Well.. The Crown system IS intentionally deceiptful, just like how casino's work with chips:
"Hey, this island for only 15.000 imaginary in game crowns!"
vs
"DAMN, they're charging € 120,00 REAL MONEY for an imaginary place to live for my imaginary heroes?"
If the Crown store was in actual money prices they wouldn't sell half as much.
if the island was real money instead of crowns it would have only been about 55 dollars. I bought crowns at half price and only 5500 at a time. even at full price crowns are .77 cents each. I think they should have more limited stuff. it is not deceptive it is math. if you don't like it don't use it. and if you don't use it you have no reason to complain.
Thannazzar wrote: »WalksonGraves wrote: »What? Capitalism leads to inequality? Since when! Next you're going to tell me people eat thousand dollar desserts while people starve to death. The more you have the less it's worth and the more likely you are to waste.
Blimey, hadn't realised that ESO had a Social Justice Warrior Class.
Thannazzar wrote: »WalksonGraves wrote: »What? Capitalism leads to inequality? Since when! Next you're going to tell me people eat thousand dollar desserts while people starve to death. The more you have the less it's worth and the more likely you are to waste.
Blimey, hadn't realised that ESO had a Social Justice Warrior Class.
A socialist and a social justice warrior are two different things.
Also, being a warrior for justice (Superman, Batman, Spider-Man, Captain America) doesn't sound like a pejorative but that may be a generational thing......
Thats parts of ZOS business model and its their call! No one forces you to buy these items and they are a good way to make mobey for ZOS without screwing us all by doing monthly fees or other. On top of that these bring in some diversity. For example I wish I would have bought the elf hero costume cause now that you can dye it it looks cool af and not many ppl have it. In this case you get what you pay for! Crown crates differnt story tho;)
A large rectangle
ANGEL_BtVS wrote: »Taco Bell has a limited time taco burrito. Is that unethical?
MaximusDargus wrote: »Also, for people giving real life examples:
In real life, having limited time products have logical and practical reason - a production process is launched to produce X of that item or its produced only for Y of months.
With virtual goods "limited time" makes no sense, the goods are virtual and once coded hey are available all the time. The rarity and "limited avaliability" is artificial.
WalksonGraves wrote: »Well.. The Crown system IS intentionally deceiptful, just like how casino's work with chips:
"Hey, this island for only 15.000 imaginary in game crowns!"
vs
"DAMN, they're charging € 120,00 REAL MONEY for an imaginary place to live for my imaginary heroes?"
If the Crown store was in actual money prices they wouldn't sell half as much.
if the island was real money instead of crowns it would have only been about 55 dollars. I bought crowns at half price and only 5500 at a time. even at full price crowns are .77 cents each. I think they should have more limited stuff. it is not deceptive it is math. if you don't like it don't use it. and if you don't use it you have no reason to complain.
Island is 150$ not 55$
MidknightWolf wrote: »A question asking if you think persuading weak minded, often younge consumers into impulse buying already outrageously overpriced items is unethical. I dont have an opinion. Just curious.
@max_only It is a generational thing, the phrase 'social justice warrior' refers to a group/brand of person (some people self-identify as, others perform the same actions as that group) whom fancies themselves an arbiter of the downtrodden, and will go out of their way to do things ranging from 'speak up for' other people through a tweet to physically assaulting a person they perceive as being negative towards the aforementioned downtrodden. Generally under the assumption that particular groups of people, based on anything from race to disability, are oppressed and needs protecting (from anything, words, violence, discrimination) from the 'social justice warriors' or available government body.Thannazzar wrote: »WalksonGraves wrote: »What? Capitalism leads to inequality? Since when! Next you're going to tell me people eat thousand dollar desserts while people starve to death. The more you have the less it's worth and the more likely you are to waste.
Blimey, hadn't realised that ESO had a Social Justice Warrior Class.
A socialist and a social justice warrior are two different things.
Also, being a warrior for justice (Superman, Batman, Spider-Man, Captain America) doesn't sound like a pejorative but that may be a generational thing......
