Why Loot Boxes ARE an issue

  • WiseSky
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    WiseSky wrote: »
    Did you just refer to me as a "Killer" ?

    No, he referred to you by a nickname/etc, like "buddy", "chief", "sport", "bub", "amigo", "bro", etc.

    (https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/334424/is-there-a-word-for-colloquial-forms-of-address)

    confusing as one of the Labels they talk about is "Killer" in that presentation that CEO did in their first post

  • kargen27
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    Lostar wrote: »
    kargen27 wrote: »
    I'm not arguing that crates might not be a problem for people with a personality that lends towards addictions. They certainly can be addictive. They are not gambling.
    I don't feel they need be restricted to all because the actions of the few. Again that responsible adult thing.

    How about adults who are atypical? You know, they exist right? Like Autistic adults? Adults who do not have the prowess to navigate the world with such ease. And yet, there are other predatory practices like scamming grandma because she doesn't know Microsoft wouldn't have any interest in her Google Play Gift Cards, and no one has an issue shunning those scammers?? Grandpa has been around for years.. he should know better, right??! How about them? You know... you're right.. we shouldn't bubble wrap society.. BUT WE SHOULD ban practices that were CONSTRUCTED from the ground up to be PREDATORY. Watch the video I posted. It is exactly what Zenimax Online Studios has been doing. Watch it.. and THEN tell me what you really think.

    You are comparing illegal activities to scam individuals to legal activities. I watched the video. None of that is new nor exclusive to the gaming industry. McDonalds monopoly game where you can earn a medium fry on your next visit by scratching a piece of paper is an example. Farther back (late 1800s) we had S&H Green Stamps. Businesses are built around two things. Serving their customers and making a profit. Different companies vary as to which is the priority and how much a priority.
    I believe if the majority of people can see the offer for what it is and have the information needed to make a sound decision for them then the offer is above board. Companies pick fonts and colors of their containers to entice more buying. Fast food places pick a different color scheme inside than other types of restaurants. In the 70s and 80s the colors were designed to make you not to want to linger. Then mid 90s or so they shifted some to more calming colors. McDonalds realized early on that children often pick where to eat when a family is traveling. That is in part why they had bright colors a clown and all that fun stuff. For the adults a burger is a burger. For kids McDonalds is fun.
    Slot machines have lots of lights and bells because people would rather play a machine that has a commotion when they win rather than one that pays more but has nothing special happen. Fear of missing out is a real thing and to that end limited time offers have been around basically as long as we have. Fear of missing out might be why the apple was eaten so long ago in the garden. Two for one sales or punch your card eight times get a free sandwich have both been used for decades.

    All that is fine so long as the majority of people have information available to reach what would be considered a reasonable decision. I would hope that adults that need the help to navigate the world get it. I know that isn't always true but we can't take things away from all in an attempt to protect them. That protection should come from the people around them.
    and then the parrot said, "must be the water mines green too."
  • JavaRen
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    My (likely unpopular).question concerning all of this: who is responsible for decisions concerning your wallet? You, ZOS or the government?
  • Lostar
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    kargen27 wrote: »
    Lostar wrote: »
    kargen27 wrote: »
    I'm not arguing that crates might not be a problem for people with a personality that lends towards addictions. They certainly can be addictive. They are not gambling.
    I don't feel they need be restricted to all because the actions of the few. Again that responsible adult thing.

    How about adults who are atypical? You know, they exist right? Like Autistic adults? Adults who do not have the prowess to navigate the world with such ease. And yet, there are other predatory practices like scamming grandma because she doesn't know Microsoft wouldn't have any interest in her Google Play Gift Cards, and no one has an issue shunning those scammers?? Grandpa has been around for years.. he should know better, right??! How about them? You know... you're right.. we shouldn't bubble wrap society.. BUT WE SHOULD ban practices that were CONSTRUCTED from the ground up to be PREDATORY. Watch the video I posted. It is exactly what Zenimax Online Studios has been doing. Watch it.. and THEN tell me what you really think.

