but I digress) and there was a HUGE difference in the amount of spamming.

One group, in fact, infamously had to go so far to get around the fixes to "advertise" in Orgrimmar that they got a bunch of gnomes together and had them killed in a way that their corpses spelled out the website on the ground.

If you want to see what happens when a company appears to be uninterested or unable to stop the botters and sellers, check out Turbine's Lord of the Rings Online. You can't be in Bree for more than five minutes before a new bot is spamming the chat channel, and you generally get multiple spams in your in game mail every week. LOTRO is a game where the botting and RMTs are truly out of control, and are really ruining the in-game economy. My guild was able to provide its own weaponry and armor to its members, which was fortunate because to keep your guy effectively equipped you almost had to spend your money in the auction house as fast as you could get it thanks to the inflation that was going on.

enter_the_zone

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cacheelma
I'm not sure about how it works in EQ2, but Granado Esprada uses an item mall system (and somehow allow the items to be traded in-game; something most other item mall-based games don't allow), and such business model is based on "whoever rich in real life can buy better items" already. Doing something like this in such game of course won't hurt it.

I don't know about anyone else. But I don't like the item mall-based free2play business model one bit. With that said, I don't think I'm going to like "real world money for in-game currency"-based business model either.

And judging from the popularity of these kind of game (i.e. non-existent anywhere outside asia), I don't think I'm the only one.


Oh, an exception would be Project Entropia and maybe Second Life? But those games have something normal MMORPGs don't, so I don't think they count.
Possibly, or maybe most companies haven't clocked just how lucrative a system it can be

I think a game like GW is a prime example of where an item-mall type system would work, since it's really only about the flash, not the function of the item.

I should clarify that I feel the most practical way of implementing RMT is via an "non-tradeable items for RL cash" system. A "gold for RL cash" system could be made to work, but it would require massive upkeep and oversight.

The main reason I feel RMT should be integrated is that it will pretty much immediately kill the goldsellers.

As an example :

Buy FoW set for char from IG store: £50

Buy ectos + crafting mats etc for FoW set from goldseller : £35

Who's going to take the risk of loosing their account for £15? Certainly not anyone sensible, especially as the RMT income would allow Anet to step up their policing of trades etc.

EDIT: I wouldn't have anything in the store that couldn't be acquired by normal playing either, except minipets.

Fril Estelin

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ctb
Interestingly, there already is an effort to form a PAC in the games industry: The Video Games Industry Goes Political

I think MMOs are such a big part of the picture that they wouldn't even need their own PAC, they could probably wield significant influence in this one - especially Blizzard and SOE.
It could be something like that. But my idea (may be commercially not viable) is a gathering of forces on the issue of RMTs, possibly combined on lobbying to put pressure on some Asian countries. Like the big blacklisting databse for spam filters or similar systems used for CC.

Stockholm

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Ctb
I'd also like to see all IP addresses originating from any machine on an open proxy (or misconfigured gateway at an ISP), or from any country east of Luxembourg, blocked from U.S. and European servers completely. Neither of these things is particularly complicated to do.

LOL, you want NC-Soft to shut out about 60% of their customers?
Germany,Scandinavia, Polen,Korea, Taiwan, Japan and China is east if Luxembourg, might aswell turn of GW in the US, that would get ride of 90% of the stupid complaints and close the "big market" for gold sellers.

Stockholm

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fril Estelin
I would support that. It's a form of democratic GM, like GWG's moderators. Of course impossible in GW1 without significant effort that Anet won't make, but may be in GW2?

(I'd even introduce meta-moderators to moderate moderators, as is done on Slashdot.org, it would be necessary at first to make sure that this police squad would agree on rules, since Anet can't really fix the rules of something so subjective); Slashdot.org karma system would work great too, by ensuring that this police squad is not always made up of the same people)
That would Kill GW2 before it even was released if they implement in-game moderators.

Fril Estelin

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Stockholm
That would Kill GW2 before it even was released if they implement in-game moderators.
How many times have I heard this on Slashdot before the Big Sweep? Countless times, because people were afraid of abuse. The result was brilliant as people got rid of trolls, aggressive commenters and other deluded people.

I can't promise it'll work, but I can tell you it has helped a lot on many occasion.

And by the way, the problem does not lie with the existence of such police squad, but rather in the power that it has.