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zd4t8Kys0tU ANGEL_BtVS wrote: »Taco Bell has a limited time taco burrito. Is that unethical?
KochDerDamonen wrote: »This poll will not convince ZOS of anything.
When they started cranking up prices, there was uproar.
When they introduced limited time offers, there was uproar
When they put in Crown Crates, uproar
Limited time, crown store exclusive motifs? Uproar.
Their response was a $150 digital house.
I don't remember seeing anything that 150 dollars.
Well.. The Crown system IS intentionally deceiptful, just like how casino's work with chips:
"Hey, this island for only 15.000 imaginary in game crowns!"
vs
"DAMN, they're charging € 120,00 REAL MONEY for an imaginary place to live for my imaginary heroes?"
If the Crown store was in actual money prices they wouldn't sell half as much.
if the island was real money instead of crowns it would have only been about 55 dollars. I bought crowns at half price and only 5500 at a time. even at full price crowns are .77 cents each. I think they should have more limited stuff. it is not deceptive it is math. if you don't like it don't use it. and if you don't use it you have no reason to complain.
If someone's too stupid to be able to translate Crown price into real cash then perhaps they need to educate themselves instead of playing a video game.Well.. The Crown system IS intentionally deceiptful, just like how casino's work with chips:
"Hey, this island for only 15.000 imaginary in game crowns!"
vs
"DAMN, they're charging € 120,00 REAL MONEY for an imaginary place to live for my imaginary heroes?".
In any case, your point has no relevance to this thread as it isn't only applicable to time-limited sales.
Stopnaggin wrote: »Well.. The Crown system IS intentionally deceiptful, just like how casino's work with chips:
"Hey, this island for only 15.000 imaginary in game crowns!"
vs
"DAMN, they're charging € 120,00 REAL MONEY for an imaginary place to live for my imaginary heroes?"
If the Crown store was in actual money prices they wouldn't sell half as much.
There is nothing tricky about buying crowns. You know exactly what you are buying. Even with the crates, you know you are buying a "chance" to get something. They never hid that fact. $120 in rlm, or maybe I bought mine on sale and added what I get every month from eso plus.
I totally agree that its because of people's mentality that these kind of things even exist tho it doesnt really have anything to do with being an adult. It mostly has to do with people being able to see reason over emotion. And if people didnt have that mentality then we wouldnt be having this conversation now.
That being said no one is forcing the companies to do these kind of things. On the contrary, they are willingly doing those offers with the sole purpose of manipulating people, expose that mentality and take as much money as possible. Like i said, its a brilliant business tactic but it is what it is. Whether its good or bad, well it depends on how u see it.
Stopnaggin wrote: »Well.. The Crown system IS intentionally deceiptful, just like how casino's work with chips:
"Hey, this island for only 15.000 imaginary in game crowns!"
vs
"DAMN, they're charging € 120,00 REAL MONEY for an imaginary place to live for my imaginary heroes?"
If the Crown store was in actual money prices they wouldn't sell half as much.
There is nothing tricky about buying crowns. You know exactly what you are buying. Even with the crates, you know you are buying a "chance" to get something. They never hid that fact. $120 in rlm, or maybe I bought mine on sale and added what I get every month from eso plus.
"The primary reason casinos prefer chips over cash is because chips add a little mental separation between the gambler and his valuable money. It’s a little easier for you, the gambler, to place a big bet because it’s just chips. Logically, you know what those chips represent. But since it’s not actual cash in your hand, you feel slightly less inhibition towards taking bigger risks.
Basically, it’s a matter of psychology. You can also think about it like this. If you wanted to place a $500 bet on blackjack and all you had was cash, you would have to sit there and count out the currency. It might be twenty-five $20 bills or a small wad of fresh, crisp hundred dollar bills. It’s very real and it’s staring you in the face. It gives time for what you’re doing to really sink in.
But if you use chips, all you need to do is throw a single, purple chip down on the table. It doesn’t look like much. It’s just a single, lonely chip sitting there in the middle of a green felt sea. All it takes is a second and the money is gone."
Same applies here.