    You are comparing illegal activities to scam individuals to legal activities. I watched the video. None of that is new nor exclusive to the gaming industry. McDonalds monopoly game where you can earn a medium fry on your next visit by scratching a piece of paper is an example. Farther back (late 1800s) we had S&H Green Stamps. Businesses are built around two things. Serving their customers and making a profit. Different companies vary as to which is the priority and how much a priority.
    I believe if the majority of people can see the offer for what it is and have the information needed to make a sound decision for them then the offer is above board. Companies pick fonts and colors of their containers to entice more buying. Fast food places pick a different color scheme inside than other types of restaurants. In the 70s and 80s the colors were designed to make you not to want to linger. Then mid 90s or so they shifted some to more calming colors. McDonalds realized early on that children often pick where to eat when a family is traveling. That is in part why they had bright colors a clown and all that fun stuff. For the adults a burger is a burger. For kids McDonalds is fun.
    Slot machines have lots of lights and bells because people would rather play a machine that has a commotion when they win rather than one that pays more but has nothing special happen. Fear of missing out is a real thing and to that end limited time offers have been around basically as long as we have. Fear of missing out might be why the apple was eaten so long ago in the garden. Two for one sales or punch your card eight times get a free sandwich have both been used for decades.

    All that is fine so long as the majority of people have information available to reach what would be considered a reasonable decision. I would hope that adults that need the help to navigate the world get it. I know that isn't always true but we can't take things away from all in an attempt to protect them. That protection should come from the people around them.

    Concerning the Mcdonald's monopoly game; that isn't gambling. You are buying a product; the fries. The sticker with it that gives you a tiny chance to win something might be an incentive to some.. but at the end of the day, most people who buy McDonald's fries are just buying McDonald's fries. The chance to win something is just an added bonus.

    In short; As an RPer, cosmetics are essential for our playstyle, and our immersion. None of us should be coerced into gambling in the hopes of acquiring a cosmetic that is as useful to us just as the BiS weapon is to a high-end raider.. players have a fit when a game puts a BiS weapon in a cash shop. That cosmetic is OUR P2W... not really but there is a parallel and the gaming industry knows it and they have exploited it for years and will continue to because the RP community is not taken seriously.
    Edited by Lostar on June 26, 2022 2:32AM
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Lostar
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    JavaRen wrote: »
    My (likely unpopular).question concerning all of this: who is responsible for decisions concerning your wallet? You, ZOS or the government?

    The individual. That isn't the point.

    Here's my question:

    Are loot boxes a predatory practice?
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Syldras
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    I've been watching this for a while. Could you please stop speaking for whole groups ("us roleplayers") of people when uttering your personal opinion? Also it would be appropriate not to make assumptions about people you have never even spoken to before. Oh, and insulting people for their use of grammar doesn't make your arguments any better; there are also people who are not native English speakers in an international forum, you know?

    That said, I'm not exactly a fan of loot boxes or even microtransactions in general. I wouldn't mind loot boxes being removed (or replaced by a better model where you get exactly the item you pay for), although I also strongly believe in personal responsibility - people expecting others (e.g. the government) to protect them from everything and basically relieving them of every individual decision can lead to rather problematic developments. But discussing this would lead to far here, I assume.

    Just another thing that makes me wonder, though:
    Lostar wrote: »
    I come to this in not saving us all... I know people who are not invested in cosmetics like us RPers are could care less.. just as I could care less if they added a P2W mechanic in the game.. not anymore. I use to. But RPers have been abandoned and dismissed because our cosmetics are not essential to YOU and YOUR playstyle.
    I fight not for YOU. I fight for ME. For MY enjoyment of this game being tarnished everytime I see a really useful cosmetic in a crown crate. One that would blow my next story arch session up to new levels just as much as it would give you all those easy kills if you could only pay to win.