Cacheelma

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Quote:
Originally Posted by enter_the_zone
Possibly, or maybe most companies haven't clocked just how lucrative a system it can be

I think a game like GW is a prime example of where an item-mall type system would work, since it's really only about the flash, not the function of the item.
I should clarify that I feel the most practical way of implementing RMT is via an "non-tradeable items for RL cash" system. A "gold for RL cash" system could be made to work, but it would require massive upkeep and oversight.

The main reason I feel RMT should be integrated is that it will pretty much immediately kill the goldsellers.

As an example :

Buy FoW set for char from IG store: £50

Buy ectos + crafting mats etc for FoW set from goldseller : £35

Who's going to take the risk of loosing their account for £15? Certainly not anyone sensible, especially as the RMT income would allow Anet to step up their policing of trades etc.

EDIT: I wouldn't have anything in the store that couldn't be acquired by normal playing either, except minipets.
You realized that games with item mall are TOTALLY free to play, as in, you don't even need to pay for the box to start playing, right?

Do you really believe a game similar to GW where you can get by with the entire game WITHOUT BUYING ANY VANITIES would work with such system?

Most item mall-based games share one thing in common: the gameplay mechanic always, always ensure that players will eventually FEEL THE NEED to buy something from the item mall. For example (and this is from my hand-on experience with many games of this kind).-

- VERY limited storage (item mall has storage & inventory expansions for sale)

- Either Repetitive equipment crafting system (think GW-crafting, with crafting levels that can be raised only by repeatedly crafting something even though you don't want to use IN ORDER TO craft the better gears which require higher levels) WITH extremely LOW MARTERIAL DROP RATE (you're lucky enough to find the mats for 1 piece of gear. But fear not! You can buy crafting materials from the item mall!) OR

- Effectiveness of equipments is based on how many times you enhance it, with lower and lower success rate the more times you do it (the item mall has 100% success stone for sale, or if the dev want to be cruel, the enhance stone is also sale in the item mall).

- Item mall potions (in-game potions are either RARE or doesn't exist)

- A book of certification (in order to GRIND for more than X levels; Hello Granado Esprada)

- item drops x2 stone in item mall (self-explanatory)

Need I go on? This is what you'd get for a game with item mall. Tell me you want GW (or GW2 or just the game you're going to play) to be like that.

Martin Alvito

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I've repeatedly stated this:

The only solution to the problem of gold sales is to make everything of value in the game only available through organized play or accomplishment. And even that has severe problems.

Suppose that the only way you could get a Miniature Kanaxai was to beat the Deep with a group no larger than six players in an hour or less.

Suppose that the only way to get a Miniature Rollerbeetle was to score 480,000 or above in rollerbeetle races.

Further suppose that these items could not be traded, and that you made similar alterations for every weapon and armor set in the game. (Ex: only way to get FoW would be to beat every elite mission and achieve rank 4 in KoaBD, or some such; after doing so, armor crafters would inexpensively provide you with one if you wished.) Gold would then be meaningless and there would be no reason to bot the game.

However, this would simply change the resource that GW rewards from time to skill. Accordingly, players could sell the service of playing someone else's account to get the Mini Kanaxai or what have you. People have sold highly ranked accounts, guilds with gold capes, fame farming services, and what have you during GW's run. It would eliminate botting (which would be good for the servers), but if you thought that it would eliminate the exchange of IRL cash for in-game stuff entirely, you would be naive.

Games have cool stuff that people want. At the end of the day there's no reason to continue to play an MMO other than the desire to get better-looking stuff, better titles, better guild rank, win Halls, hold Halls for X amount of time, win an AT, win a monthly, or whatever accomplishment it is that a player might wish to attain. The problem is built into the incentive structure of the game, and that incentive structure is necessary to keep you playing.

Legalized gold sales would be an epic failure of game design. It would reshape the game to one where deep pockets would be necessary in order to afford anything of consequence. This would be great for a certain small segment of the community that is sufficiently skilled to supply the high-end stuff, as well as those (such as the bots) with huge amounts of time on their hands. However, ANet clearly wants to sell lots of copies to fairly casual gamers that are price sensitive and able to put the game down for long stretches. Gold sales would be antithetical to both of those objectives.

Could ANet deal with the problem more capably through improved game design? You bet. I hope that GW2 applies some of what the community has generally learned since WoW and GW hit the streets. But I do not hold out hope that the problem will go away entirely.

