Whoa whoa whoa there Bucky!Laerania_ESO wrote: »This trading system is probably the most awful I've seen; having a "healthy economy" cartelizing the market, forcing people into trading guilds, fake guilds.
Even Tibia (mmorpg since 1997) abandoned the chat spam direct/cod trading and has an Auction House; but not ESO, we are "special"... and sheeps like it.
AshySamurai wrote: »
They've had one since release.
They're called GUILD STORES!
*gasps in mock surprise*
Laerania_ESO wrote: »This trading system is probably the most awful I've seen; having a "healthy economy" cartelizing the market, forcing people into trading guilds, fake guilds.
Even Tibia (mmorpg since 1997) abandoned the chat spam direct/cod tra.ding and has an Auction House; but not ESO, we are "special"... and sheeps like it.
I can't for the life of me remember when or where I saw it, but the best compromise idea I've ever heard regarding trade guilds was the following (paraphrased from my own memory):
1) Get rid of all the guild trader kiosks entirely.
2) Give bankers a new option, called "Trade Guilds" or something.
3) When you click on it, you get a list of 100 guilds. You pick one, and it opens the same interface that you get from the guild kiosk. You still have to search though each guild separately, but you can at least access them all from one location (any bank).
4) Guilds still bid for a position on the list. Just instead of bidding on a particular trader and their location, you are simply bidding for position on the single master list. Guilds are ordered on the list by bid amount. Top bidder gets top slot. Top 100 bidders get on the list. Anything below that doesn't get on the list. There is only one master list, and every banker in the world accesses the same list.
This system sounds great because it works very similar to the current system (meaning minimal overhaul, and it maintains the current system's advantages), but without the stupid issue of buyers having to run all over the world to shop for stuff.
Personally, I thought it was genius when I read it. Wish I could give credit to whoever suggested it...
I can't for the life of me remember when or where I saw it, but the best compromise idea I've ever heard regarding trade guilds was the following (paraphrased from my own memory):
1) Get rid of all the guild trader kiosks entirely.
2) Give bankers a new option, called "Trade Guilds" or something.
3) When you click on it, you get a list of 100 guilds. You pick one, and it opens the same interface that you get from the guild kiosk. You still have to search though each guild separately, but you can at least access them all from one location (any bank).
4) Guilds still bid for a position on the list. Just instead of bidding on a particular trader and their location, you are simply bidding for position on the single master list. Guilds are ordered on the list by bid amount. Top bidder gets top slot. Top 100 bidders get on the list. Anything below that doesn't get on the list. There is only one master list, and every banker in the world accesses the same list.
This system sounds great because it works very similar to the current system (meaning minimal overhaul, and it maintains the current system's advantages), but without the stupid issue of buyers having to run all over the world to shop for stuff.
Personally, I thought it was genius when I read it. Wish I could give credit to whoever suggested it...
Such a system would help buyers marginally, but not sellers. You'd still have to belong to a guild in order to sell goods publicly, and which guild you belonged to would determine how effectively you could sell your goods. Even for buyers there'd only be a marginal improvement because you'd still need to trawl through 100 guild lists to look for what you were after at the best price, the only advantage being that you'd stand in one spot while doing so. As a buyer, would you want to look through 100 lists? As a seller, would you want to belong to the 90% of guilds whose lists no buyer bothered to get down to?
AshySamurai wrote: »So Ashy, what are your thoughts on an AH thenlol
I'm so tired of prooving why AH will kill all economic in game. Tired of providing links to ZOS's posts. It's even not funny anymore, it's rather sad. Sad that people think that no need to check previous discussion. Sad that they are too lazy and too unwise to keep this place constructive and civilian. Sad that most people don't use search tool and asking the same questions over and over and over and over and over again. This topic it totally useless.
I think you mean "sad that they hold a different opinion to you".
The OP is right. The guild store system does not provide an effective means of public trading, and its retention is only sought by those who belong to the guilds that corner the market in kiosks. Well, the rest of us would quite like to be able to sell stuff too, and have a lot less hassle finding the other stuff that we want to buy. Whether it's an AH or some other form of public trading, there needs to be a better system than the one we have currently. That's why it's an issue that comes up so frequently.
b_archaonpreeb18_ESO wrote: »The system is fine as it is.
It promotes arbitrage and bargains. Sellers can corner their part of the market, buying cheap and selling higher, without having to compete with every other seller on the server.
There seems to be this whole paranoid theory by those who refuse to participate that trading guilds are trying to "corner the market" and kind of hoard things. It's not that way at all.
My "fake" trading guild has a lively chat, regularly quests together and meets up for some fun in the Rosy Lion Inn; in fact, I've just returned from an event we held today in Daggerfall. If you're in one of the silent pseudo-AHs, I feel for you, but not all guilds are like this - and even when they are, it still takes effort to maintain a large number of active members. Don't diss trading guilds.Laerania_ESO wrote: »This trading system is probably the most awful I've seen; having a "healthy economy" cartelizing the market, forcing people into trading guilds, fake guilds.
