bradleymsimmons wrote: »How about making ESO's 10-Year anniversary something to remember!? For a limited time, have EVERY item that's ever been for sale available in the store. Including those long forgotten, missing items (Dragon's Treasure Trove). Every: house, music box, costume, personality, etc. for sale. All... at... once! That's reason to celebrate!
bradleymsimmons wrote: »How about making ESO's 10-Year anniversary something to remember!? For a limited time, have EVERY item that's ever been for sale available in the store. Including those long forgotten, missing items (Dragon's Treasure Trove). Every: house, music box, costume, personality, etc. for sale. All... at... once! That's reason to celebrate!
/script JumpToSpecificHouse("@Starbridge84", 71)
I'm against that proposal. Those who got the old items (e.g. the beta monkey) earned them, and making them available to all of us (a) gives those with more money an unfair advantage and (b) cheapens the value of these well-earned items.
How about for the 10th we figure out how to help players locked on old platforms move? And before the white knights saddle up, yes I know they can't do it. I just miss playing this game is all.
This december they should at least do it with the event furnishings like the Dragon Trove, Voriplasm Pet, Apocryphal Tome ect...
RealLoveBVB wrote: »If you mean, they are all free, then I am in!
Else it would be only a one-sided celebration
I am not against the idea but there may be a database design limitation.
I am not against the idea but there may be a database design limitation.
Sure, any technical system can be pushed past real limits, but no.
This system - monetization - is their bread and butter. It would always have been comfortably resourced.
Hypothetically if at risk of being overwhelmed by a surge of demand from those wanting to THROW OBSCENE AMOUNTS OF MONEY at them during a special sale like this, they'd sensibly spend a bit of money temporarily buffing up those systems so they could receive all of that money.
Don't forget that they're now owned by tech king Microsoft.
Inari Telvanni wrote: »