Basic game theory: if it is costly to enforce rules against cheating, and it is rewarding, people will cheat.

Inde

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Join Date: Dec 2004

I think most of you are under the assumption that the average player knows that gold buying or selling is against the EULA. I assure you, just as there is only a small minority that read forums, there is a smaller minority that reads their EULA. I have come across many MMO players who have bought gold and had no idea there was even a controversy over these things. I think it's admirable that MMO companies do try and educate the player on the issue but realize that most people buying gold do not realize that they are affecting the game or do know it and it's a non-issue to them.

I do like the ideas and suggestions coming out of this thread though, it's a great discussion. Please don't make it political.

Stockholm

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Fril Estelin
And by the way, the problem does not lie with the existence of such police squad, but rather in the power that it has.
And the Power will be abused unless the members of Squads are Paid employees of A-net/NC-Soft.

Martin Alvito

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Quote:
Originally Posted by Stockholm
And the Power will be abused unless the members of Squads are Paid employees of A-net/NC-Soft.
Certainly. However, it may cut down on ANet's monitoring costs sufficiently to make it worthwhile. (At that point, they only have to monitor the police force, and probably make Support a bit more effective - at least when dealing with this type of infraction). It would reshape the game experience; whether it would be a profitable reshaping from ANet's perspective is something that their marketing department is better equipped to answer than I.

And if you think that the game will be changed in any way that marketing believes will cut revenues...

Snow Bunny

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ANet can say that monitor every piece of gold that moves around, but I know far too many people who have admitted to purchasing gold multiple times for me to really believe it.

Ctb

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Quote:
And the Power will be abused unless the members of Squads are Paid employees of A-net/NC-Soft.
Which is why you need public oversight. It will not be perfect, but modeling a moderation system on a police force can be an effective mechanism.

The trick, however, is that, like real life, you have to have the community participate. Just like with a real police force, if the community stops keeping an eye on it, corruption can set in and take over, and once it's entrenched it's very difficult to weed out (easier in a game where you can just revoke privileges with a SQL command, but still...)

I think such a system would have to give the ability to the "deputized" players to ban without having ANET's or the community's approval, but their would need to be an appeals process and public documentation of the reasoning behind each ban (sans identifying account info, of course).

I think relying on just ANET can never work because they need to pay people, and paying a 24/7 active "police" force that can respond to /reports instantly is not feasibvle. Likewise, relying entirely on a democratic system can never work because it can easily become a popularity contest that can be abused by people with a lot of friends.

Which is why I think Slashdot is not a good model for moderation. I was a pretty successful troll on Slashdot a few years ago, and the key to the success was the moderation system itself. I had something like the 5th or 6th biggest friends list on the site, and I was able to marshal support from it whenever my trolling netted me bad "karma" on the site. At first I used the editor Michael as a focal point and started attacking him in the stories, which inevitably garnered positive moderation on my comments from like-minded Michael-haters. Later, when they added the politics subdomain (and after Michael was fired), I was able to post political commentary that inevitably attracted the support of whichever party or mindset I was ostensibly pushing.

Implementing something like that in a video game, with Guilds, Alliances, and the like is, IMHO, a recipe for disaster. Remember this: the average IQ is always 100 because it's mapped to a bell curve, but a 100 IQ is, quite simply, not usually that bright. Trusting the public, then, to monitor itself in an equitable manner is just not a good idea. Many won't get it and many of the ones that do will manipulate it for their own gain.

enter_the_zone

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R/

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cacheelma
You realized that games with item mall are TOTALLY free to play, as in, you don't even need to pay for the box to start playing, right?

Do you really believe a game similar to GW where you can get by with the entire game WITHOUT BUYING ANY VANITIES would work with such system?

Most item mall-based games share one thing in common: the gameplay mechanic always, always ensure that players will eventually FEEL THE NEED to buy something from the item mall. For example (and this is from my hand-on experience with many games of this kind).-

- VERY limited storage (item mall has storage & inventory expansions for sale)

- Either Repetitive equipment crafting system (think GW-crafting, with crafting levels that can be raised only by repeatedly crafting something even though you don't want to use IN ORDER TO craft the better gears which require higher levels) WITH extremely LOW MARTERIAL DROP RATE (you're lucky enough to find the mats for 1 piece of gear. But fear not! You can buy crafting materials from the item mall!) OR

- Effectiveness of equipments is based on how many times you enhance it, with lower and lower success rate the more times you do it (the item mall has 100% success stone for sale, or if the dev want to be cruel, the enhance stone is also sale in the item mall).