    Why are cosmetics essential for roleplay? I mean, I also dress my characters the way I consider it appropriate, but there's literally no cosmetic item I can think of that's a total "must" that I couldn't live without. It's not that my chars would have to walk around naked and bald without loot box items.
    Lostar wrote: »
    But I also speak up for those role players like myself who for years have been negatively affected because we are forced into GAMBLING if we are going to get that next aesthetic that will immerse us into our RP experiences

    I might be old-fashioned, but I just... use my imagination from time to time?!
    @Syldras | PC | EU
    The forceful expression of will gives true honor to the Ancestors.
    Sarayn Andrethi, Telvanni mage (Main)
    Darvasa Andrethi, his "I'm NOT a Necromancer!" sister
    Malacar Sunavarlas, Altmer Ayleid vampire
    Soris Rethandus, a Sleeper not yet awake
  • WiseSky
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    Lostar wrote: »
    WiseSky wrote: »
    Lostar wrote: »
    WiseSky wrote: »
    As long as it's not P2W it's ok in my book.

    Would I like that each thing in the crates is free, Sure why not.

    Earnable sure why not.

    at least the game is 18+

    But every for profit company is there to make a profit and they will do their best to do so.

    Wen they introduce stuff like Diablo Immortal then they would have crossed the line.

    Till then Fingers crossed and Faith in Mara

    Oh yes. The goal post has moved, killer. Thank you Blizzard for stooping to a new low.. may no other IPs that we love adopt such predatory practices. I would like the crownstore to remain, as well as ESO+ which I subscribe to annually. No exploiting FOMO with "limited time" offers. I, and many others, demand gambling be removed.

    The goal post is always being moved. 10 years ago, gamers would bawk at what the great many don't bat an eye at today. We are being conditioned to be milked on the macro level as a gaming community.

    Did you just refer to me as a "Killer" ?

    There are many studies about "The Harmful Effects of Labeling People, Ourselves and Others", they usually make individuals see the world through a rigid lenses and people fall in-between being back or white , without any nuance of their complexities or any desire to understand them.

    The only thing tieing us to the label "gamer" in this context is that we both presumably play ESO, I doubt we have the same definition of the meaning of that labeling word.

    The goal post is always being moved when we enter in conversations with other individuals as everyone has different goals, values and beliefs.

    If someone feels like they are being exploited and FOMOed and Milked on the macro level, not everyone also has those same feelings or beliefs as you might have.

    You could be coming from the point of view that you are coming to Save us, as you are now informed where we may not be, and changing our points of views and paths is actually for our own good.

    But the bottom line might be this...

    What is your solution to the for Profit Gaming Complex without any shareholders at the table dictating the bottom line, but instead the main goal is the best game possible for "Gamers"?

    here is a Loot Crate Simulator for people to try out that I made for them to see the feel of buying crates

    If you read the original post you would understand the reference I was making. Yes.. it was a generic label and I was using it cheekily. Not seriously. It hasn't been the RPers who defend loot boxes as not gambling.. but those who are against P2W because their gaming focus is on .. well.. the game. Climbing leaderboards or beating the next boss or whatever. So I cheekily called you a "Killer" in reference to the video and the OP.

    I come to this in not saving us all... I know people who are not invested in cosmetics like us RPers are could care less.. just as I could care less if they added a P2W mechanic in the game.. not anymore. I use to. But RPers have been abandoned and dismissed because our cosmetics are not essential to YOU and YOUR playstyle.

    I fight not for YOU. I fight for ME. For MY enjoyment of this game being tarnished everytime I see a really useful cosmetic in a crown crate. One that would blow my next story arch session up to new levels just as much as it would give you all those easy kills if you could only pay to win. But I also speak up for those role players like myself who for years have been negatively affected because we are forced into GAMBLING if we are going to get that next aesthetic that will immerse us into our RP experiences. It's enough that we pay over $100 for some of the houses (which I have done gladly several times over because at least it is NOT gambling and I understand and appreciate the server load it must impact especially when I furnish that place up). But continuing to put not useful for YOU but VERY USEFUL FOR US cosmetics into a gambling system is harmful. I DO NOT want to gamble to get that hairstyle. And I already mentioned endeavors (CTRL+F "endeavors" because I'm not repeating myself again).

    Well as a Solo Role Player I totally feel for you, I really does suck to miss out on those goodies from the Crown Crates.

    And it's quite sad that much of the cosmetics are really valuable for people during their play sessions, I remember having to get the /Campfire emote for 40 Gems, and thinking how grateful I am that I have crafters for the gold I need to buy crates and benefactors for the RP and AddOn I am creating helping me with crowns if I ever needed any.

