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View Full Version : Why can't I ever find some cheap gold?!?!


Brian Cronin
08-02-2006, 05:27 PM
It's so damn annoying.

I look and I look and I look - and nothing!

The prices just are never good enough for me.

Damn you, gold merchants of the world, why do you torment me so?!?!

Where is all the cheap gold?!?!

-Brian

meethraa
08-02-2006, 05:30 PM
I recently bought The Escapists #1 for 1 dollar.
That's some cheap gold!

Donald M.
08-02-2006, 05:51 PM
There was very recently a thread on the Games board entitled "cheap gold".

It had something to do with games (naturally) and I think it was meant to be a sales pitch of some sort, but I couldn't really tell.

Spammers need to learn, proper formatting and a clear communication of what you're selling won't help your obnoxious threads last any longer, but it will make them less of a headache inducing eyesore.

Sanagi
08-02-2006, 06:06 PM
Have you tried panning?

Jack Zodiac
08-02-2006, 06:09 PM
Where is all the cheap gold?!?!

The clouds, of course! If you buy these magic beans from me, you can plant them and grow a stalk straight into the clouds! One hundred dollars a bean. You need, like, six for a nice sturdy stalk.

And yeah, those threads, while random, are hilarious. Damn EQ nerds.

Valmore
08-02-2006, 06:22 PM
Where is all the cheap gold?!?!

The Elemental Plane of Earth, berk.

Sir Tim Drake
08-02-2006, 06:30 PM
The clouds, of course! If you buy these magic beans from me, you can plant them and grow a stalk straight into the clouds! One hundred dollars a bean. You need, like, six for a nice sturdy stalk.

I don't have $600, but will you accept this cow instead?

Jack Zodiac
08-02-2006, 06:32 PM
Sold! Does it squirt golden milk? Wait, I'm getting my fairy tales confused...

Rachel Grey
08-03-2006, 12:12 AM
Dude, farm whelps. Those mofos go for 100g easy on AH!

howyadoin
08-03-2006, 12:16 AM
Sold! Does it squirt golden milk? Wait, I'm getting my fairy tales confused...Maybe you need a bull, not a cow.

Gilda Dent
08-03-2006, 03:26 AM
It probably refers to the practice of paying real world money for in game money and items in online multiplayer RPG's.

http://www.world-of-warcraft-gold.com/

The Ethics of Buying World of WarCraft Gold

Here is a great article discussing the pros and cons of being able to buy World of Warcraft Gold so readily through third party currency providers.

PAY real cash for virtual goods. That is to what many players like Wang Kang Yi have resorted to quicken their progress in online games. The 25-year-old administrative executive shelled out $200 in March this year for 500 gold credits in World of Warcraft, a popular massive multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG). And he thinks the money was well-spent. 'I couldn't afford to be glued in front of the computer for at least two hours at a stretch since I was already working full time. 'By doing my sums, I realized that it would take me about 100 playing hours to earn that amount of gold. Buying became a better alternative,' said the game fanatic.

Replete with night elves, Orcs and dwarves, World of Warcraft is set in a fantasy world not unlike Tolkien's Lord Of The Rings. Thousands of players interact with one another in real time through the virtual environment, and earn gold credits through their team conquests. For Mr. Wang, adding the virtual currency he bought to his own hard-earned cache of gold meant that he could finally purchase his object of desire - a horse worth a princely sum of 900 gold credits. He is not alone. Many computer gamers around the world are paying hard cash to gain an edge over others in the online fantasy world. Other games which attract such "trading" include Maple Story, Ultima Online, EverQuest, Asheron's Call and Star Wars Galaxies.

Players have been known to buy virtual money, rare items in the game or even entire characters with their associated powers and accompanying weapons. As it takes a lot of hard work, not to mention time and luck, to attain these virtual goods, the high prices they command seem reasonable. However, World of Warcraft player Eric Chua thinks otherwise. "It does take a lot of time and effort to build a character to a level where you actually start to enjoy the gameplay," said the 29-year-old advertising brand manager. "But the current market rate is just not something I would be willing to pay for." A scan of auction site Ebay produced over 700 results for various items of the game on sale. The highest-priced item is a World of Warcraft account sold by a New Yorker for US$5,000.