- Item mall potions (in-game potions are either RARE or doesn't exist)

- A book of certification (in order to GRIND for more than X levels; Hello Granado Esprada)

- item drops x2 stone in item mall (self-explanatory)

Need I go on? This is what you'd get for a game with item mall. Tell me you want GW (or GW2 or just the game you're going to play) to be like that.
Like I said, I'm looking at this from a primarily GW point of view. I'd personally be happy to pay for the game and expansions and then have the choice of finding/crafting items and crafting armor or buying them for RL cash. And, just a side note, but the storage in GW is pretty bad if you only have one campaign. Many of us have solved this by RMT already, buying extra char slots to mule for us.

As I said, this only really works in a game like GW where vanity is all that matters, none of these things are needed or required, only desired.

I look at it like this : in the time it takes me to grind the required ectos and shards for FoW, I could have been doing consulting work that would have made me hundreds of pounds, at least. If I'm forced to choose, I choose money (working for it) over grinding. So, as a somewhat casual player, I'd like the option to give Anet my real cash in return for a flashy item that I don't have the time to invest in the game to get. Remember, GW was supposed to be skill>time. For PVE players, this hasn't been true for a very long time.

R.Shayne

Wilds Pathfinder

Join Date: Oct 2007

To those that feel there should be a crack down on RMT; apparently when you read these articles’ on RMT most of you forget to read the part that most of these companies give KICK-BACKS to the game publisher company considered an operating cost.

To those that support in game gold buying via ANET or NCSof; the only way this could be done that would not affect the economy drastically would be for ANET to establish a price on every item in the game and enforce this price with NPC traders. That means the company would have to spend money on developing. The publisher would have to pay for this development and that is NOT GOING TO HAPPEN

Why is it not going to happen, see above statement or re-read one of the none basis articles’ that are not afraid to upset the game companies and even mention Kick-backs. The publisher have a real dilemma now, waste money on developing something that will give a marginal profit or keep taking kickbacks from RMT at no cost to them. Morality is always subjective.

I reported one gold seller through NC Soft website with screenshots, took me about 45 minutes to report the gold seller. If ANET or any company was serious about stopping gold sellers they would have an easy way to report them. Type in “/report name” do you see gold seller listed as an option?

-Sonata-

-Sonata-

Lion's Arch Merchant

Join Date: Nov 2007

Pretty Hate Machines [NIN]

Me/

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.

Cacheelma

Cacheelma

Desert Nomad

Join Date: Jun 2005

The Ascalon Union

Me/Mo

Quote:
Originally Posted by enter_the_zone
Like I said, I'm looking at this from a primarily GW point of view. I'd personally be happy to pay for the game and expansions and then have the choice of finding/crafting items and crafting armor or buying them for RL cash.

As I said, this only really works in a game like GW where vanity is all that matters, none of these things are needed or required, only desired.

I look at it like this : in the time it takes me to grind the required ectos and shards for FoW, I could have been doing consulting work that would have made me hundreds of pounds, at least. If I'm forced to choose, I choose money (working for it) over grinding. So, as a somewhat casual player, I'd like the option to give Anet my real cash in return for a flashy item that I don't have the time to invest in the game to get. Remember, GW was supposed to be skill>time. For PVE players, this hasn't been true for a very long time.
So basically your proposed business model is like GW (pay once to play one game) but with an option to BUY IN-GAME ITEMS WITH REAL MONEY?

Seriously?

Currently, some people (yeah, even now there're just some) think of high-end items as accomplishments (from grinding, getting lucky drops, whatever), and clearly not everybody can have them (for example I don't see myself wearing FoW anytime soon).

But still some people regard FoW wearers as "gold buyers". Granted, they could be wrong. But who knows? Some of them might've really bought gold to buy those high-end stuff.

See the point now? If said items can be bought with real money "legally", what would be their value? Who would care about them, now that whoever wear them would be nothing but "rich kids" in real life? You can still say "I grind for it myself" but who would care, when we all know so well everyone can buy them with money?

