By the way, I will just add that I have bought two lots of these crates, in the past and a very kind friend bought me a third (as I liked the pets this month!).
I quite enjoy opening them, even though I won very little, both this time and last and had to buy 3 of the 4 pets I wanted, this time, with traded-in gems.
So, I'm not so opposed to them that I won't ever buy them.
In the case of people who are over 18, don't have a gambling problem and can limit themselves to what they can afford, they're actually quite a fun way of getting small things (like pets) you would have bought (for a reasonable price), anyway.
Problem is, some people clearly aren't over 18 and/or don't have much money and/or can't limit themselves and for those people, it is a constant temptation they can't easily avoid and (possibly) even the start of a lifelong gambling addiction.
I'm anti prohibition, but if you knew someone was an alcoholic, you wouldn't force them to have a bar permanently set-up in their living room, where they couldn't get away from it, would you?
Kiralyn2000 wrote: »You just made me think of something. How come Pokémon cards is not gambling, or Magic the Gathering is not gambling, hockey, baseball cards? Is it gambling?
Collectable figure blind-boxes, those little toy capsules that come out of the machines at the grocery store entrance, Kinder eggs...Back then in my child hood in the 1970s and 80s, we had baseball, hockey cards. Thing is, there was no "exclusives" that we must have. So we didn't buy more to get "what we want" than "what we didn't want".
Eh, there was wanting to get Your Favorite Player. Or that special Rookie Card. Or the last three cards to complete your set. Or...
(and then there were the collectors)
And hey! There's repeating dungeon runs because you want to break open the loot box boss at the end for a chance to get That Piece Of Gear You Really Need™. Doesn't cost anything, you say? Ah, but time has value. If your time is worth $X/hour, and it takes 30m per run, you're "spending" $X/2 on every random draw from the "box". I can't wait for Congress to pass a stupid feel-good law about loot boxes, with such vague wording that one of those class-action-suit factories ("20-inch monitors are actually 19.87 inches because of the bezel? OMG, so many customers have been Harmed™, we must sue to get everyone $1 in damages, and $50million in fees for ourselves!") can file a lawsuit against all gaming ever for addicting kids to random loot drops.
By the way, I will just add that I have bought two lots of these crates, in the past and a very kind friend bought me a third (as I liked the pets this month!).
I quite enjoy opening them, even though I won very little, both this time and last and had to buy 3 of the 4 pets I wanted, this time, with traded-in gems.
So, I'm not so opposed to them that I won't ever buy them.
In the case of people who are over 18, don't have a gambling problem and can limit themselves to what they can afford, they're actually quite a fun way of getting small things (like pets) you would have bought (for a reasonable price), anyway.
Problem is, some people clearly aren't over 18 and/or don't have much money and/or can't limit themselves and for those people, it is a constant temptation they can't easily avoid and (possibly) even the start of a lifelong gambling addiction.
I'm anti prohibition, but if you knew someone was an alcoholic, you wouldn't force them to have a bar permanently set-up in their living room, where they couldn't get away from it, would you?
Very well said.
Siohwenoeht wrote: »I have gone over to spending no money on the game apart from my subscription, because spending any additional money just gets you stuck in that circle of frustration and temptation to spend more money. But us having to regulate our selfs in that should not be the solution. At the point where I spend real money their should be no randomization involved. You also wouldn't buy a car for the company to roll a dice on the color you receive.
Actually I rather think we need more self control as a society. Blaming companies for tempting you to buy things is diverting the blame from yourself. No one is forcing anyone to buy anything.
By the way, I will just add that I have bought two lots of these crates, in the past and a very kind friend bought me a third (as I liked the pets this month!).
I quite enjoy opening them, even though I won very little, both this time and last and had to buy 3 of the 4 pets I wanted, this time, with traded-in gems.
So, I'm not so opposed to them that I won't ever buy them.
In the case of people who are over 18, don't have a gambling problem and can limit themselves to what they can afford, they're actually quite a fun way of getting small things (like pets) you would have bought (for a reasonable price), anyway.
Problem is, some people clearly aren't over 18 and/or don't have much money and/or can't limit themselves and for those people, it is a constant temptation they can't easily avoid and (possibly) even the start of a lifelong gambling addiction.
I'm anti prohibition, but if you knew someone was an alcoholic, you wouldn't force them to have a bar permanently set-up in their living room, where they couldn't get away from it, would you?
Very well said.
Gambling advertisements and machines in my country are legislated to also have advertisements for help with gambling addiction, and are emphatically worded to address gambling as a problem, and to think about what you're doing.
