Are you quiting and selling all/some items?
Chaos Theory Pvp
Ok recently there's been a lot of players claiming to be quiting Guildwars and selling up all their hard earned items before they do something else I guess.
Now what gets to me is this, they nearly always demand a full or over the top price for their goods, I guess that it must be unbearable to make a loss on an item from a purchase some years ago in most cases those items are going to go into inactiveness forever. But why?? your quiting are you not?
So guys/gals get serious and let someone else enjoy those amazing items you have rusting away.
TIA
Now what gets to me is this, they nearly always demand a full or over the top price for their goods, I guess that it must be unbearable to make a loss on an item from a purchase some years ago in most cases those items are going to go into inactiveness forever. But why?? your quiting are you not?
So guys/gals get serious and let someone else enjoy those amazing items you have rusting away.
TIA
StormDragonZ
1) Tell everyone you're quitting GW and have <insert lots of cool items here> available to sell.
2) Ask prices 60-100% more than what most people sell for them anyways.
3) ????
4) Profit! because you're not quitting and just selling useless crap you don't want/need anyways.
Something like that, right?
2) Ask prices 60-100% more than what most people sell for them anyways.
3) ????
4) Profit! because you're not quitting and just selling useless crap you don't want/need anyways.
Something like that, right?
Enchanted Krystal
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So guys/gals get serious and let someone else enjoy those amazing items you have rusting away.
TIA |
http://www.guildwarsguru.com/forum/buy-f37.html
If it's a "good home" you want for your item's, many people can help out.
AngelWJedi
yeah i always thought this was a stupid move. if your quiting then you dont need the money from the item.but if your coming back then you shouldnt sell your items.
spun ducky
I heard through the grapevine some people sell their gold for real cash and I would think that is the actual route besides the ones just going for price hype.
Kunder
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1) Tell everyone you're quitting GW and have <insert lots of cool items here> available to sell.
2) Ask prices 60-100% more than what most people sell for them anyways. 3) ???? 4) Profit! because you're not quitting and just selling useless crap you don't want/need anyways. Something like that, right? |
Then when you get done have a "returned to guild wars, paying top dollar for x". Then offer 75% of the going rate.
Clay Brick
I've "quit" several times and end up giving things away because if I'm not playing the game or going inactive for awhile, anything that doesn't pertain to HoM, doesn't have serious value, or takes too long to sell for the value it's worth, I give away! By serious value I mean <15-30k.
zwei2stein
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But why?? your quiting are you not?
So guys/gals get serious and let someone else enjoy those amazing items you have rusting away. TIA |
So you of course sell your stuff, use that money to buy other stuff that you can put to hom or use to titles and then you quit for good with empty pockets.
Same thing as salvaging your FoW set when you want money to fuel title. (make sure you get runes and insignia out with perfect salvage kit first to increase chance of getting ectos. make double sure that you actually have it in HoM)
Hmm, I think it is 15k salvage time for me! Wee! Also, Naked hero time! Dye sale time! Salvaging crystaline swords for 30hp upgrades was never so much fun before :-)
system.fan
People Quitting GW -> Sell ingame shit for ecto -> Sell ecto shit for real money -> Enjoy RL....
And more Ecto = More $$$....
thats how it is in 90% of all quitters, as long as they arent too lazy to do that.
Since if you quit... u dont have to RED ENGINE GORED ENGINE GORED ENGINE GORED ENGINE GOing care if your acc gets banned for ebaying or not. (That's not MY opinion, but thats what few ppl did i know)
In case i'd quit (again^^) id give away everything for free, just like i did 2 times before already...
And more Ecto = More $$$....
thats how it is in 90% of all quitters, as long as they arent too lazy to do that.
Since if you quit... u dont have to RED ENGINE GORED ENGINE GORED ENGINE GORED ENGINE GOing care if your acc gets banned for ebaying or not. (That's not MY opinion, but thats what few ppl did i know)
In case i'd quit (again^^) id give away everything for free, just like i did 2 times before already...
EPO Bot
If i ever were to delete my one character, i would throw everything i have in the trash.
