Prices will go down and if you don't put a limit on what people can buy (which would be hard to control without upset) the rich will get richer and the poor will stay poor. Which is great until more new item drops occur and anyone with bad look and isn't getting the necklace or ring of so & so won't be able to complete their set.
Prices will go down and if you don't put a limit on what people can buy (which would be hard to control without upset) the rich will get richer and the poor will stay poor. Which is great until more new item drops occur and anyone with bad look and isn't getting the necklace or ring of so & so won't be able to complete their set.
I didn't realize that this system was any different from an actual auction house i that regard...
That's a great idea!The system as it is is stupid. And I cannot believe how some people actually think its fine.
"They've said it wont ever happen" Well they've said a lot of things
"ESO doesn't have to copy other mmos" Never said it should. But it should at least make a system thats better than it currently is.
Hell give us an "information" NPC that can tell us where items are selling for and what price. Make it cost 5 gold per search or something. That way I don't have to waste my limited playing time going from zone to zone trader to trader in the HOPE that maybe one will be selling the item I want at a decent price.
'Canny take no more, she's going to blow' - All for lazy people that don't want to wander around a few guild stores, wheres your sense of accomplishment it's giving all those that complain there's nothing to do, something to do. I know people that get enjoyment out of the seeking bargains aspect of the traders. Roaming Tamriel to have a nose around.
A simple fix would be to introduce a text search into the guild traders, in fact i think this would be much better than scrolling through say 10,000 rings just to find a footman one, or 10,000 belts just to find the piece you want. Let's face it just how many items would be on there if everyone had 150 slots to use.
Not everyone is in a rush. I don't need to hunt something down often enough to be a problem. I usually find what I am looking for in 10 minutes or less. I go to the other hubs because I want to find the best price and I very often do find a lower price.
This system is a lot more competitive than a global AH. Much better than the constant super inflation that a global auction house promotes. The AH and economy in GW2 sucks because of it.
Just because you're not in a rush doesn't mean everyone isn't. You can still take your time if there was an AH, hell take all day. With a AH you can find the best price right there.
So exactly how many players are there on the EU server just on PS4 for example, now how many of them have wax, alloy, rosin, plants, ingredients etc. If you force all of those players to use one store to sell people would be constantly undercutting each other just to have there items sold, if each guild store i'm seeing has lets say 10 wax for sale and then suddenly there's a global store that's what 600-700 wax now for sale, not to mention anyone else that didn't have access to a trader that week.
Prices will go down and if you don't put a limit on what people can buy (which would be hard to control without upset) the rich will get richer and the poor will stay poor. Which is great until more new item drops occur and anyone with bad luck and isn't getting the necklace or ring of so & so won't be able to complete their set, because they can't afford the ridiculous prices they are because they are 'rare' so the rich (i.e the ones that have been playing a while) get the best and the new people get squat. Wasn't that the point of getting rid of the Vet ranks to make it a little fairer?
Answer to this increase drop rates, well wait isn't that what ZOS don't want - I mean didn't they say they wanted something for people to work for so they don't get bored and feel a sense of accomplishment.
Other than that it would put yet more pressure on the system, there already supposed to be introducing text chat to the console and the servers can't cope as they are.
'Canny take no more, she's going to blow' - All for lazy people that don't want to wander around a few guild stores, wheres your sense of accomplishment it's giving all those that complain there's nothing to do, something to do. I know people that get enjoyment out of the seeking bargains aspect of the traders. Roaming Tamriel to have a nose around.
A simple fix would be to introduce a text search into the guild traders, in fact i think this would be much better than scrolling through say 10,000 rings just to find a footman one, or 10,000 belts just to find the piece you want. Let's face it just how many items would be on there if everyone had 150 slots to use.
Fix the leak from your tap, don't replace the entire bathroom it's not needed.
As an example i just need some freakin' Blessed Thistle to finish a writ. The Guild Traders were worthless. Spending over an hour to find a single ingredient is a bit of a game breaker for me.
I understand your argument but it's built on false premises.I understand why you would want the that but IMI it would pretty much lead to less competition and more price fixing because everyone can see all the prices everywhere. The competition is better as it is precisely because we can't see all the prices for everything all at once.
The first false premise is that the current system prevents some players to control the market. This is clearly not the case. There have been multiple threads about this, notably on consoles where they do not have access to third-party addons like on PC. In a way, the addons saved (somehow) the PC economy from these anticompetitive practices.
The second false premise is that a global AH or a meta-search engine would lead to more anticompetitive practices. This is a half-truth, because it depends how it's implemented. In the real world, there is something called "antitrust laws" to prevent these anticompetitive practices. These could be replicated in the game code to protect the economy and the "consumers".
Nothing false in anything I've said. It is based on my direct experience with a global AH in other games. No developer is going to put anti trust coding in their AH system/economy.
A global AH won't fix the issues on consoles.
Your experience, not the majority experience.
You guys are also assuming the games are the same and they are not. Just because it works over there doesn't mean it will work over here. Consider end game gear and progression between these games. The best gear in WoW comes from PvE content and is Bind Pickup. You don't have BiS gear swimming all over the auction house there. ESO has a very different economy and quite frankly there isn't a whole hell of a lot of stuff to sell that is actually in demand. I can speak from experience because I can produce 800k in sales right now weekly whereas I could get twice that in previous weeks (new content is always the best).
There's just not enough product to support a global auction house. And believe it or not, there is a "fun" factor behind the current system, which by the way acts as a thickening agent right now in the economy.
disintegr8 wrote: »Rather than an auction house, maybe a centralized item search. A well functioning tool that tells you if any guild trader has what you are looking for. It doesn't have to give you any prices, just tells you which guild stores have the item you want and where they are located.
This way the drudgery of the search is removed but you still have to 'shop' around to maybe compare prices. If you are happy to pay whatever the first price is, then you are done in a flash. If you are fussy about getting the cheapest price, spend as much time as you like checking out all the competitors prices.
lordrichter wrote: »As an example i just need some freakin' Blessed Thistle to finish a writ. The Guild Traders were worthless. Spending over an hour to find a single ingredient is a bit of a game breaker for me.
As an example, not too long ago I needed Wormwood to finish a writ. The first guild trader I looked at had what I needed. The trader was in Rivenspire. This is pretty much how it usually happens for me. I need something and I can usually find it pretty quick. If my own guilds do not have it, it is usually in some place like Mournhold, Rivenspire, Rawl, etc.
As for people selling high level stuff in low level areas, that pretty much depends on whether it is selling. I sell low level crafting materials in places like Mournhold and Wayrest and higher level materials in places like Rawl.
As far as finding rare items. I've purchased 2 very rare items (I won't reveal what that item is because I'm looking for one more, but suffice to say it is one of the rarest items in the game so far), by periodically going to the main trading hubs.
It just takes patience, which I know is a rare attribute these days where instant gratification is the norm. I also play on average 2-4 hours a day because I work and have a life besides ESO.
Off-topic: Please use the search tool. There have been tens of thousands of these threads created. Please, we don't need another one. Keep discussion on whether or not we need an ah to one thread, pls.
On-topic: What's wrong with the guild traders?
ComboBreaker88 wrote: »If system was fine as is there wouldn't be as many ppl as there are asking for a AH of some sorts.
The number of people doesn't matter. When you have tens of thousands or millions of people interacting with something invariably there will always be people who find something wrong with it. So while sure, there a quite a bit of people who don't like it. There are still more people who like it the way it is.