That's exactly it - you're drawing assumptions. Yes, the game now has much more people, the population is huge. Yet we do not know the ratio profit-from-all-these-sales/all-resources-that-were-used-so-people-would-come. Without the numbers - which we, of course, will never get and companies are entitled to such secrets, 'cause privacy matters - we can only assume. Throwing accusations based on assumptions never won anyone any points.First the financial aspect. At the beginning of last year Matt Firor released an article saying that ESO has been a major success. http://massivelyop.com/2016/04/04/matt-firor-says-elder-scrolls-onlines-population-is-huge-and-thriving/
This game I'm sure was doing well and this move was motivated by greed.How, pray tell, is that different? XDSecondly, your response to rng is flawed. Running game content repeatedly, is not the same as running your credit card repeatedly. It's a system designed to tempt people to spend ridiculous amounts of money for something most would pay considerably less on average if they put in the store. They are ripping off their players and people are actually praising them.
vMA is a system which tempts people to spend ridiculous amount of time for something that would take considerably less time if sharpened vMA weapons could be bought for <X>k gold from "MA-vendor" XD
The only difference is resource in question.
And what all of us want? Right. The token system. Which exists in Crates.
Noone lies and noone forces. It is clearly said: you have a chance. If someone buys 1 crate and gets lucky - yay. If someone buys X crates to get enough gems - yay. If someone buys 10 Crates with mindset "APEX MOUNT OR RIOT" - well, mindset is the problem.
And yes. We are conveniently not counting everything else that comes from Crates. Gambling in which you always wins... interesting
The real loss in all this is experienced by people with bad luck who needed bazillion Crates to get those 400 gems. It's a sad situation and I symphatize. But then again - the rules were clear from the start.
Choices and consequences. Not evil corporations
If you are against Crates, 'cause gambling, but you ran vMA hundreds times to get the weapon you wanted - congratulations, you are a hypocrite. And you have lost much more than people who bought Crates. Money can be made again. Time can't.
It's incredibly easy money for them, and will likely become the focus of their efforts.
Everything that gets rewarded from a Crown Crate is purely cosmetic, so unless this game is just a fashion show to you there is no pay to win, you are not losing out on anything by not purchasing a crate and you'll have no advantage if you do.
However if you wish you contribute to a now free to play MMO by making a few micro transactions in the hope of acquiring some exclusive cosmetic mounts/costumes etc, no one will judge you.
While I understand that it would be nice to know the exact odds of the rewards, there is something people happily misinterpret. This is not gambling for a couple of reasons. In gambling you put on something valuable for a hope of something better/more valuable - with a chance to lose. The crates can be BOUGHT for 400 crowns (or less if buying in bulk) and always contain CS items worth at least 400 crowns. Yes the content is random, but you get a value for your purchase.
mrfrontman wrote: »I agree 100% with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and you would have better luck winning at a casino that's rigged. Don't support this.
mrfrontman wrote: »I agree 100% with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and you would have better luck winning at a casino that's rigged. Don't support this.
I 100% disagree with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and got the exact mount I wanted and some other awesome cosmetics.
Do support this.
katiesmith12341 wrote: »Unfortuantly being a an addict to gambling can I stop when I see something I want? No..
I spent 65 quid last week on those crown crates, I got 3 forest mounts out of it though. Worth it? No. Can I stop? No.
katiesmith12341 wrote: »Unfortuantly being a an addict to gambling can I stop when I see something I want? No..
I spent 65 quid last week on those crown crates, I got 3 forest mounts out of it though. Worth it? No. Can I stop? No.
Hope you're not addicted to food cause I don't want people demanding to ban cakes.
Bigevilpeter wrote: »mrfrontman wrote: »I agree 100% with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and you would have better luck winning at a casino that's rigged. Don't support this.
I 100% disagree with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and got the exact mount I wanted and some other awesome cosmetics.
Do support this.
Thats the main reason I do not support this, it is pure gambling and ZOS abusing the human psychology, there are underage kids who are take advantage of and actually are not legally allowed to gamble
Bigevilpeter wrote: »mrfrontman wrote: »I agree 100% with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and you would have better luck winning at a casino that's rigged. Don't support this.
I 100% disagree with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and got the exact mount I wanted and some other awesome cosmetics.
Do support this.
Thats the main reason I do not support this, it is pure gambling and ZOS abusing the human psychology, there are underage kids who are take advantage of and actually are not legally allowed to gamble
There are no cash rewards in the crown crates. It may be a fine line, but buying crown crates is not considered gambling in the official sense. There's nothing but digital fluff in there, so no regulatory body would condemn or regulate it.
Bigevilpeter wrote: »Seeing all this money wasted just makes me sad. The mounts do look epic, but putting them behind an rng wall that costs so much money with a very low chance is one of the biggest scams ever.
I didn't buy crown crates yet, but I saw some videos on youtube of openings and I see how many people were disappointing and just threw so much money away.
Even if you have too much money to spend, there are other more useful ways to spend it other than supporting this massive scam.
Even if there was 100% chance to get a mount every 15 boxes it would still be the equivalent of 40$ for a mount which is the price of many brand new games.
Supporting things like that only encourages them to scam you more.