But really, i will never delete her. EVER
But really, i will never delete her. EVER
TheGizzy
They're selling the account, and the gold, for real cash. There are a number of RMT sites that will pay cash for a legitimate account & gold/ectos on the account.
In reality, it's a form of theft - accounts do not belong to the player using them, they belong to ANet who is allowing players use of their service & digital content for the price of an access key (your CD key).
RMTs are the bane of the gaming world. They are the primary reason accounts are hacked, and the primary cause of financial "crashes" in various games. As far as I'm concerned, they're criminals - both the RMTs and their "clients."
In reality, it's a form of theft - accounts do not belong to the player using them, they belong to ANet who is allowing players use of their service & digital content for the price of an access key (your CD key).
RMTs are the bane of the gaming world. They are the primary reason accounts are hacked, and the primary cause of financial "crashes" in various games. As far as I'm concerned, they're criminals - both the RMTs and their "clients."
Rooms Of Ruin
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yeah i always thought this was a stupid move. if your quiting then you dont need the money from the item.
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If you want to continue in GW2 liquidating your assets and tuning it into HOM related items is smart move.
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1) Tell everyone you're quitting GW and have <insert lots of cool items here> available to sell.
2) Ask prices 60-100% more than what most people sell for them anyways. 3) ???? 4) Profit! because you're not quitting and just selling useless crap you don't want/need anyways. Something like that, right? |
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I heard through the grapevine some people sell their gold for real cash and I would think that is the actual route besides the ones just going for price hype.
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“It is good to have an end to journey toward; but it is the journey that matters, in the end” -Ursula K. LeGuin
spun ducky
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Nope, you couldn't be more wrong. I sold all my unnecessary stuff off (at a considerable discount) to fund a second HOM and moved on to the D3beta until retail D3 & GW2. Trust me, people like me are not coming back or involved in any of these ridiculous conspiracies. If you're moving to GW2 and you've already filled your monuments, the longevity of the game is over; everything is soon to be useless if you're migrating to a new game.
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If you ever get curious do some google searches I think your mind would be blown at how many take this route especially after they have filled HoM.
Rooms Of Ruin
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I am sorry that you take a blind eye to one of the most obvious things in most mmorpgs. If it wasn't against the rules of guru I could easily show you how big the account/gold selling industry actually is and I have known a lot of people who "Cashed Out" long before GW2 was ever mentioned much less now with a sequel looming.
If you ever get curious do some google searches I think your mind would be blown at how many take this route especially after they have filled HoM. |
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I heard through the grapevine some people sell their gold for real cash
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Nerel
I think Spun Ducky was just being coy and not dropping names, but he's right about the players cashing out, selling ectos/zkeys etc for cash, it is pretty rampant, even the illustrious QQ forums use to be littered with this stuff *cough* QQonomy *cough* yeah, lots of recognizable Guru names there...
Rooms Of Ruin
Keep in mind, if 10,000 people are breaking the rules out of a 1,000,000 person player base, that is a mere 1%, hardly "rampant". Anyway, this is a pointless argument without any real statistical data. Go walk throughout the game for a month and ask 1,000 people a day if they sell GW gold for money; I'm betting you'll find your generalizations to be greatly exaggerated.
Guru is a tiny fraction of the Guild Wars Community.
Guru is a tiny fraction of the Guild Wars Community.
Nerel
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Keep in mind, if 10,000 people are breaking the rules out of a 1,000,000 person player base, that is a mere 1%, hardly "rampant". Anyway, this is a pointless argument without any real statistical data. Go walk throughout the game for a month and ask 1,000 people a day if they sell GW gold for money; I'm betting you'll find your generalizations to be greatly exaggerated.
Guru is a tiny fraction of the Guild Wars Community. |
My point about the recognizable Guru names was just to say that everyone with HALF A CLUE realizes that the trade is going on. Heck Anet Staffers have posted to QQ... and they're still happy to give exclusive interviews to them even though they facilitate RMT trades.
Point is... lots of people do it, it's hardly a secret, and there are a heck of a lot of forums/websites dedicated to it.