My "fake" trading guild has a lively chat, regularly quests together and meets up for some fun in the Rosy Lion Inn; in fact, I've just returned from an event we held today in Daggerfall. If you're in one of the silent pseudo-AHs, I feel for you, but not all guilds are like this - and even when they are, it still takes effort to maintain a large number of active members. Don't diss trading guilds.Laerania_ESO wrote: »This trading system is probably the most awful I've seen; having a "healthy economy" cartelizing the market, forcing people into trading guilds, fake guilds.
My "fake" trading guild has a lively chat, regularly quests together and meets up for some fun in the Rosy Lion Inn; in fact, I've just returned from an event we held today in Daggerfall. If you're in one of the silent pseudo-AHs, I feel for you, but not all guilds are like this - and even when they are, it still takes effort to maintain a large number of active members. Don't diss trading guilds.Laerania_ESO wrote: »This trading system is probably the most awful I've seen; having a "healthy economy" cartelizing the market, forcing people into trading guilds, fake guilds.
I'll agree with Ros on this, I'm in the very same trading guild. We just spent the past two hours meeting and greeting new players as they entered Daggarfall, giving them starter packs. There are a lot of quality guilds out there, but like any game, you also find less quality ones. The beauty is you can keep looking until you find the right fit
Because we have only 2 free spots left.Drachenfier wrote: »My "fake" trading guild has a lively chat, regularly quests together and meets up for some fun in the Rosy Lion Inn; in fact, I've just returned from an event we held today in Daggerfall. If you're in one of the silent pseudo-AHs, I feel for you, but not all guilds are like this - and even when they are, it still takes effort to maintain a large number of active members. Don't diss trading guilds.Laerania_ESO wrote: »This trading system is probably the most awful I've seen; having a "healthy economy" cartelizing the market, forcing people into trading guilds, fake guilds.
I'll agree with Ros on this, I'm in the very same trading guild. We just spent the past two hours meeting and greeting new players as they entered Daggarfall, giving them starter packs. There are a lot of quality guilds out there, but like any game, you also find less quality ones. The beauty is you can keep looking until you find the right fit
Or, you could offer us invitesWhy you holdin out?
But it does feel a bit like a throw-back to ye olde days of Ultima Online when everyone stood around the bank hoping desperately to come across someone selling what they wanted to buy.
Drachenfier wrote: »My "fake" trading guild has a lively chat, regularly quests together and meets up for some fun in the Rosy Lion Inn; in fact, I've just returned from an event we held today in Daggerfall. If you're in one of the silent pseudo-AHs, I feel for you, but not all guilds are like this - and even when they are, it still takes effort to maintain a large number of active members. Don't diss trading guilds.Laerania_ESO wrote: »This trading system is probably the most awful I've seen; having a "healthy economy" cartelizing the market, forcing people into trading guilds, fake guilds.
I'll agree with Ros on this, I'm in the very same trading guild. We just spent the past two hours meeting and greeting new players as they entered Daggarfall, giving them starter packs. There are a lot of quality guilds out there, but like any game, you also find less quality ones. The beauty is you can keep looking until you find the right fit
Or, you could offer us invitesWhy you holdin out?
No AH and probably won't be.
Trade guilds suck the knob. Auction House is the only way to go. The core mechanics of the game do not revolve around the trade guilds as someone suggested.
b_archaonpreeb18_ESO wrote: »It promotes arbitrage and bargains. Sellers can corner their part of the market, buying cheap and selling higher, without having to compete with every other seller on the server..
Holycannoli wrote: »b_archaonpreeb18_ESO wrote: »It promotes arbitrage and bargains. Sellers can corner their part of the market, buying cheap and selling higher, without having to compete with every other seller on the server..
So you don't want competition. Cornering parts of the market is not a good thing. Competition is. There are reasons why most every other MMORPG out there the last few years has had an auction house. The two most important reasons are convenience and competition to keep prices reasonable.
Many economists consider competition to be vital to the economy you know.
I wanted an auction house too for convenience. You basically just have to adapt and accept things they way they are sometimes. There are wonderful trading guilds that work very hard to stay competitive and wonderful addons made by the community. Please don't disregard these out of pure stubbornness. Give them a try.Drachenfier wrote: »AshySamurai wrote: »
I have yet to see a single shred of proof to support this claim. Ever. I was big on this AH argument back at launch, and all I saw were nonsensical assertions and straw man arguments as reasons not to have one.
There seems to be this whole paranoid theory by those who refuse to participate that trading guilds are trying to "corner the market" and kind of hoard things. It's not that way at all.
What proportion of trading guilds get kiosks in good positions on a regular basis?
What proportion of the total playerbase do those guilds represent?
Would you agree to those supporting the present system being required to list the guilds they're in and their position in the kiosk market?