https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tycuOiGFD74Take a look at this.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tycuOiGFD74
Remember bethesda and zos are both subsidiaries of zenimax, so remember this when they pull things like "buying" skyshards which is borderline p2w, they are testing the waters.
This post could get deleted, which would be quite telling.
Ragnarock41 wrote: »Ragnarock41 wrote: »I'm fine with crown crates. I don't open them but at the same time I'm glad they found a way to fund development without going pay to win.
Pay to cosmetic or pay to skip is completely fine in my opinion. Gambling? As long as I don't have to.
But then again its annoying when I want something but its only on crown crates or crystals that come from crown crates. I just wanna buy whatever the heck I want directly.
Is buying vCR+3 carry run with all loot from there for 150 euro still skipping or already pay to win ?
I don't exactly care since thats not something done by zenimax. Players sell runs.
The question wasn't do You care or not. Also players sell many other things then runs but it is not core of the question. Is buying for real money stuff that is normally beyond reach for most of the players skipping or pay to win ?
Mathius_Mordred wrote: »Jayman1000 wrote: »Mathius_Mordred wrote: »What is the issue with the gambling crates, everyone has to be over 18 to play don't they? Is it that they don't explicitly specify that it's gambling? because everyone knows that it is anyway. I don't have an issue with gambling in games as long as they are not targeted towards minors, which would be unethical and possibly illegal in some countries. At the end of the day, we are all adults, we make a choice on how we spend our disposable income and we don't need a nanny state to save us from our own impulsive desires thank you very much.
Because if you are doing gambling then you need to adhere to gambling laws. But by using loopholes in the law zos and other videogame companies using gambling practices, can avoid following gambling laws because they can claim that it is "technically not gambling", even though for all intent and purposes this is gambling.
Then isn't it the politicians' role to adjust those laws to include this new type of gambling? And until they do so ZoS and others are not actually breaking any laws? What, if any, current gambling laws are they breaking? I'm no expert in this area but from my cursory glance at the topic, they don't seem to be breaking any because there is no real-world financial payout or material prizes from the chance boxes. Until the laws are changed then these forms of gambling will continue.
You could also say that playing a trial for a chance to win something you want is also gambling, in this case you are paying with your time, and time=money, for a random chance, and yet because no real-world money is involved nobody says anything.
As long as this game remains targeted at adults, ie over 18, then I have no issue with it, if under 18s are playing, and I know they are, then it is for their parents to ensure they are not spending their money on gambling, as I do with my children.
So Crown Crates could be made illegal but would this be the end of them; maybe not.
There is nothing to stop ZOS from adding them ingame for in game currencies.
I think they could also get round the legalities of the gambling laws if they offered them as part of a package (so many per month when you pay for ESO plus).
If they do both of the above the crates gained from ESO plus are actually a bonus perk of something you can buy ingame and therefore not classed as gambling but just a boosted game perk.
This would possibably generate extra interest in ESO+ and therefore extra income.
Just a thought but I cannot see any gaming company completely getting rid of something they have invested so much in but instead a different way of generating revenue from them.
This IMO is also a much more moral way of using them.
LittlePinkDot wrote: »So Crown Crates could be made illegal but would this be the end of them; maybe not.
There is nothing to stop ZOS from adding them ingame for in game currencies.
I think they could also get round the legalities of the gambling laws if they offered them as part of a package (so many per month when you pay for ESO plus).
If they do both of the above the crates gained from ESO plus are actually a bonus perk of something you can buy ingame and therefore not classed as gambling but just a boosted game perk.
This would possibably generate extra interest in ESO+ and therefore extra income.
Just a thought but I cannot see any gaming company completely getting rid of something they have invested so much in but instead a different way of generating revenue from them.
This IMO is also a much more moral way of using them.
ESO is rated mature. Its not intended for kids. Adults are allowed to make their own choices. So I see no reason why they would be banned.
rope_bunny wrote: »Crown Crates aren't really gambling. If you don't get what you want, usually you can just extract the items you don't want in exchange for gems and get what you want that way with the exception of Radiant Apex Mounts.
rope_bunny wrote: »Crown Crates aren't really gambling. If you don't get what you want, usually you can just extract the items you don't want in exchange for gems and get what you want that way with the exception of Radiant Apex Mounts.
Canned_Apples wrote: »No, they are 100% Gambling. 100%.
If they were banned, then they'd sell costumes for $20 a piece- wait, they already do that.
Canned_Apples wrote: »No, they are 100% Gambling. 100%.
If they were banned, then they'd sell costumes for $20 a piece- wait, they already do that.