But yeah, ignore it's frequency and go back to whatever rant or supposition you were making, no need to waste your time any further.
tonini
iv seen and heard of a few ppl selling everything off to help friends out reaching thier hom goals this definitely isnt a majority thing but another reason why ppl would want to get top prices for their items
nuclear_herring
That's what I'm doing at the moment. I'm part of an 8 person Alliance (well, 2 guilds, all members of extended family) and by far the most active player among us. Having accumulated wealth for the past 5 1/2 years I'm finally splurging, selling everything that isn't HoM related to buy things for my family so they can at least get to 30/50 in HoM.
Mcsnake85
There is another thing to consider: A lot of people quit for months or years but then they come back and when they come back they need money/ectos to restart.
I did it for a lot of games, and i always get advantages, why:
Do you guys remember the price of armbraces about 2 years ago? they were around 50e.
Now lets suppose that <insert a name> had 100 armbraces 2 years ago. He decide to quit for X amount of time, so he sold everything: 100 armbraces * 50e = 5000e + maybe he sold equipment too.
Now after 2 years he come back in game : A lot of updates, new storylines, new weapons ecc + Hall of Monuments points (for GW2). With the 5000e he can buy 200 armbraces at least he doubled his wealth, and all weapons and items are dropped in price: Emerald blade,BDSs,Obsidian Blade ecc...
At this point he can restart without any kind of problems.
I did it for a lot of games, and i always get advantages, why:
Do you guys remember the price of armbraces about 2 years ago? they were around 50e.
Now lets suppose that <insert a name> had 100 armbraces 2 years ago. He decide to quit for X amount of time, so he sold everything: 100 armbraces * 50e = 5000e + maybe he sold equipment too.
Now after 2 years he come back in game : A lot of updates, new storylines, new weapons ecc + Hall of Monuments points (for GW2). With the 5000e he can buy 200 armbraces at least he doubled his wealth, and all weapons and items are dropped in price: Emerald blade,BDSs,Obsidian Blade ecc...
At this point he can restart without any kind of problems.
drkn
I'm quite surprised no one has provided psychological insight into the matter, so let me be the voice of somewhat reason: it's much easier to leave once you got rid of all your valuables, shinies or powerful items.
Face it: MMOs are quite addictive (well, not exactly, but let's use this term rather than 'generating compulsion' as i don't want to get into it right now). Collecting stuff is a valid reason to play for some, same as gathering money to buy some expensive, rare items. In more gear-based MMOs, stating and tiering your equipment and/or character, simply because of raising your overall power so you can pwn more people around, is also enough to play.
Now, eradicating your precious collectibles and other valuables is a valid step towards conscious leaving. It simply makes it easier, as you have nothing to look back at except for some currency. You might liquidate everything you ever collected or gathered, and then use that money to start another collection, but starting it from a scratch - especially after saying goodbye to the previous one(s) - is rather discouraging.
Thus, if you haven't simply given your stuff away to validate your leave but rather sold it, you end up with currency and, usually, only currency, save for some very basic equipment.
Then, if you ever want to get back into the game, you have some money for a kickstart. If your initial intention is to leave the game completely and never come back, you'd be better off giving stuff away, or organising an event with your valuable possessions as prizes in some trivia contest - whatever pleases you. But if you actually see the possibility of getting back after X period of time and you don't want to be tempted in the meanwhile, selling your stuff and keeping raw currency is actually a good idea.
It's also a time-saver. While you may highly value your collection of rare shields at the moment, if you quit for a year and come back, your sentiments towards the collection might have died and you'd want to sell them anyway. That's a common thing about the currency itself when it comes to money-hoarders - people who are not necessarily mean in MMOs, but they prefer to collect their money rather than spend it. When they come back after a longer break, they're not so inclined to keep their money and they actually often blow it on things they'd never buy before the break, because right now the currency holds little sentimental value to them.
