Why should I pay for something that should be free? Why is everyone so willing and ready to pay.
Well said.
Additional slots are a P2W mechanism and have no place in a free MMO. As soon the crown shop offers important items or content that a player can not gain by playing, ESO will follow the evil road of milking its customers for things that should be free.
Say NO to additional slots in the crown shop!
@Audigy What would you then propose? Also, is buying a second account p2w? Cause I can do that all day long, third account, fourth account..
@Audigy you've said that buying additional character slots is P2W before, but you haven't said how it's P2W. Care to explain your reasoning? Also, do you consider being able to buy a second account P2W? If not, what's the difference you see between that and being able to buy additional character slots? I'm genuinely curious.Why should I pay for something that should be free? Why is everyone so willing and ready to pay.
Well said.
Additional slots are a P2W mechanism and have no place in a free MMO. As soon the crown shop offers important items or content that a player can not gain by playing, ESO will follow the evil road of milking its customers for things that should be free.
Say NO to additional slots in the crown shop!
|
Caius Drusus Imperial DK (DC) Bragg Ironhand Orc Temp (DC) Neesha Stalks-Shadows Argonian NB (EP) Falidir Altmer Sorcr (AD) J'zharka Khajiit NB (AD) |
Isabeau Runeseer Breton Sorc (DC) Fevassa Dunmer DK (EP) Manut Redguard Temp (AD) Tylera the Summoner Altmer Sorc (EP) Svari Snake-Blood Nord DK (AD) |
Ashlyn D'Elyse Breton NB (EP) Filindria Bosmer Temp (DC) Vigbjorn the Wanderer Nord Warden (EP) Hrokki Winterborn Breton Warden (DC) Basks-in-the-Sunshine Argonian Temp |
So far I have located a table that indicates a sample size of 110 is adequate to represent a population of 1,000,000 with 90% confidence.
What I see in this data there are a few people that would pay $6.00 so if I was ZoS reading this data I would put them on SALE at $10.00 and bet there would be a lot of people that would pay it.
What I see in this data there are a few people that would pay $6.00 so if I was ZoS reading this data I would put them on SALE at $10.00 and bet there would be a lot of people that would pay it.
I had to lol at this
I bet the bean counters would say put it at $20 and we'll drop it to $15 in 6 months and $10 a year after that!
Kinda like new tech or new cars, phones etc...you pay to be the first to utilize the feature.
What I see in this data there are a few people that would pay $6.00 so if I was ZoS reading this data I would put them on SALE at $10.00 and bet there would be a lot of people that would pay it.
I had to lol at this
I bet the bean counters would say put it at $20 and we'll drop it to $15 in 6 months and $10 a year after that!
Kinda like new tech or new cars, phones etc...you pay to be the first to utilize the feature.
**LIMITED TIME OFFER** 50% SALE ON CHARACTER SLOTS!
@Acrolas Thank
Yere's a link for anyone else: http://stats.stackexchange.com/questions/2272/whats-the-difference-between-a-confidence-interval-and-a-credible-interval
What I am intending to say is there is a 90% probability that the sample represents the sample's population correctly. Like others have stated (and my original analysis indirectly indicated, but failed to explicitly state) defining the population that the sample represents is difficult or impossible.
I look at credible intervals and confidence intervals as different sides of the same coin but acrolas that was fair criticism on the way I worded things.
@VictoriaRachel I actually agree with a lot of the points you make in your last post. Regarding the question "What is the most you would pay" vs "What politician do you like more" a price seems less subjective in the sense that real objects have real value and in many situations these things do not fluctuate much and thus are fairly constant. Also prices have benchmarks and relative pricing, what I mean is there are reference points, for instance a loaf of bread costs $x a gallon of gasonline costs $y. These values are quantifiable on a measuring stick of sorts and they can be referenced to other things via that measuring sticks. The political poll doesn't allow for the creation of reference points or comparison to outside variable because it is completely subject. Where the "what is the most you would pay" is only subjective for an individuals preference instead of the preference and reference both being subjective.
Two moving marks (reference and preference) introduces much more error than a single moving mark (preference and a stationary reference). That the difference I see in political polls and ones similar to this.
Certainly agree with most of the rest (even the bias on that last choice).What I see in this data there are a few people that would pay $6.00 so if I was ZoS reading this data I would put them on SALE at $10.00 and bet there would be a lot of people that would pay it.
I had to lol at this
I bet the bean counters would say put it at $20 and we'll drop it to $15 in 6 months and $10 a year after that!
Kinda like new tech or new cars, phones etc...you pay to be the first to utilize the feature.
**LIMITED TIME OFFER** 50% SALE ON CHARACTER SLOTS!
especially right before financial reports for the board
@Acrolas Thank
Yere's a link for anyone else: http://stats.stackexchange.com/questions/2272/whats-the-difference-between-a-confidence-interval-and-a-credible-interval
What I am intending to say is there is a 90% probability that the sample represents the sample's population correctly. Like others have stated (and my original analysis indirectly indicated, but failed to explicitly state) defining the population that the sample represents is difficult or impossible.
I look at credible intervals and confidence intervals as different sides of the same coin but acrolas that was fair criticism on the way I worded things.
