Dusk_Coven wrote: »Simply inflating Master Writ payouts does not really help the wider issue of the exorbitant cost of upgrading jewelry for actual use, not just for turning in a writ.
Taleof2Cities wrote: »Dusk_Coven wrote: »Simply inflating Master Writ payouts does not really help the wider issue of the exorbitant cost of upgrading jewelry for actual use, not just for turning in a writ.
ZOS’s original premise for keeping Chromium rare is so players don’t substitute challenging content with upgrading green jewelry to gold on a whim.
Sometimes forum-goers unintentionally forget this when starting new threads about the exorbitant cost of Chromium.
Other times, forum-goers conveniently forget this when starting new threads about the exorbitant cost of Chromium.
Alinhbo_Tyaka wrote: »I don't think anyone forgets part of the rationale for making gold tempers rare. The issue is jewelry is way outside of the norm when compared to the other crafts in obtaining gold level tempers. Also keep in mind Zircon is even worse than Chromium in its drop rate.
Alinhbo_Tyaka wrote: »Taleof2Cities wrote: »Dusk_Coven wrote: »Simply inflating Master Writ payouts does not really help the wider issue of the exorbitant cost of upgrading jewelry for actual use, not just for turning in a writ.
ZOS’s original premise for keeping Chromium rare is so players don’t substitute challenging content with upgrading green jewelry to gold on a whim.
Sometimes forum-goers unintentionally forget this when starting new threads about the exorbitant cost of Chromium.
Other times, forum-goers conveniently forget this when starting new threads about the exorbitant cost of Chromium.
I don't think anyone forgets part of the rationale for making gold tempers rare. The issue is jewelry is way outside of the norm when compared to the other crafts in obtaining gold level tempers.
Dusk_Coven wrote: »The situation (which is partly player-made by player-pricing in Guild Stores) is so bad ZOS feels they need to intervene with inflating the payout for jewelry writs (which is another can of worms).
Dusk_Coven wrote: »Making people "farm" plating with 8 to 18 alts running jewelry daily writs, or making people grind Alik'r Dolmens for deconstruction -- neither of these are reasonable answers
Unless people just use vouchers to buy the materials. Ignore the market till the price comes down. Or just ignore it and use vouchers.To be honest looking at OP proposal, would make existing suppliers of Chromium plating's slightly richer.
They'd be foolish to upgrade their gear -- especially in a pricey field like jewelry -- without upgrading their skill first.the people who have a main crafter and likely alts maxed out doing daily writs as well, are likely to be the main ones earning writ vouchers, not the people seeking to buy the plating's from them to upgrade their gear.
Whether it does or not is irrelevant. By using vouchers, we bypass the Guild Stores entirely. You can still buy from it if you want, or you can do other types of crafts to get vouchers to then supplement your supply. Not necessarily to do writs, but to upgrade jewelry for personal use.will it lower prices? no
Well, yes.all this will do is allow those players interested in doing the new JC, to complete them without having to rely on the guild stores as much.
Considering that people try to sell voucher stuff all the time and use that as a benchmark for whether a writ is worth doing... I'm not sure this is true.But and this is the most important part, people don't do master writs with the intention of buying their upgrade mats with the vouchers, they use those vouchers to buy stuff of the writ vendors.
Not a problem either way.Either those writs would stop appearing in guild stores or their price or the price of the mats would go up to compensate for potential profit.
Maybe I am just being pessimistic but that's the way I see it.
Dusk_Coven wrote: »Unless people just use vouchers to buy the materials. Ignore the market till the price comes down. Or just ignore it and use vouchers.To be honest looking at OP proposal, would make existing suppliers of Chromium plating's slightly richer.
Right now the costs are such that people are smarter to wait for the Golden Vendor to sell them gold rings for 150k.
With vouchers at the current rate of maybe 700/voucher, you're looking at not too much over 168k, which is not bad considering there's no RNG.They'd be foolish to upgrade their gear -- especially in a pricey field like jewelry -- without upgrading their skill first.the people who have a main crafter and likely alts maxed out doing daily writs as well, are likely to be the main ones earning writ vouchers, not the people seeking to buy the plating's from them to upgrade their gear.
In the worst case, get a crafter friend to do it for you.Whether it does or not is irrelevant. By using vouchers, we bypass the Guild Stores entirely. You can still buy from it if you want, or you can do other types of crafts to get vouchers to then supplement your supply. Not necessarily to do writs, but to upgrade jewelry for personal use.will it lower prices? noWell, yes.all this will do is allow those players interested in doing the new JC, to complete them without having to rely on the guild stores as much.
I see the Guild Stores as intended to supplement your "normal" sources for all sorts of items. However, because the price is so inflated, it is no longer serving that function reasonably for Jewelry crafting.
So if you let people get some with vouchers, you can effectively cap the cost at a calculated price that isn't too good but definitely not going to make you craft the item at a loss.
It's not intended that they use vouchers to make up the entire materials requirement -- they can just get enough grains to SUPPLEMENT their inventory that they got from other sources.Considering that people try to sell voucher stuff all the time and use that as a benchmark for whether a writ is worth doing... I'm not sure this is true.But and this is the most important part, people don't do master writs with the intention of buying their upgrade mats with the vouchers, they use those vouchers to buy stuff of the writ vendors.
But even if it were true... nothing's stopping them from using their vouchers to buy voucher stuff.
If they did try to use only vouchers for all the mats, their profit would be comparable to the other crafts. Which is still sort of OK. At least they wouldn't just throwing away writs or sit on them for a long time because they can't get enough materials at a sensible price.
If you were sitting on 300+ vouchers, why not use that and come out ahead with maybe 330? Not so huge a profit that it blows all the other crafts away, but at least there's profit. Rather than feeling like you should hoard your plating and wait for that top-reward writ that might never come.Not a problem either way.Either those writs would stop appearing in guild stores or their price or the price of the mats would go up to compensate for potential profit.
People who sell writs are looking for profit, not vouchers. If they stopped selling them, did them themselves to get vouchers, and tried to sell the vouchers on the market at a ludicrous price... well, they are already at a terrible price so we're not any worse. Just don't buy with gold.
There are lots of crafts easier and cheaper to get vouchers from than jewelry. Do the writs that you get. You can get your own vouchers and hence supplement your jewelry mats.
And if someone really didn't want to do any crafts but still needed the mats, there's always the Guild Store, which is basically trading gold for time.
thermatico wrote: »Doesn't sound like a good idea. That would be the easiest conversion of vouchers to gold in the history of Narnia.
disintegr8 wrote: »I have 2000 vouchers in my inventory - bring it on home!!
Really is just another way to make rich people richer - not really in favor of it.
Dark_Lord_Kuro wrote: »Or jewelery hireling to keep some mats coming in