Not gambling. You purchase a crate knowing it will contain at least four items and you get at least four items.
LittlePinkDot wrote: »So Crown Crates could be made illegal but would this be the end of them; maybe not.
There is nothing to stop ZOS from adding them ingame for in game currencies.
I think they could also get round the legalities of the gambling laws if they offered them as part of a package (so many per month when you pay for ESO plus).
If they do both of the above the crates gained from ESO plus are actually a bonus perk of something you can buy ingame and therefore not classed as gambling but just a boosted game perk.
This would possibably generate extra interest in ESO+ and therefore extra income.
Just a thought but I cannot see any gaming company completely getting rid of something they have invested so much in but instead a different way of generating revenue from them.
This IMO is also a much more moral way of using them.
ESO is rated mature. Its not intended for kids. Adults are allowed to make their own choices. So I see no reason why they would be banned.
It isn't a case of whether we want them banning or not that wasn't what this thread is about. That choice has already been taken away from the Belgians.
There are also 14 others countries looking at doing the same and one state in the US. So our choice may be immaterial.
The idea behind this thread was could they be implemented in a way that would not be considered gambling.
Siohwenoeht wrote: »Personally I have a tough time with this issue.
Crates aren't a problem for me, I sub so crowns build up and when there's nothing in the store I want outright, I may get a set of crates.
My conflict comes from a perspective that I'd rather not have too much regulation in my life lol. Plus relying on legislation to fix mental health issue, if it's to the point of a gambling addiction, doesn't sit well at all.
Maybe I'm too old school but if you can't regulate your own behavior then it's time to get help, not ban things that the majority have no issue regulating on their own.
Just my 2 cents.
redspecter23 wrote: »The crates are designed to be sold for money. They could add them to the game for in game currencies, but they don't benefit from that. Putting them in the game might seem great from a player point of view, but spinning that wheel over and over again and getting trash (even if it only cost in game currency) would get old fast. RNG has never been overly popular as a reward method.
LittlePinkDot wrote: »LittlePinkDot wrote: »So Crown Crates could be made illegal but would this be the end of them; maybe not.
There is nothing to stop ZOS from adding them ingame for in game currencies.
I think they could also get round the legalities of the gambling laws if they offered them as part of a package (so many per month when you pay for ESO plus).
If they do both of the above the crates gained from ESO plus are actually a bonus perk of something you can buy ingame and therefore not classed as gambling but just a boosted game perk.
This would possibably generate extra interest in ESO+ and therefore extra income.
Just a thought but I cannot see any gaming company completely getting rid of something they have invested so much in but instead a different way of generating revenue from them.
This IMO is also a much more moral way of using them.
ESO is rated mature. Its not intended for kids. Adults are allowed to make their own choices. So I see no reason why they would be banned.
It isn't a case of whether we want them banning or not that wasn't what this thread is about. That choice has already been taken away from the Belgians.
There are also 14 others countries looking at doing the same and one state in the US. So our choice may be immaterial.
The idea behind this thread was could they be implemented in a way that would not be considered gambling.
But wasnt the reason Belgium had a problem with it was because children cant gamble? Wasnt Starwars battlefront marketed to kids?
How is gambling in a MMO for adults any different than gambling with online slots or online poker, blackjack?
If its only for adults than it would be easy to launch a lawsuit for the ban being unconstitutional.
LittlePinkDot wrote: »LittlePinkDot wrote: »So Crown Crates could be made illegal but would this be the end of them; maybe not.
There is nothing to stop ZOS from adding them ingame for in game currencies.
I think they could also get round the legalities of the gambling laws if they offered them as part of a package (so many per month when you pay for ESO plus).
If they do both of the above the crates gained from ESO plus are actually a bonus perk of something you can buy ingame and therefore not classed as gambling but just a boosted game perk.
This would possibably generate extra interest in ESO+ and therefore extra income.
Just a thought but I cannot see any gaming company completely getting rid of something they have invested so much in but instead a different way of generating revenue from them.
This IMO is also a much more moral way of using them.
ESO is rated mature. Its not intended for kids. Adults are allowed to make their own choices. So I see no reason why they would be banned.
It isn't a case of whether we want them banning or not that wasn't what this thread is about. That choice has already been taken away from the Belgians.
There are also 14 others countries looking at doing the same and one state in the US. So our choice may be immaterial.
The idea behind this thread was could they be implemented in a way that would not be considered gambling.
But wasnt the reason Belgium had a problem with it was because children cant gamble? Wasnt Starwars battlefront marketed to kids?