@VictoriaRachel I actually agree with a lot of the points you make in your last post. Regarding the question "What is the most you would pay" vs "What politician do you like more" a price seems less subjective in the sense that real objects have real value and in many situations these things do not fluctuate much and thus are fairly constant. Also prices have benchmarks and relative pricing, what I mean is there are reference points, for instance a loaf of bread costs $x a gallon of gasonline costs $y. These values are quantifiable on a measuring stick of sorts and they can be referenced to other things via that measuring sticks. The political poll doesn't allow for the creation of reference points or comparison to outside variable because it is completely subject. Where the "what is the most you would pay" is only subjective for an individuals preference instead of the preference and reference both being subjective.
Two moving marks (reference and preference) introduces much more error than a single moving mark (preference and a stationary reference). That the difference I see in political polls and ones similar to this.
Certainly agree with most of the rest (even the bias on that last choice).What I see in this data there are a few people that would pay $6.00 so if I was ZoS reading this data I would put them on SALE at $10.00 and bet there would be a lot of people that would pay it.
I had to lol at this
I bet the bean counters would say put it at $20 and we'll drop it to $15 in 6 months and $10 a year after that!
Kinda like new tech or new cars, phones etc...you pay to be the first to utilize the feature.
**LIMITED TIME OFFER** 50% SALE ON CHARACTER SLOTS!
especially right before financial reports for the board
Hey, quarterly profits. That's what it's all about right?
@Acrolas Thank
Yere's a link for anyone else: http://stats.stackexchange.com/questions/2272/whats-the-difference-between-a-confidence-interval-and-a-credible-interval
What I am intending to say is there is a 90% probability that the sample represents the sample's population correctly. Like others have stated (and my original analysis indirectly indicated, but failed to explicitly state) defining the population that the sample represents is difficult or impossible.
I look at credible intervals and confidence intervals as different sides of the same coin but acrolas that was fair criticism on the way I worded things.
@VictoriaRachel I actually agree with a lot of the points you make in your last post. Regarding the question "What is the most you would pay" vs "What politician do you like more" a price seems less subjective in the sense that real objects have real value and in many situations these things do not fluctuate much and thus are fairly constant. Also prices have benchmarks and relative pricing, what I mean is there are reference points, for instance a loaf of bread costs $x a gallon of gasonline costs $y. These values are quantifiable on a measuring stick of sorts and they can be referenced to other things via that measuring sticks. The political poll doesn't allow for the creation of reference points or comparison to outside variable because it is completely subject. Where the "what is the most you would pay" is only subjective for an individuals preference instead of the preference and reference both being subjective.
Two moving marks (reference and preference) introduces much more error than a single moving mark (preference and a stationary reference). That the difference I see in political polls and ones similar to this.
Certainly agree with most of the rest (even the bias on that last choice).What I see in this data there are a few people that would pay $6.00 so if I was ZoS reading this data I would put them on SALE at $10.00 and bet there would be a lot of people that would pay it.
I had to lol at this
I bet the bean counters would say put it at $20 and we'll drop it to $15 in 6 months and $10 a year after that!
Kinda like new tech or new cars, phones etc...you pay to be the first to utilize the feature.
**LIMITED TIME OFFER** 50% SALE ON CHARACTER SLOTS!
especially right before financial reports for the board
Hey, quarterly profits. That's what it's all about right?
i'm not sure how that works for private investment...i know for public its quarterly..shrug
Why should I pay for something that should be free? Why is everyone so willing and ready to pay. I already pay 15 a month and for that I should be getting extra slots, priority queue, etc. Instead you are proposing I pay more for something I should already have.
I actually agree with a lot of the points you make in your last post. Regarding the question "What is the most you would pay" vs "What politician do you like more" a price seems less subjective in the sense that real objects have real value and in many situations these things do not fluctuate much and thus are fairly constant. Also prices have benchmarks and relative pricing, what I mean is there are reference points, for instance a loaf of bread costs $x a gallon of gasonline costs $y. These values are quantifiable on a measuring stick of sorts and they can be referenced to other things via that measuring sticks. The political poll doesn't allow for the creation of reference points or comparison to outside variable because it is completely subject. Where the "what is the most you would pay" is only subjective for an individuals preference instead of the preference and reference both being subjective.
Two moving marks (reference and preference) introduces much more error than a single moving mark (preference and a stationary reference). That the difference I see in political polls and ones similar to this.
Yup.That's a lot of work for a pretty simple request. I don't think adding fluff to the request makes it more conniving. They know we want to be able to buy extra chatacter slots.
The price is a bit low though. I would say more in the 1000 Crown range. What you're purposing is less than the price of a costume.
TheShadowScout wrote: »Yup.That's a lot of work for a pretty simple request. I don't think adding fluff to the request makes it more conniving. They know we want to be able to buy extra chatacter slots.
The price is a bit low though. I would say more in the 1000 Crown range. What you're purposing is less than the price of a costume.
Other games I have played usually go sith a price between 500 and 1000 crowns, equivalent. I can't really see ZOS going lower, and I kinda expect them to be more likely to go for the 1000.
And I'd pay it. Several times over, to feed my altaholism...
TheShadowScout wrote: »