Meanwhile, to raise the game level of a character in the shortest time, known in gaming parlance as "leveling", online hawkers are charging up to US$360. These vendors will log into your account and play the game for you. Indeed, the industry is so lucrative that China-based sweatshops and established companies, such as Miami-based Internet Gaming Entertainment (IGE), have been set up just to 'farm'. The word is used to describe the activity of playing the game to acquire as much gold or items as possible for resale. Selling skills and weapons online, however, is frowned upon and banned by Blizzard Entertainment, the games developer of World of Warcraft. It has threatened to take legal action against individuals 'who engage in this inappropriate activity'.

World of Warcraft was launched late November 2004. Since March of 2005, the company has removed more than 800 players suspected of farming from its servers. Nonetheless, World Cyber Games organizers Herman Ng can understand where the allure of buying gold lies. "MMORPGs have very immersive environments. So whatever you possess in that world, your friends can see it. To obtain a rare item or to be an advanced player gives you bragging rights in a way," said the 27-year-old. Others, however, feel adding real money into the equation taints the value of the play and destroys the enjoyment of the game. Audio engineer Willy Goh, 28, said: "I would never buy World of Warcraft Gold because the fun is in the journey. The sense of achievement is in finally killing that ultra-big monster, not in amassing items or cheap gold." IT writer Chan Chi-Loong, 29, agrees. "Some people might feel that their time is precious, so to get the maximum enjoyment from the game, they pay for a short cut to the process," he said. "But if you get to the advanced level too easily, it loses its value. In that sense, I prefer to just enjoy the game for what it is."

Article written By Debbie Swee
Straits Times
September 4, 2005

I'm a Diablo II junkie, and I prefer to earn my goods and trade for them. It was possible with 1.09 to build a decent character that could run the game legitimately with some time and effort and a little luck, but the duping, power leveling, and selling of high power items made developing uber-powered characters ridiculously easy if you had one or two hundred bucks to spare. 1.10 is all but impossible to beat on Hell without some offline trading, though I have thus far resisted temptation. I can understand the temptation, but think that building your own character from scratch is more fun.

Gilda

Valmore
08-03-2006, 07:21 AM
Gold Farming? I thought that was just a PvP comic strip joke.

Jack Zodiac
08-03-2006, 12:44 PM
Maybe you need a bull, not a cow.

I tried milking a bull once. Took too long and the milk was disgusting.

Gold Farming? I thought that was just a PvP comic strip joke.

No, sir! It's a sickening reality (as most reality is!), and there are even companies in Korea and Japan wholly devoted to farming and selling gold in video games to chubby, pizza-faced nerdy American boys. Huzzah!

Rachel Grey
08-04-2006, 12:23 AM
I'm a Diablo II junkie, and I prefer to earn my goods and trade for them. It was possible with 1.09 to build a decent character that could run the game legitimately with some time and effort and a little luck, but the duping, power leveling, and selling of high power items made developing uber-powered characters ridiculously easy if you had one or two hundred bucks to spare. 1.10 is all but impossible to beat on Hell without some offline trading, though I have thus far resisted temptation. I can understand the temptation, but think that building your own character from scratch is more fun.

Gilda

I totally agree. My WoW main is only at level 42 but you can bet that it's all my own work. As it should be. :)

Hiromi
08-04-2006, 01:24 AM
Believe when you get to 60 and see the price tag on your epic mount it gets REALLY tempting.

Rachel Grey
08-04-2006, 01:29 AM
lol I've seen the price tag. 900g is not cheap...

Mac Danny
08-04-2006, 03:53 AM
You want cheap gold.. Kill a pimp. Just like if you want big shoes Kill a clown.