Face it: MMOs are quite addictive (well, not exactly, but let's use this term rather than 'generating compulsion' as i don't want to get into it right now). Collecting stuff is a valid reason to play for some, same as gathering money to buy some expensive, rare items. In more gear-based MMOs, stating and tiering your equipment and/or character, simply because of raising your overall power so you can pwn more people around, is also enough to play.
Now, eradicating your precious collectibles and other valuables is a valid step towards conscious leaving. It simply makes it easier, as you have nothing to look back at except for some currency. You might liquidate everything you ever collected or gathered, and then use that money to start another collection, but starting it from a scratch - especially after saying goodbye to the previous one(s) - is rather discouraging.
Thus, if you haven't simply given your stuff away to validate your leave but rather sold it, you end up with currency and, usually, only currency, save for some very basic equipment.
Then, if you ever want to get back into the game, you have some money for a kickstart. If your initial intention is to leave the game completely and never come back, you'd be better off giving stuff away, or organising an event with your valuable possessions as prizes in some trivia contest - whatever pleases you. But if you actually see the possibility of getting back after X period of time and you don't want to be tempted in the meanwhile, selling your stuff and keeping raw currency is actually a good idea.
It's also a time-saver. While you may highly value your collection of rare shields at the moment, if you quit for a year and come back, your sentiments towards the collection might have died and you'd want to sell them anyway. That's a common thing about the currency itself when it comes to money-hoarders - people who are not necessarily mean in MMOs, but they prefer to collect their money rather than spend it. When they come back after a longer break, they're not so inclined to keep their money and they actually often blow it on things they'd never buy before the break, because right now the currency holds little sentimental value to them.
Xiaquin
At least some of my inventory serves me no purpose, but money is useless due to the whole "not really playing anymore" thing. I give all drops away to guildies, donate within what I can get rid of and it's simply too much work to sell without an auction house.
Like a lot of other players my years of work will probably collect dust, never to be seen or used by anyone else. I find it convenient and fitting that it's more a legacy thing than anything, frozen in time rather than broken up and sold off in pieces to the highest bidders.
Like a lot of other players my years of work will probably collect dust, never to be seen or used by anyone else. I find it convenient and fitting that it's more a legacy thing than anything, frozen in time rather than broken up and sold off in pieces to the highest bidders.
N E D M
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I am sorry that you take a blind eye to one of the most obvious things in most mmorpgs. If it wasn't against the rules of guru I could easily show you how big the account/gold selling industry actually is and I have known a lot of people who "Cashed Out" long before GW2 was ever mentioned much less now with a sequel looming.
If you ever get curious do some google searches I think your mind would be blown at how many take this route especially after they have filled HoM. |
enter_the_zone
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I think very few would be foolish enough to fill HOM then sell account, thus losing ability to link to HOM accomplishments for GW2...
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On the other hand, trading different MMO accounts seems more sensible (one wants to play GW and has WoW, other wants to play WoW and have GW) though it involves a level of trust that I simply don't have in other people. Plus, WTF is the point in playing a game if you're just going to skip the whole game to get access to end game content? Leaving aside the obvious advantage if it's a second or third account.
chaosincarnate87
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I'm quite surprised no one has provided psychological insight into the matter, so let me be the voice of somewhat reason: it's much easier to leave once you got rid of all your valuables, shinies or powerful items.