This has nothing relates to the Skill > Time that you want so much. It will only lead to real-life money > EVERYTHING.

And before you propose another set of high-end items that can't be bought, I'd tell you that then nobody would bother with buyable items and instead focus on said in-game only items, and everything will end up JUST LIKE HOW IT IS NOW.

enter_the_zone

Jungle Guide

Join Date: Nov 2007

R/

Quote:
Originally Posted by Cacheelma
So basically your proposed business model is like GW (pay once to play one game) but with an option to BUY IN-GAME ITEMS WITH REAL MONEY?

Seriously?

Currently, some people (yeah, even now there're just some) think of high-end items as accomplishments (from grinding, getting lucky drops, whatever), and clearly not everybody can have them (for example I don't see myself wearing FoW anytime soon).

But still some people regard FoW wearers as "gold buyers". Granted, they could be wrong. But who knows? Some of them might've really bought gold to buy those high-end stuff.

See the point now? If said items can be bought with real money "legally", what would be their value? Who would care about them, now that whoever wear them would be nothing but "rich kids" in real life? You can still say "I grind for it myself" but who would care, when we all know so well everyone can buy them with money?

This has nothing relates to the Skill > Time that you want so much. It will only lead to real-life money > EVERYTHING.

And before you propose another set of high-end items that can't be bought, I'd tell you that then nobody would bother with buyable items and instead focus on said in-game only items, and everything will end up JUST LIKE HOW IT IS NOW.
Yes, that is my proposed business model. The stuff you can buy is exactly the same as the stuff you can grind for, no differences whatsoever (apart from being customized ofc).

Why? Because no one does care, anyway, no one at all. I just want it because it looks flash. Sorry, I'm far too used to SP-RPG's so I don't get items or titles because I think they make me look good to others. I get them because I want them for myself. Case in point is my Ranger. The female FoW ranger armor sucks, imo, so she's running armour from Voldo the Exotic. My ele is also running Voldo armor (Tyrian, I think). In fact, none of my chars have any elite armor because it's a waste to grind for it. I'd rather spend the money on stupid titles like drunkard, sweettooth and lucky.

As you have already pointed out, most people with multiple FoW sets are already considered gold buyers by most people. As it stands real money > everything already, hence the problems with goldsellers and people still buying from them. All I'm proposing is that Anet is the benefactor, rather than some random scrub who can set up a website and a couple of bots.

Cacheelma

Cacheelma

Desert Nomad

Join Date: Jun 2005

The Ascalon Union

Me/Mo

Yeah well. Sorry but not everyone thinks like you.

And someone who is "considered" to be a gold buyer is TOTALLY different from someone who "why wouldn't he do it anyway?" really buys items with real money.

Why don't we just agree that Anet selling in-game currency would be a suicide attempt and drop this whole "I think they should do it because I want it" thing once and for all? I don't feel like repeating my replies over and over like how you provoked me to.

ManiSan

Academy Page

Join Date: Oct 2007

Me/

In NO WAY i would accept RTM from Anet.
High end stuff is for players who deserve it.
When i see someone in FoW armor, I can think "this person know the game, he should be a decent player". If that person have bought his stuff, it would be a LIE for me. That person is a CHEATER. Thats not only vanity (where? if you cheat, how can you be proud of it? Ill never be able to understand fools anyway), thats about the opinion that others make about you.
Games are games. Real money have nothing to do in games. Most players will strongly disagree and avoid such *cough* games *couGH*.
By the way... Anet, stop with your exclusive stuff, like the BMP, or you'll lose some clients: me, my friends, and be sure that I would make a lot of noise about that on the internet and in every way i could. Thats the wrong way to improve gw. Most of my guildies (and random ppl) were pissed about it... /fail.

To stop spamming, thats easy. Ask for volunteers. I am. Give them the possibilty to record the main chat on your server, and ban after 10 mins. Of course, the volunteer would be perma banned if hes doing wrong. Thats easy to do. Very. This wont stop gold trading, only spamming... would be nice thougt.

Inde

Site Contributor

Join Date: Dec 2004

Why would it be a suicide attempt again? Someone remind me? Because Sony did this... quite successful I might add. The same doom and gloom predictions popped up when Sony did their station exchange... in case you haven't noticed it's still up, running and successful.

