Darkstorne wrote: »
What I'm opposed to is that this is a game that is played by a lot of minors.
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »Darkstorne wrote: »
You've got to differentiate here.
- If people buy crates in the hope to get some particular specific item "cheap", then they're seeing it wrong and get scammed. We should warn them and explain again and again.
- If people are buying crates for the thrill of opening them, then they're purchasing exactly what is offered and it's their choice and freedom, we've got no right to tell them what they should or shouldn't spend their money on.
Darkstorne wrote: »I'm just trying to clarify that this is why some people support crates. You guys are telling me you genuinely prefer giving ZOS more money for random items that you have no control over, rather than giving them less money for specific items individually? Just because you get a thrill out of the presentation..?
As OP has stated marketing is fair game but when marketing starts affecting the children someone has to speak up and put a stop to this.
Sometimes it all comes down to doing the right thing. People may say right and wrong is unclear but I think it's fairly clear in this situation and that is. DONT. MANIPULATE. CHILDREN.
necronomniconb14_ESO wrote: »The few whales there are give them more than the majority of smaller spenders before the gambling unfortunately. Otherwise they would have discontinued this by now. The blame isn't on the whales, since they have the money why not I would think the way they do if my bank was bloated too. It just sits there might as well spend it on something. It is not the fault of the devs since it is natural for the strong to prey on the weak.
The fault is with every other player out there that has purchased a single rng box, or made a single post in support of it even if only saying "you don't have to buy it so idc". They are the ones to blame when your game gets flushed down the can. Not the whales, not the devs, they are doing what's in their nature.
The playerbase developing a Stockholm syndrome over it and continuing to hand the company money for anything even if it's only for morrowind are entirely to blame for allowing the spread of this infection. Be angry with them, and speak to them. The devs won't listen, the whales don't need to listen, but the players have shown they are pretty dull and open to suggestion so you only need to find the right way to plant your opinions in their little heads.
necronomniconb14_ESO wrote: »The few whales there are give them more than the majority of smaller spenders before the gambling unfortunately. Otherwise they would have discontinued this by now. The blame isn't on the whales, since they have the money why not I would think the way they do if my bank was bloated too. It just sits there might as well spend it on something. It is not the fault of the devs since it is natural for the strong to prey on the weak.
The fault is with every other player out there that has purchased a single rng box, or made a single post in support of it even if only saying "you don't have to buy it so idc". They are the ones to blame when your game gets flushed down the can. Not the whales, not the devs, they are doing what's in their nature.
The playerbase developing a Stockholm syndrome over it and continuing to hand the company money for anything even if it's only for morrowind are entirely to blame for allowing the spread of this infection. Be angry with them, and speak to them. The devs won't listen, the whales don't need to listen, but the players have shown they are pretty dull and open to suggestion so you only need to find the right way to plant your opinions in their little heads.
Have you seen the thread from the guy who insists that the gambling crates are not really gambling?
There's no talking to them, it's too late.
Edit: I should be more positive, but it's hard.
necronomniconb14_ESO wrote: »Even the gamblers know it's gambling, and are okay with it, don't care or manage to have theirs under control. Many people set a limit on their gambling and do not go over it.
necronomniconb14_ESO wrote: »Even the gamblers know it's gambling, and are okay with it, don't care or manage to have theirs under control. Many people set a limit on their gambling and do not go over it.
Just commenting because this statement stood out so much; it's very true and a valid comparison. Most gamblers have a bet ceiling, pocket their winnings, and quit when the initial investment hits $0. I wonder if more Crate buyers would feel less ripped-off if they bothered to count up the potential Crown cost of things they want and refrained from exceeding it when they buy the Crate packs.
necronomniconb14_ESO wrote: »Even the gamblers know it's gambling, and are okay with it, don't care or manage to have theirs under control. Many people set a limit on their gambling and do not go over it.
Just commenting because this statement stood out so much; it's very true and a valid comparison. Most gamblers have a bet ceiling, pocket their winnings, and quit when the initial investment hits $0. I wonder if more Crate buyers would feel less ripped-off if they bothered to count up the potential Crown cost of things they want and refrained from exceeding it when they buy the Crate packs.
Aye but we're talking about gambling in a game, in real life you bet money and you can win money, the majority of people are going in for a specific item and that will be their "bet ceiling."
The gem system that comes with these crates is a double edged sword. Sure, you're guaranteed to get the item you want but because you can buy it with gems you're gonna keep buying crates because you know eventually you'll get enough for the item even if you don't get it from a crate, your bet limit can become an uncertain amount of money and becomes the amount of gems you need for the item.
@Hanokihs I don't understand the screwing yourself out of a wolf. If you'd gone in and bought more gems...whatever...could you have kept drawing? Or did running out in the middle erase that draw?
Regardless, your point is a good one because players should indeed be free to do the math, which means ZOS should have to publish odds on this garbage. If I want a specific item, I should be told what the chances are it'll come out of a crate.
Being that black history month just pass I think it is appropriate here to quote MLK "There comes a time when silence is betrayal."
As OP has stated marketing is fair game but when marketing starts affecting the children someone has to speak up and put a stop to this.
Sometimes it all comes down to doing the right thing. People may say right and wrong is unclear but I think it's fairly clear in this situation and that is. DONT. MANIPULATE. CHILDREN.
This game has an ESRB rating of M 17+ and 17 year olds are still considered minors. So Zo$ either change the ratings or ensure minors don't get dragged in to this absolutely filthy business practice.
I know you guys are trying to make your quarterly reports look pretty hence the release of the wild hunt clown crates before the end of q1 and again with your planned release of the dwemmer crates before the end of q2 but let us please at least maintain a certain level of honor and ethics.
@Stopnaggin
1. While the entire game has a mature rating, most people understand it's just the social aspect that gets rated mature and that the rest of the game is fine for kids. So the argument that ESO could allow anything because it has that rating anyway is pretty lame. Also, The mature rating is for 16 and younger. But the legal gambling age is 21, so any argument about protecting 17-20 YOs is valid even under your logic.
2. Game and media ratings concern content. Gambling isn't content, it's a regulated activity, and any gambling laws supersede any ratings rules. A casino is required by law not to ensure that minors don't have access to gambling. It's not sufficient to simply post signs. In a court case, the same would almost certainly be found of online gambling. The argument isn't that crates violate the ratings system, it's that they violate gambling regulations.
3. People are free to base their arguments off their own individual values and beliefs. If someone holds the value that a just society protects children by highly regulating gambling, even in a video game, and believes that this system is contrary with current laws, those arguments aren't defeated just because you make ad hominem attacks, even if they're relatively civil. How you parent your kids is irrelevant, and while you do have the most say in this, society and government can and will step in to supersede you on some things.
I did something similar with the storm atronach crates. I wanted that mind shriven horse mount BADLY. I thought I was done buying crates and spent gems on it. A few weeks later I bought more crates and ... mind shriven horse pops up. LOL. Of course.... when I started on my last set of 15, the first mount I pulled was the wolf I had just bought. Even though I got two other things I would have purchased with gems, that wolf card was a waste of 400.
Not where I live. The legal gambling age is 18 here. It's not 21 for every country, or even every state within the United States.But the legal gambling age is 21, so any argument about protecting 17-20 YOs is valid even under your logic.