I think it's probably the best approach, in that it allows those who do not have a problem to continue as per, and treats people like adults, while also reminding those who do have a problem to think about it, and offering them a solution to address it. If you got rid of gambling entirely, you're ruining enjoyment for the majority. If you did nothing, you're assisting the destruction of people's lives.
Methinks that companies like Zenimax have a very strong motivation to resist the move to label lootboxes as gambling, because then they might fall under a whole slew of gambling legislation like the above, and have to actually give a ***. Lawyers gonna lawyer.
I have gone over to spending no money on the game apart from my subscription, because spending any additional money just gets you stuck in that circle of frustration and temptation to spend more money. But us having to regulate our selfs in that should not be the solution. At the point where I spend real money their should be no randomization involved. You also wouldn't buy a car for the company to roll a dice on the color you receive.
if you are crying because you spent all of your money on worthless digital items, this game (or any other game) isn't the reason you are a failure human and shouldn't be held responsible for your inability to utilize self control
ESO does not exploit gamers with gambling addictions, just like McDonalds does not exploit fat people with eating addictions. Stand up and take responsibility instead of blaming others.
Agreed, it's gross and exploitative.
900 gems for both the mount and pet is both hilarious yet depressing at the same time.
It's clear ZOS is getting more and more extreme with these prices as time goes on. All cosmetic, yes, but still not a good look for them.
ESO does not exploit gamers with gambling addictions, just like McDonalds does not exploit fat people with eating addictions. Stand up and take responsibility instead of blaming others.
You do realize that in some people it's not simply something where they can just stop gambling or stop eating too much. There are officially diagnosed mental health diseases from professionals in this matter.
ESO does not exploit gamers with gambling addictions, just like McDonalds does not exploit fat people with eating addictions. Stand up and take responsibility instead of blaming others.
You do realize that in some people it's not simply something where they can just stop gambling or stop eating too much. There are officially diagnosed mental health diseases from professionals in this matter.
A boss I once had said to me ' Come to me with solutions, not problems'.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s99ZeamF7J0 See this is what I don't get. People blame companies for their inability to control their addiction. By this logic a person who's addicted to eating it's being prayed upon by fast food and buffet chains?
A boss I once had said to me ' Come to me with solutions, not problems'.
So you worked for a guy who had no understanding of the problem whatsoever and would just pick a solution based on nothing?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s99ZeamF7J0
A boss I once had said to me ' Come to me with solutions, not problems'.
So you worked for a guy who had no understanding of the problem whatsoever and would just pick a solution based on nothing?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s99ZeamF7J0
No. I would say 9 times out 10 he already knew the answer. He encouraged me to be a critical thinker. A skill you will never learn if someone else is always doing it for you.
I have gone over to spending no money on the game apart from my subscription, because spending any additional money just gets you stuck in that circle of frustration and temptation to spend more money. But us having to regulate our selfs in that should not be the solution. At the point where I spend real money their should be no randomization involved. You also wouldn't buy a car for the company to roll a dice on the color you receive.
By the way, I will just add that I have bought two lots of these crates, in the past and a very kind friend bought me a third (as I liked the pets this month!).
I quite enjoy opening them, even though I won very little, both this time and last and had to buy 3 of the 4 pets I wanted, this time, with traded-in gems.
So, I'm not so opposed to them that I won't ever buy them.
In the case of people who are over 18, don't have a gambling problem and can limit themselves to what they can afford, they're actually quite a fun way of getting small things (like pets) you would have bought (for a reasonable price), anyway.
Problem is, some people clearly aren't over 18 and/or don't have much money and/or can't limit themselves and for those people, it is a constant temptation they can't easily avoid and (possibly) even the start of a lifelong gambling addiction.
I'm anti prohibition, but if you knew someone was an alcoholic, you wouldn't force them to have a bar permanently set-up in their living room, where they couldn't get away from it, would you?
By the way, I will just add that I have bought two lots of these crates, in the past and a very kind friend bought me a third (as I liked the pets this month!).
I quite enjoy opening them, even though I won very little, both this time and last and had to buy 3 of the 4 pets I wanted, this time, with traded-in gems.
So, I'm not so opposed to them that I won't ever buy them.
In the case of people who are over 18, don't have a gambling problem and can limit themselves to what they can afford, they're actually quite a fun way of getting small things (like pets) you would have bought (for a reasonable price), anyway.
Problem is, some people clearly aren't over 18 and/or don't have much money and/or can't limit themselves and for those people, it is a constant temptation they can't easily avoid and (possibly) even the start of a lifelong gambling addiction.
I'm anti prohibition, but if you knew someone was an alcoholic, you wouldn't force them to have a bar permanently set-up in their living room, where they couldn't get away from it, would you?
Very well said.