Ctb

Desert Nomad

Join Date: Apr 2006

W/

Quote:
So basically your proposed business model is like GW (pay once to play one game) but with an option to BUY IN-GAME ITEMS WITH REAL MONEY?

Seriously?
SOE does this with its games and Station.com. Basically, since the world is sharded, you can choose at the time of character creation whether you want to be in a shard that allows the use of Station.com to buy and sell equipment or you can choose to be on a server that disallows the use of station.com.

It seems fairly effective. People can still do RMTs illegitimately, but it's silly since it's a ban risk and you can just use a shard that legalizes the trade of items for money. It also provides something of a free market managed by the players so that they not only have safe, monitored transfers, but they also have the ability to pay market value rather than whatever price some guy across the world chooses to set.

The key, however, is the sharding. If GW2 continues on its single-world path, this is not an option.

enter_the_zone

Jungle Guide

Join Date: Nov 2007

R/

Sorry, but given Anet hilarious track record with the ban stick, why wouldn't anyone buy gold? It's not like you're likely to be caught, at least from what I've heard in these parts.

Also, I fail to see how it would be a suicide attempt, given that it's proven to work elsewhere but yes, why don't we drop the whole "I don't want them to, so they shouldn't" argument.

Doing it the way I have suggested, it would basically have no impact on the IG economy, since the items are customized and non-salvagable. Yes, it would possibly separate a portion of the players out from the others, but by doing so it would effectively kill the goldsellers in their tracks.

Again, this isn't a system I'd seriously suggest is introduced into GW as there would be far too much resentment from those who had already spent the hours acquiring items. But for GW2, it does bear consideration as it serves the dual purposes of scuppering goldsellers and generating revenue without a monthly fee.

Inde

Site Contributor

Join Date: Dec 2004

Very good point Ctb. It would be interesting to see more companies implement something as this, selling the items and gold at lower prices. Making it legit. While it's money in the game developers pocket (not necessarily a bad thing) it certainly hasn't caused any of their shards or their game to collapse.

enter_the_zone

Jungle Guide

Join Date: Nov 2007

R/

Quote:
Originally Posted by ManiSan
In NO WAY i would accept RTM from Anet.
High end stuff is for players who deserve it.
When i see someone in FoW armor, I can think "this person know the game, he should be a decent player". If that person have bought his stuff, it would be a LIE for me. That person is a CHEATER. Thats not only vanity (where? if you cheat, how can you be proud of it? Ill never be able to understand fools anyway), thats about the opinion that others make about you.
Games are games. Real money have nothing to do in games. Most players will strongly disagree and avoid such *cough* games *couGH*.
By the way... Anet, stop with your exclusive stuff, like the BMP, or you'll lose some clients: me, my friends, and be sure that I would make a lot of noise about that on the internet and in every way i could. Thats the wrong way to improve gw. Most of my guildies (and random ppl) were pissed about it... /fail.

To stop spamming, thats easy. Ask for volunteers. I am. Give them the possibilty to record the main chat on your server, and ban after 10 mins. Of course, the volunteer would be perma banned if hes doing wrong. Thats easy to do. Very. This wont stop gold trading, only spamming... would be nice thougt.

Games are about nothing but money, that's why the rash of £40+ PS3 games have been made shorter than games used to be. So you'll buy new ones more often.

Cacheelma

Cacheelma

Desert Nomad

Join Date: Jun 2005

The Ascalon Union

Me/Mo

Quote:
Originally Posted by Ctb
SOE does this with its games and Station.com. Basically, since the world is sharded, you can choose at the time of character creation whether you want to be in a shard that allows the use of Station.com to buy and sell equipment or you can choose to be on a server that disallows the use of station.com.

It seems fairly effective. People can still do RMTs illegitimately, but it's silly since it's a ban risk and you can just use a shard that legalizes the trade of items for money. It also provides something of a free market managed by the players so that they not only have safe, monitored transfers, but they also have the ability to pay market value rather than whatever price some guy across the world chooses to set.

The key, however, is the sharding. If GW2 continues on its single-world path, this is not an option.
Yeah, I guess I can use your reply to answer Inde's question why it's not a suicide attempt for Sony: because it doesn't apply to the whole game. People can still choose to play in an environment where such things don't exist.

As I stated earlier, I didn't know how it works with EQ2. And clearly those who do know (like Ctb) understands WHY it works.