Face it: MMOs are quite addictive (well, not exactly, but let's use this term rather than 'generating compulsion' as i don't want to get into it right now). Collecting stuff is a valid reason to play for some, same as gathering money to buy some expensive, rare items. In more gear-based MMOs, stating and tiering your equipment and/or character, simply because of raising your overall power so you can pwn more people around, is also enough to play. Now, eradicating your precious collectibles and other valuables is a valid step towards conscious leaving. It simply makes it easier, as you have nothing to look back at except for some currency. You might liquidate everything you ever collected or gathered, and then use that money to start another collection, but starting it from a scratch - especially after saying goodbye to the previous one(s) - is rather discouraging. Thus, if you haven't simply given your stuff away to validate your leave but rather sold it, you end up with currency and, usually, only currency, save for some very basic equipment. Then, if you ever want to get back into the game, you have some money for a kickstart. If your initial intention is to leave the game completely and never come back, you'd be better off giving stuff away, or organising an event with your valuable possessions as prizes in some trivia contest - whatever pleases you. But if you actually see the possibility of getting back after X period of time and you don't want to be tempted in the meanwhile, selling your stuff and keeping raw currency is actually a good idea. It's also a time-saver. While you may highly value your collection of rare shields at the moment, if you quit for a year and come back, your sentiments towards the collection might have died and you'd want to sell them anyway. That's a common thing about the currency itself when it comes to money-hoarders - people who are not necessarily mean in MMOs, but they prefer to collect their money rather than spend it. When they come back after a longer break, they're not so inclined to keep their money and they actually often blow it on things they'd never buy before the break, because right now the currency holds little sentimental value to them. |
drkn
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I doubt getting an account to even 30/50 could be profitable, given the time it takes. Pulling a figure out of thin air, say £400, which, after a bit of googling, seems to be high, and say 200 hours of gameplay (which is very quick to 30/50 and involves virtually no enjoyment at all since everything is rushed), you come out at £2 per hour.... which sucks. |
If that's it, i see it possible to get vast profits from it. I know we're getting into the black market stuff here, but i believe i won't say anything too inappropriate, if i state that all you need is powertrading. Sure, you will need lots upon lots of in-game money, but you will probably get much more real money after selling a 30/50 account than it's relative raw worth in ectos.
For in-game currency, you can buy (more or less in ascending order of cash involved): 19 hero armours [7 points]; minipets [easy 5 points, but you can get more cheaply if you're lucky]; 7 elite armour sets [5 points]; HoM weapons [5-8 points]; zkeys [5 points - PvP statue plus 'any' statue].
Adding 3 points available due to linking, you can really quickly get about 25 points on a completely fresh account, without playing more than getting one character to HoM (the hero armours might require unlocking heroes, unless the potential buyer knows a bit about HoM and GW and is interested in playing a little, thus getting heroes themselves; the same goes for elite armours, but then there are runners to unlock towns and complete campaigns for you...).
That's really without wasting that 200 hours you mentioned, as the mats, hero armours, weapons and zkeys are readily available to buy in Spamadan. The 'only' thing you'd need is really vast in-game wealth. But then, there are people with n-teen thousands of ectos, or even more, so...
The real issue in question here is the rates on RMTs. I have no idea how much is a stack of ecto 'worth' in terms of real money, nor i am interested in wasting more time to google that data now, or how valuable would a 30/50 account be. If more than its worth in ectos, and this is what i assume, then we've just found a way to maximize your profits - provided (1) you already have an in-game fortune or are great at powertrading, and (2) the worth of a 30/50 account is greater than of a fresh account + ectos needed to get 30/50.
Again, please do not consider this post as any kind of justification or encouraging of RMT in any form. It's just a mental experiment really, and i assumed it's okay to post it since we already got talking about the black market of ecto in this thread.
shady tradesman
I am quitting, but instead of selling my account for real money (which is sort of disrespectful to Anet, I guess), I'm holding a big giveaway for newbies who want to get some more HOM points.
Cynthia321
I agree with Chaos
zwei2stein
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If i understood you correctly, you're talking about getting a fresh account, getting it to 30/50 or even 50/50, and then selling it for profit to those with money who care about in-game rewards in GW2 but don't want to play GW1?
