My trading guild doesn't have dues that I'm aware of, but they do have raffles and auctions. The raffle tickets I tend to buy about 100k worth a week, and the auctions are usually out of my price range lol. We have a really good trader spot as well.
I don't sell a whole lot but when I do it's more mid to bigger ticket items. Rare patterns and the like. I loot everything, pulled up a few mil+ archive patterns that way.
Billium813 wrote: »There are two economies in ESO: 1) ZOS economy, 2) Guild Trader economy
"ZOS economy" is the in-game economy. It includes buy/selling to Merchants, gold dropped in game, selling Treasures/stolen goods, ect. No one is going to make substantial money from this in-game economy. "Guild Trader economy" is where you really make money. Personally, I recommend being in multiple Trade Guilds. Prioritize the Guilds with nice locations, or even some sub-prime locations are ok... depending on what you sell.
For me, I make money off of the laziness of the average player. I sell common pots and purple quality crafted gear. I'm in 4 Trading Guilds and the turnover is nuts. For example, I think it would surprise people just how many players are too lazy to craft Order's Wrath (yes, ik it's a dlc set but eso+ has it and the trait requirement is low)... In 2023, I sold over 1000 complete sets of Order's Wrath. That's just one thing I sold, made me over 50m in 2023, and took me 10 minutes a day to keep on top of.
Making money in ESO is insanely easy...
SmellyUnlimited wrote: »Billium813 wrote: »There are two economies in ESO: 1) ZOS economy, 2) Guild Trader economy
"ZOS economy" is the in-game economy. It includes buy/selling to Merchants, gold dropped in game, selling Treasures/stolen goods, ect. No one is going to make substantial money from this in-game economy. "Guild Trader economy" is where you really make money. Personally, I recommend being in multiple Trade Guilds. Prioritize the Guilds with nice locations, or even some sub-prime locations are ok... depending on what you sell.
For me, I make money off of the laziness of the average player. I sell common pots and purple quality crafted gear. I'm in 4 Trading Guilds and the turnover is nuts. For example, I think it would surprise people just how many players are too lazy to craft Order's Wrath (yes, ik it's a dlc set but eso+ has it and the trait requirement is low)... In 2023, I sold over 1000 complete sets of Order's Wrath. That's just one thing I sold, made me over 50m in 2023, and took me 10 minutes a day to keep on top of.
Making money in ESO is insanely easy...
This might be a silly question, but when I first started the game it seemed like you could get pretty valuable things by stealing/pickpocketing (motifs occasionally, things to fence at the outlaw refuge). Is this still a thing? Or does this fall into the ZoS economy realm where it’s not worth it?
SmellyUnlimited wrote: »I regularly see people with millions of gold, and I’m wondering, do I simply not have a head for business? I make what scratch I can by selling any motifs I come across, or crafting writs, and maybe the odd weapon or jewelry I’m lucky enough to come by. But what really is the key to success here?
I’ve got about $400k to my name, but that’s because I really only ever buy mats to improve stuff, which is even then is pretty cost prohibitive. I’m not asking for you all to pierce the corporate veil on ALL your money making knowhow, but what are some things I can do to get richer? My only motivation is being able to buy gear occasionally without having to farm for everything constantly. I’m in a trading guild, but it’s only $2k a week and I don’t think we even have a location. Otherwise the ones that are in prime spots are like $25k a week from what I understand; which I doubt I could sell enough to even make that worth my while.
emilyhyoyeon wrote: »I'd lose the will to live if I did crafting dailies on more than 2 characters per day
freespirit wrote: »I stand by my assertion that stealing/pickpocketing is still viable BUT it is important to research where you can land the expensive items.....
I am not talking the basic green, blue, purple drops, I am talking about rare furniture plans, things that look uninteresting but sell for large amounts, items such as the "Elsweyr brush, body" and the "Elsweyr comb, grooming" which are rare drops, I think one is actually a white item and the other is green but otherwise are crown store only, they sell for a pretty penny too!!
Billium813 wrote: »freespirit wrote: »I stand by my assertion that stealing/pickpocketing is still viable BUT it is important to research where you can land the expensive items.....
I am not talking the basic green, blue, purple drops, I am talking about rare furniture plans, things that look uninteresting but sell for large amounts, items such as the "Elsweyr brush, body" and the "Elsweyr comb, grooming" which are rare drops, I think one is actually a white item and the other is green but otherwise are crown store only, they sell for a pretty penny too!!
IMO, looting furnishing plans and stealing/pickpocketing are two different things. Stealing/pickpocketing are usually focused on the Treasures and not furnishing plans. That's what I reference when I say that I don't find Stealing/pickpocketing efficiently profitable.
Also, I think it's worth noting that there are "confirmed" cooldowns on looting furnishing plans. They are definitely worth selling as many are expensive, but know there are cooldowns to help you save time and farm efficiently. From my memory, it's like 10 minutes per Green, 1hr per Blue, 8hrs?? per Purple? So, I would say this isn't a focused activity to farm, like motif pages. I sell them when i get them, but I just let it happen and not farm for money.