It is to ANet’s real-world economic advantage to keep those whales spending money, which means it is to their advantage to allow for players to earn extremely large amounts of disposable in-game currency so that whales have customers for their gems.
I still haven’t seen any evidence that gem→gold is a significant part of their business model, and until I do, I’ll continue to believe the more plausible scenario which is that gems→gem store is where most of their cashflow comes from and that buying gold with gems is more of a sideline thing. Even if it is overall a major part of their business, I imagine that it would be more widely distributed than the typical “whale” phenomenon, with many players buying small amounts of gold with their gems, rather than few players buying huge amounts of gold.
First and foremost, it’s a strawman argument. The issue we’re pointing out is that stripping comments of their posters muddles the conversation, regardless of which thread one is trying to follow, and your response is to call us “self-absorbed”? That’s just fallacious, and it’s particularly galling since you’ve been quick to point out strawmen arguments when used against you.
I’m not “stripping” anything from anything, I’m just not typing in poster data when I copy/paste.
Players with massive incomes, on the other hand, can afford to buy out the gem store because really, what else is there to do when you have 20,000 gold just sitting around?
And yet players like Wanze say that they don’t spend a lot on those things, they just convert their wealth into more wealth recursively until they hit some sort of wallet overflow error and crash the servers, I suppose.
Statements about another’s intentions are not easily falsifiable, but whether a given action was rude or not is quite a bit more so.
For the record, both would be entirely subjective. It might be tricky to prove that someone intends to be rude, but it’s actually impossible to prove that someone’s actions are rude.
Its actually positive for poor and middle class players, if basic mats rise in price becasue they can easily farm them and therefore get more value for their loot.
That entirely depends on what those players actually want or do. If they want to farm base materials to sell on the markets, then you’d be right, it would work out for them. If they don’t do that, then they see no benefit from that situation, and if they wanted to have the items that are unreasonably expensive, then they are harmed by those items being unreasonably expensive. your entire “it’s good for the poor” analysis rests on the concept that they don’t deserve to have nice things, and thus should feel happy that while they can’t have the things they actually want, they should be happy they’re able to pick at the table scraps of the well off. How very generous of you.
Also, I think it’s important to keep in mind that the GW2 economy is very different from the real-world economy in a few important ways. First, there are no inherent impediments that can prevent any individual from bootstrapping themselves into the aristocracy. There are no industry connections you need to foster, no legal system you need to navigate, no racial or gender prejudice which might make finding a well-paying job more difficult, no sudden medical or legal disasters that might wipe out your savings, no need to balance your desire to invest against your need to eat and pay the bills.
All true, although since those elements are in place, there are also no limits on the “aristocracy” themselves, they just keep accelerating and accelerating without end, so catching up becomes unlikely. The game lacks many of the breaks on income growth, but also lacks many of the checks on inequality, like progressive income tax.
I’m not interested in how Ohoni is attempting to conduct him/herself. I’m simply irritated at the conduct itself. S/he has made the decision to prioritize making an inane philosophical point that has nothing to do with the conversation at the cost of conversational clarity. Regardless of why the decision was made, I find the conduct itself intolerable, and I’m evidently not the only one.
I can’t assume your motives, but I somehow doubt you would find my formatting so objectionable if you did not also find the content of it so objectionable. I tend to view this as a sideshow that comes up any time people feel they are losing the primary discussion.
Do you think just because i am a good trader that my listings sell faster than yours?
No, but that because you have so much surplus, you can deal in very high volumes and diversified positions, so that if some things fail, others will succeed, if some things take forever, others will pay off in the short term, and over all you will tend to make more than you lose, which is not necessarily the case for someone just throwing in whatever he happens to come across. Further, I assume that you have some idea of what the market is like when you invest in it, and have some clue as to where it is likely to go in the future, and are not merely assuming that every item in the game will double or triple in value.
So how are my odds better than everybody elses?
Because you have 55K of items sitting on the TP collecting dust, when most people have never had even 10% of that in their possession, much less had the elbow room to gamble with it.
How do you measure it?
I guess you must have a pretty good idea about it somewhere hidden in your head, that you just failed to tell us yet, on how to define profits form the tp, if your intend is to nerf it or tax players more, who make more profit.
I would say profit would be the amount of gold you receive as the result of a transaction. If you list, and sell an item for 10g, you would currently pocket 8.5g from that sale. That would be your profit. That would be the amount used to calculate what added income tax, if necessary, would be needed. It would be calculated at the point the purchase is completed, and removed from the amount you receive when you cash out at the TP.
Now, you might come back with “but I have my own costs, I had to buy those items for 7g, so I actually only made 1.5g on the transaction,” well that’s your own business. If the progressive tax adds up to more than that 1.5g, making that transaction unprofitable to you, then that’s probably not a transaction you should be making.
But the not getting fleeced part is easy. It is also valuable and beneficial to all of the players. A lot of players seem to buy at the ask and sell at the bid. This is extremely foolish. It is pretty much the only way to guarantee you do get fleeced.
And yet if those players didn’t do that, then the flippers could never make any money off of it. The flipper’s success requires those players’ ignorance. That’s why better tools to educate the consumers is a major factor in this, to let them know how they could still get everything they’re looking for at a better rate.
you spend complaining about it on the forums, you’d be
done by now.”