If that's it, i see it possible to get vast profits from it. I know we're getting into the black market stuff here, but i believe i won't say anything too inappropriate, if i state that all you need is powertrading. Sure, you will need lots upon lots of in-game money, but you will probably get much more real money after selling a 30/50 account than it's relative raw worth in ectos. For in-game currency, you can buy (more or less in ascending order of cash involved): 19 hero armours [7 points]; minipets [easy 5 points, but you can get more cheaply if you're lucky]; 7 elite armour sets [5 points]; HoM weapons [5-8 points]; zkeys [5 points - PvP statue plus 'any' statue]. Adding 3 points available due to linking, you can really quickly get about 25 points on a completely fresh account, without playing more than getting one character to HoM (the hero armours might require unlocking heroes, unless the potential buyer knows a bit about HoM and GW and is interested in playing a little, thus getting heroes themselves; the same goes for elite armours, but then there are runners to unlock towns and complete campaigns for you...). That's really without wasting that 200 hours you mentioned, as the mats, hero armours, weapons and zkeys are readily available to buy in Spamadan. The 'only' thing you'd need is really vast in-game wealth. But then, there are people with n-teen thousands of ectos, or even more, so... The real issue in question here is the rates on RMTs. I have no idea how much is a stack of ecto 'worth' in terms of real money, nor i am interested in wasting more time to google that data now, or how valuable would a 30/50 account be. If more than its worth in ectos, and this is what i assume, then we've just found a way to maximize your profits - provided (1) you already have an in-game fortune or are great at powertrading, and (2) the worth of a 30/50 account is greater than of a fresh account + ectos needed to get 30/50. Again, please do not consider this post as any kind of justification or encouraging of RMT in any form. It's just a mental experiment really, and i assumed it's okay to post it since we already got talking about the black market of ecto in this thread. |
What is issue is that you have to spend quite a lot of time hunting down people who have sufficient amount of good for sale - i think it would take at least week of spamadan to buy everything outlined. Even if you overpay, supply on some things is fairly limited.
drkn
It depends if you want to get it done quickly or don't mind doing it over time, but with much less time investment on your side. You can either actively spam Kamadan and other popular places in the game, or you can just hold and bump your Guru thread every day (and browse the sell forum from time to time), logging in only for a few minutes to finish the transaction. It'd take longer, but you wouldn't waste your own time resources for that.
If you overpay, buying via Guru, various auction sites and other GW trade centres will take much shorter.
If you overpay, buying via Guru, various auction sites and other GW trade centres will take much shorter.
LicensedLuny
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Ok recently there's been a lot of players claiming to be quiting Guildwars and selling up all their hard earned items before they do something else I guess.
Now what gets to me is this, they nearly always demand a full or over the top price for their goods, I guess that it must be unbearable to make a loss on an item from a purchase some years ago in most cases those items are going to go into inactiveness forever. But why?? your quiting are you not? So guys/gals get serious and let someone else enjoy those amazing items you have rusting away. TIA |
If you've focused much on trading off and on for longer than 6-12 months, then you've probably noticed that rare items come in and out of favor. The closest we can come to "legitimate PC" has never been based on rarity alone; rather, it tracks the ratio of demand to supply for <insert spectacularly shiny and extremely rare widget of choice.> Perhaps some of these quitters are of the opinion that, demand or not, they have some seriously rare precious widgets. They're willing to sell some before going inactive only if a buyer is willing to pay their opinion of value, an amount higher than the current market is likely to offer. Perhaps these quitting sellers are motivated for reasons more like, "Here's one last chance for people who are going to stay around to get this widget which I know it would take ages to find elsewhere. If no one is willing to pay my price, I'd rather let it gather dust than sell it cheap." Maybe they're hanging onto currently unpopular widgets figuring the market might be better should they decide to come back to GW later on.
It's impossible for any of us to say what another's reasons are with 100% certainty, but I suspect some of these "full or over the top" prices you mention could have just as much to do with a collector's opinion/appreciation of a shiny widget as with any of the darker or more simple greed based explanations.
I suspect some sellers might also be motivated by who is buying their precious treasures. Someone oft seen complaining about overpricing might not strike a seller as a fellow collector who appreciates the rarity of the widget in question. Think of your own most treasured widget which, to your way of thinking, is worth at least Y. Now imagine you read posts of mine saying it's so silly for people to ask even X (X being less than Y) for similar widgets. Would you rank me very high on your list of good alternative homes if you were looking to sell your widget to someone who would appreciate it after you were gone? Just a thought.
That was when 1e ~ 5k, at most, though. In your example, the player who converted all his arms to ecto before leaving still comes back to even more fake-money value in storage. But I thought it worth noting that the effective plat value of arms has dropped more like 25% since that time as opposed to the 50% drop one might infer from your example.