How is gambling in a MMO for adults any different than gambling with online slots or online poker, blackjack?
If its only for adults than it would be easy to launch a lawsuit for the ban being unconstitutional.
I don't know the reason that they were banned there and again the point of the thread isn't whether they should be banned or not. It is if they were banned would they still exist in any form.
My OP did not ask whether one thought they should be banned and as I have said we may not have any say in the matter if they are made illegal.
Also, EA defied the ban for months then decide to agree in the end to follow it.
Don't you think that if there were any loopholes they would have been found by their lawyers?
lordrichter wrote: »Canned_Apples wrote: »No, they are 100% Gambling. 100%.
If they were banned, then they'd sell costumes for $20 a piece- wait, they already do that.
Not gambling. You purchase a crate knowing it will contain at least four items and you get at least four items.
Odd thing I noticed... You really don't hear anyone bragging about those consolation prizes that they get when they lose gambling with Crown Crates.They brag about the mounts, particularly the Radiant Apex ones, or about the Gems that they farmed.
NoTimeToWait wrote: »If crates were banned, Pacrooti would be one sad cat
rope_bunny wrote: »Crown Crates aren't really gambling. If you don't get what you want, usually you can just extract the items you don't want in exchange for gems and get what you want that way with the exception of Radiant Apex Mounts.
They are 100% gambling. You pay your money and you take your chances.
Jayman1000 wrote: »Oh yeah sure it is the politicians job to make better laws. But videogame companies are still implementing gambling in their games by circumventing laws. They found a way to "break the law" without actually breaking it. I think it is a deplorable practice.
LittlePinkDot wrote: »LittlePinkDot wrote: »LittlePinkDot wrote: »So Crown Crates could be made illegal but would this be the end of them; maybe not.
There is nothing to stop ZOS from adding them ingame for in game currencies.
I think they could also get round the legalities of the gambling laws if they offered them as part of a package (so many per month when you pay for ESO plus).
If they do both of the above the crates gained from ESO plus are actually a bonus perk of something you can buy ingame and therefore not classed as gambling but just a boosted game perk.
This would possibably generate extra interest in ESO+ and therefore extra income.
Just a thought but I cannot see any gaming company completely getting rid of something they have invested so much in but instead a different way of generating revenue from them.
This IMO is also a much more moral way of using them.
ESO is rated mature. Its not intended for kids. Adults are allowed to make their own choices. So I see no reason why they would be banned.
It isn't a case of whether we want them banning or not that wasn't what this thread is about. That choice has already been taken away from the Belgians.
There are also 14 others countries looking at doing the same and one state in the US. So our choice may be immaterial.
The idea behind this thread was could they be implemented in a way that would not be considered gambling.
But wasnt the reason Belgium had a problem with it was because children cant gamble? Wasnt Starwars battlefront marketed to kids?
How is gambling in a MMO for adults any different than gambling with online slots or online poker, blackjack?
If its only for adults than it would be easy to launch a lawsuit for the ban being unconstitutional.
I don't know the reason that they were banned there and again the point of the thread isn't whether they should be banned or not. It is if they were banned would they still exist in any form.
My OP did not ask whether one thought they should be banned and as I have said we may not have any say in the matter if they are made illegal.
Also, EA defied the ban for months then decide to agree in the end to follow it.
Don't you think that if there were any loopholes they would have been found by their lawyers?
Its not about finding loop holes. Its about if they feel confident enough that they will sell enough copies of a game if its 21+ to play in the states and 18 or 19+ everywhere else. They cannot back track on games that have already been released. But they can easily market any future games as adult only.
ESO will never have this problem because it was always been intended for adults.
A side note.. I find it funny that the Netherlands banned loot crate considering you can go into what they call "a smart shop" and buy "truffles" made from magic mushrooms, take the strongest dose one and you are practically on a bull blown acid trip in Amsterdam... Perfectly legal.
They're not gambling as covered by law, but they are exactly the same methods used in some gabling. It's essentially gambling that doesn't have to be regulated because you're buying a product, not trying to get more money back.rope_bunny wrote: »Crown Crates aren't really gambling. If you don't get what you want, usually you can just extract the items you don't want in exchange for gems and get what you want that way with the exception of Radiant Apex Mounts.
The only way to obtain gems is to buy crates, and that's a pretty bad rate.
Radiant Apex Mounts can't be purchased for gems, thus you have to keep playing to win.
You can't choose to turn everything into gems, only consumables or duplicates.
There are now gem exclusive items which require you to constantly buy crates to get the currency needed to buy the items.
It's predatory and insulting business model used to extract as much money from the customer as possible.
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