    True endgame is fashion for lots of us and being hidden behind the crates if someone does not adapt is quite hardcore.

    Our Time or our Money it shall cost if we wish to be in the fashion world of ESO, ignoring it is possible but it always will catch our eye.

    I see you do commissions, that is a neat way to earn crowns in the RP community, I myself might contact you as a commission would a cool prize for the addon we are creating for the writers.

  • JavaRen
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    I dislike the usage of predatory in this context. I will say that I find buying crates to be wasteful and foolish, but if others wish to make the informed decision to do so, then so be it. (Same as I feel about lottery,, lotto, etc)

    If you don't like a product, don't buy it. If you want a product then examine your budget and decide if you will purchase it. This is basic adulting.
  • dem0n1k
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    Crown crates are definitely gambling :) No one buys crates (or even opens free crates) thinking "i really want potions & poison!"... what they want is the apex prizes. I dislike this practice... not just with the crown crates but with all the RNG loot boxes. Such as the set piece boxes you can buy for TV in IC. It's just a tedious grind for no good reason other than to keep players grinding & that gaming model has lost all interest to me.

    I've recently played another popular game with no micro-transactions at all.. & it is very refreshing. Every item in the game, you can have it... you just to find it (or google it's location lol) & kill whatever is guarding it. Feels good.
    NA Server [PC] -- Mostly Ebonheart Pact, Mostly.
  • Lostar
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    Syldras wrote: »
    I've been watching this for a while. Could you please stop speaking for whole groups ("us roleplayers") of people when uttering your personal opinion? Also it would be appropriate not to make assumptions about people you have never even spoken to before. Oh, and insulting people for their use of grammar doesn't make your arguments any better; there are also people who are not native English speakers in an international forum, you know?

    That said, I'm not exactly a fan of loot boxes or even microtransactions in general. I wouldn't mind loot boxes being removed (or replaced by a better model where you get exactly the item you pay for), although I also strongly believe in personal responsibility - people expecting others (e.g. the government) to protect them from everything and basically relieving them of every individual decision can lead to rather problematic developments. But discussing this would lead to far here, I assume.

    Just another thing that makes me wonder, though:
    Lostar wrote: »
    I come to this in not saving us all... I know people who are not invested in cosmetics like us RPers are could care less.. just as I could care less if they added a P2W mechanic in the game.. not anymore. I use to. But RPers have been abandoned and dismissed because our cosmetics are not essential to YOU and YOUR playstyle.
    I fight not for YOU. I fight for ME. For MY enjoyment of this game being tarnished everytime I see a really useful cosmetic in a crown crate. One that would blow my next story arch session up to new levels just as much as it would give you all those easy kills if you could only pay to win.

    Why are cosmetics essential for roleplay? I mean, I also dress my characters the way I consider it appropriate, but there's literally no cosmetic item I can think of that's a total "must" that I couldn't live without. It's not that my chars would have to walk around naked and bald without loot box items.
    Lostar wrote: »
    But I also speak up for those role players like myself who for years have been negatively affected because we are forced into GAMBLING if we are going to get that next aesthetic that will immerse us into our RP experiences

    I might be old-fashioned, but I just... use my imagination from time to time?!

    You're right about the 'us'.. I should basically be clear and mean my friends.. the ones who are upset because if they're going to get that new hairstyle, they need to gamble for it now since there is no way to get enough seals before the rotation. If you want it.. You have to gamble. It is gambling. Gambling should have no part in any MMO. Can we agree on that much? No one should feel coerced into gambling in order to have a chance of acquiring anything that they find useful or enjoyable to them no matter if I or you or anyone thinks that item/cosmetic is useless.

    About the grammar thing. I edited that out hours ago. I admit, I got heated but a minute later I cooled down and deleted it cause it was wrong of me to say and I regretted it the moment I posted it.

