Bots = Log-ins, which is good for ZOS's image and bottom line.
Don't expect many bans. This business is built on how many log-ins your game gets.
So... the logical question is why do those numbers matter?People playing for free through Game Pass are numbers that the marketing and business-oriented departments of ZOS can use to inflate the active player base, as well as more eyes viewing the crown store/potential revenue. I seriously doubt they'd want see those numbers go down in any way.
If you removed bots from console, you'd struggle for mats.
Also, can't you only take 3 free trials per Xbox? That used to be the rule iirc.
If you removed bots from console, you'd struggle for mats.
Absolute BS. I've only ever picked up mats wandering around, never farmed (how boring), and have NEVER had to buy mats from traders. I think the lowest level I have of any golding mat is I currently have about 50 dreugh wax. Excepting jewelry of course.
NoTimeToWait wrote: »
50 dreugh wax is a laughable amount. Enough for a single set. You might find it reasonable to run in purple sets, true, but I still think you are very economic in the way you use your mats if you never farmed and never bought anything from traders (yes I do have hirelings too, not on every char though).
NoTimeToWait wrote: »
50 dreugh wax is a laughable amount. Enough for a single set. You might find it reasonable to run in purple sets, true, but I still think you are very economic in the way you use your mats if you never farmed and never bought anything from traders (yes I do have hirelings too, not on every char though).
I don't even have hirelings. I also don't change my set every week chasing the next meta. All from just.. playing the game....
So... the logical question is why do those numbers matter?People playing for free through Game Pass are numbers that the marketing and business-oriented departments of ZOS can use to inflate the active player base, as well as more eyes viewing the crown store/potential revenue. I seriously doubt they'd want see those numbers go down in any way.
Because they want people, not bots. Bots are a static investment. People are less riskier in terms of a source of revenue both because they can recommend the game and make further purchases. Bots don't do that. They make a one-time purchase and they're done. It might be lots of one-time purchases, but the moment a better game offers more opportunities for money they'll be gone... which leaves only the players. The game won't last forever, sure, but it won't last long without players - the botters need players too then. So the numbers matter because they can use them to get more players. The high numbers aren't just high because high is good, they're high because there are a lot of players in the game and that turns heads and brings in more players. Which folds into reputation. If that reputation suffers, so does the impact of any numbers and then those numbers start to decrease. ZOS wants money, which means active players, and the botters want money, which means a place to bot. Both require active players - without them, they both get nothing.
If there was more money in making a game designed for bots that only cared about log-ins then you'd bet we'd see it. No marketing costs, minimal maintenance, zero investment in new content... but that game doesn't exist because that's not how this works, lol
I don't think I missed your point but I see it clearer now. Without numbers to look at it's hard to say what percentage of those new players are botters. *shrug*So... the logical question is why do those numbers matter?People playing for free through Game Pass are numbers that the marketing and business-oriented departments of ZOS can use to inflate the active player base, as well as more eyes viewing the crown store/potential revenue. I seriously doubt they'd want see those numbers go down in any way.
Because they want people, not bots. Bots are a static investment. People are less riskier in terms of a source of revenue both because they can recommend the game and make further purchases. Bots don't do that. They make a one-time purchase and they're done. It might be lots of one-time purchases, but the moment a better game offers more opportunities for money they'll be gone... which leaves only the players. The game won't last forever, sure, but it won't last long without players - the botters need players too then. So the numbers matter because they can use them to get more players. The high numbers aren't just high because high is good, they're high because there are a lot of players in the game and that turns heads and brings in more players. Which folds into reputation. If that reputation suffers, so does the impact of any numbers and then those numbers start to decrease. ZOS wants money, which means active players, and the botters want money, which means a place to bot. Both require active players - without them, they both get nothing.
If there was more money in making a game designed for bots that only cared about log-ins then you'd bet we'd see it. No marketing costs, minimal maintenance, zero investment in new content... but that game doesn't exist because that's not how this works, lol
You totally missed my point: It's not just bots that are using the Game Pass to play this game. By putting ESO on this Pass, they're getting more actual players (possibly along with bots) into the game by reducing the investment needed to start playing. If ESO were no longer included, some of these players would also disappear, which doesn't make sense from a business standpoint.
The bots don't really cost ZOS any money directly, while those players engaging with the game through their Game Pass subscription are MAKING ZOS money. Until that equation changes, I don't really see them worrying about this.