It's such a huge success for them that they'll probably just turn all DLCs into crown crate seasons and say, "*** the people who want actual content".
But yes, the fact that ESO now has legal gambling is *** *** and I cannot express how disappointed I am. I thought I had seen the worst when Update 6 and the Crown Store came out, but that was just the beginning... I love ESO, but ZOS is making it really hard to trust them, since they are also excluding their "chapters" from the subscriber rewards and making them non-purchasable with crowns.
It has become very apparent where their priorities lie: $$$ > content
If you don't support the idea of Crown Crates then put your money where your mouth is and stop paying them, I've encountered so many hypocrits who say they hate it and yet still buy them.
katiesmith12341 wrote: »Bigevilpeter wrote: »mrfrontman wrote: »I agree 100% with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and you would have better luck winning at a casino that's rigged. Don't support this.
I 100% disagree with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and got the exact mount I wanted and some other awesome cosmetics.
Do support this.
Thats the main reason I do not support this, it is pure gambling and ZOS abusing the human psychology, there are underage kids who are take advantage of and actually are not legally allowed to gamble
There are no cash rewards in the crown crates. It may be a fine line, but buying crown crates is not considered gambling in the official sense. There's nothing but digital fluff in there, so no regulatory body would condemn or regulate it.
True, but still feeding an addiction
Bigevilpeter wrote: »mrfrontman wrote: »I agree 100% with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and you would have better luck winning at a casino that's rigged. Don't support this.
I 100% disagree with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and got the exact mount I wanted and some other awesome cosmetics.
Do support this.
Thats the main reason I do not support this, it is pure gambling and ZOS abusing the human psychology, there are underage kids who are take advantage of and actually are not legally allowed to gamble
There are no cash rewards in the crown crates. It may be a fine line, but buying crown crates is not considered gambling in the official sense. There's nothing but digital fluff in there, so no regulatory body would condemn or regulate it.
katiesmith12341 wrote: »Bigevilpeter wrote: »mrfrontman wrote: »I agree 100% with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and you would have better luck winning at a casino that's rigged. Don't support this.
I 100% disagree with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and got the exact mount I wanted and some other awesome cosmetics.
Do support this.
Thats the main reason I do not support this, it is pure gambling and ZOS abusing the human psychology, there are underage kids who are take advantage of and actually are not legally allowed to gamble
There are no cash rewards in the crown crates. It may be a fine line, but buying crown crates is not considered gambling in the official sense. There's nothing but digital fluff in there, so no regulatory body would condemn or regulate it.
True, but still feeding an addiction
I don't get why people automatically assume you're an addict if you partake in 'gambling'. I'm sure you know someone who buys a lottery ticket every once in a while, but you wouldn't call that feeding an addiction... Maybe being stupid but not addiction unless it's a compulsive thing they really can't control.
However that also holds true for every other potentially addictive activity, including alcohol, smoking, recreational drugs, and gaming so much you forget to eat/bathe/go to work/feed your baby.
There are no cash rewards in the crown crates. It may be a fine line, but buying crown crates is not considered gambling in the official sense. There's nothing but digital fluff in there, so no regulatory body would condemn or regulate it.
People are funny. These players say "why do you put the cool stuff in gambling crates, if you sell it outright I'd pay for it"
So Zos selsl mounts outright. The same players say "why did you make this mount so expensive, it should be cheaper"
These are usually the same people that won't pay 99 cents for an app as if they could have created it themselves. The same people who don't want to pay for logos and art bc they have a nephew they can guilt into making it for them for free. These people don't see the value and never will. A sparkly digital horse doesn't affect your life at all in practical terms and yet... it feels nice. Why? The human brain is weird. They are only "against" crates because they want what's inside. If you don't want what's inside you'd have the attitude of @MLGProPlayer.
What you don't know is: Zos knows you were never going to give them extra money no matter what they did (crates or outright) they aren't here for you. Zos is here for the people who are going to give them money anyway because those people are already happy and satisfied with the product As Is and don't mind paying extra for sprinkles.
I'm here for the ice cream , I paid for the ice cream , I joined the membership for the ice cream club and heck yeah put some sprinkles on that ice cream , I know it costs extra.**
**(this is an example I'm actually lactose intolerant lol)
katiesmith12341 wrote: »Bigevilpeter wrote: »mrfrontman wrote: »I agree 100% with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and you would have better luck winning at a casino that's rigged. Don't support this.
I 100% disagree with OP. I did it myself once to test the odds and got the exact mount I wanted and some other awesome cosmetics.
Do support this.
Thats the main reason I do not support this, it is pure gambling and ZOS abusing the human psychology, there are underage kids who are take advantage of and actually are not legally allowed to gamble
There are no cash rewards in the crown crates. It may be a fine line, but buying crown crates is not considered gambling in the official sense. There's nothing but digital fluff in there, so no regulatory body would condemn or regulate it.
True, but still feeding an addiction
I don't get why people automatically assume you're an addict if you partake in 'gambling'. I'm sure you know someone who buys a lottery ticket every once in a while, but you wouldn't call that feeding an addiction... Maybe being stupid but not addiction unless it's a compulsive thing they really can't control.