    So.. Who else wants to defend the ABSO-HECKING-LOOTLY PREDATORIAL PRACTICE of loot boxes.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7S-DGTBZU14&ab_channel=JimSterling
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Lostar
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    JavaRen wrote: »
    I dislike the usage of predatory in this context. I will say that I find buying crates to be wasteful and foolish, but if others wish to make the informed decision to do so, then so be it. (Same as I feel about lottery,, lotto, etc)

    If you don't like a product, don't buy it. If you want a product then examine your budget and decide if you will purchase it. This is basic adulting.

    If I could buy the product directly, then yes. But if I want a product that is behind an RNG box... then your argument falls apart and yes it is predatory.
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Malthorne
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    JavaRen wrote: »
    I dislike the usage of predatory in this context. I will say that I find buying crates to be wasteful and foolish, but if others wish to make the informed decision to do so, then so be it. (Same as I feel about lottery,, lotto, etc)

    If you don't like a product, don't buy it. If you want a product then examine your budget and decide if you will purchase it. This is basic adulting.

    Loot boxes foster addiction and are designed to target vulnerable consumers. Predatory seems to be the appropriate adjective here.
  • xaraan
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    kargen27 wrote: »
    Crown crates are not gambling. You purchase a crown crate knowing it will give you a minimum number of items. You always get at least that minimum number. Crown crates are no more gambling than trading cards that come with a stick of gum are gambling.
    That said I would prefer they got rid of the crown crates and maybe even the crown store altogether and went back to a required subscription to play.

    They are gambling. If all it took was to give someone a base reward not worth the money they paid to mean something wasn't gambling, then it would be happening everywhere in the US not just Vegas. There is a reason that loophole doesn't just let people open casinos nationwide and give everyone a nikel for every game they enter and say "look, they always win something, it doesn't count."

    The stick of gun/trading card thing is a strawman, which is just a way to get people arguing about a different topic instead of the current one (But I'd be all for banning that sort o crap with cards as well). So back to real topic:

    Gambling: "staking of something of value, with consciousness of risk and hope of gain, on the outcome of a game, a contest, or an uncertain event whose result may be determined by chance" -- Crowns = something of value (bought with real world cash). Risk and hope of gain? Are people buying the crates to get the smallest reward possible? Would crates still sell if that's all they had? Or are the taking that risk hoping they will win a valuable item and gain something greater? Are crates a certain event? Do you always know what you will get before you get it, or could you get items of varying value? -- So sounds like gambling to me.
    Edited by xaraan on June 26, 2022 2:55AM
    -- @xaraan --
    nightblade: Xaraan templar: Xaraan-dar dragon-knight: Xaraanosaurus necromancer: Xaraan-qa warden: Xaraanodon sorcerer: Xaraan-ra
    AD • NA • PC
  • mavfin
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    The loot crates are not any issue at all. All you have to do is control yourself enough to not buy them.

    How the game company monetizes the game is not for us, the players, to dictate.

    If you don't like the practices of the game company, that's fine. No one's forcing you to play the game.

    You don't own the game, the game company does, and there's lots of other games out there that may or may not fix what is bothering you about this one.

    As far as the government...I'd rather not involve them. I trust them a LOT less than I do the game company. At least if I don't like how ZOS does things, I can just walk away.

    In the end, you only get one real choice. Play the game...or not. The rest is just noise.
  • Amottica
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    I ceased reading half way through that paragraph and did not bother watching the video. The reason is OP is discussing P2W and crates have absolutely nothing to do with P2W as it does nothing to help someone win.

    In other words, the title seems to have nothing to do with what the message in the thread is speaking to.

    I am not a big consumer of cash shop items and I am here to play a game and enjoy the game itself. However, myself, like others, would rather be able to make a direct choice on buying something or not buying it vs a dice roll on what I will get.

    However, there are enough people with presumably more cash to toss away that are willing to buy crates upon crates in the hopes of getting something they want, and that si what drives the crates. Threads that complain about crates will do nothing to cease their sales as the stream of money going into the bank account of Zenimax drowns all this out.

    But they are not P2W by any stretch.

  • spartaxoxo
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    kargen27 wrote: »
    Lostar wrote: »
    Merriam-Webster definition of gambling
    : the practice or activity of betting : the practice of risking money or other stakes in a game or bet. <check>

    Exactly. So crates are not gambling as you are not risking real money to purchase the crates.

    It literally says "or other stakes" right there. Poker isn't gambling guys, you use poker chips not real cash! Crown crates are absolutely gambling. Getting something each time doesn't make it not gambling. This is why casinos can't just give you a cheap piece of candy to escape gambling regulations. Gambling is games of chance and Crown Crates are obviously a game of chance.
    Edited by spartaxoxo on June 26, 2022 3:19AM
  • tonyblack
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    When i read threads like that I always think that those who complain about it assume that all crown crate items would suddenly become affordable but I doubt it would be the case. Ok, let’s imagine crates outlawed and gone, instead we’d get same shiny apex mounts selling for 25000 crowns and radiant apexes for 150000 (approximate rates comparable to amounts you need to get one from crates now). Would something like that be actually better? Because I can’t imagine them abandoning one of the main source of revenue. Personally i find current mini game a bit more entertaining mechanic than just outright spending huge amount of money on one specific item.
  • BretonMage
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    bmnoble wrote: »
    I am sorry but if someone has that little self control they should not be playing an online game with a cash shop. That goes for anyone young or old if you cannot prioritize your household bills over some shiny thing in a video game you should not be playing a game with in game purchases at all or at the very least have a guardian controlling their ability to make purchases.

    In any civilised society, people *should* be discouraged from preying on the vulnerable, and predatory practices are specifically designed to manipulate those with a weakness. I know people on the spectrum who really do have issues with impulse control and it can be a nightmare for them and those around them. And it goes without saying that these are people with just as many rights as any other person, including rights to gaming entertainment. To be honest, I'm embarrassed I even have to mention all this.

    It's nothing to us players not to have loot crate gambling. I think Endeavors was a great step in the right direction, and ZOS (and other companies) should continue to look into other ways to entice us with shinies without taking advantage of the more vulnerable amongst us.
  • Lostar
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    WiseSky wrote: »
    Lostar wrote: »
    WiseSky wrote: »
    Lostar wrote: »
    WiseSky wrote: »
    As long as it's not P2W it's ok in my book.

    Would I like that each thing in the crates is free, Sure why not.

    Earnable sure why not.

    at least the game is 18+

    But every for profit company is there to make a profit and they will do their best to do so.

    Wen they introduce stuff like Diablo Immortal then they would have crossed the line.

    Till then Fingers crossed and Faith in Mara

    Oh yes. The goal post has moved, killer. Thank you Blizzard for stooping to a new low.. may no other IPs that we love adopt such predatory practices. I would like the crownstore to remain, as well as ESO+ which I subscribe to annually. No exploiting FOMO with "limited time" offers. I, and many others, demand gambling be removed.

    The goal post is always being moved. 10 years ago, gamers would bawk at what the great many don't bat an eye at today. We are being conditioned to be milked on the macro level as a gaming community.

    Did you just refer to me as a "Killer" ?

    There are many studies about "The Harmful Effects of Labeling People, Ourselves and Others", they usually make individuals see the world through a rigid lenses and people fall in-between being back or white , without any nuance of their complexities or any desire to understand them.

    The only thing tieing us to the label "gamer" in this context is that we both presumably play ESO, I doubt we have the same definition of the meaning of that labeling word.

    The goal post is always being moved when we enter in conversations with other individuals as everyone has different goals, values and beliefs.

    If someone feels like they are being exploited and FOMOed and Milked on the macro level, not everyone also has those same feelings or beliefs as you might have.

    You could be coming from the point of view that you are coming to Save us, as you are now informed where we may not be, and changing our points of views and paths is actually for our own good.

    But the bottom line might be this...

    What is your solution to the for Profit Gaming Complex without any shareholders at the table dictating the bottom line, but instead the main goal is the best game possible for "Gamers"?

    here is a Loot Crate Simulator for people to try out that I made for them to see the feel of buying crates

    If you read the original post you would understand the reference I was making. Yes.. it was a generic label and I was using it cheekily. Not seriously. It hasn't been the RPers who defend loot boxes as not gambling.. but those who are against P2W because their gaming focus is on .. well.. the game. Climbing leaderboards or beating the next boss or whatever. So I cheekily called you a "Killer" in reference to the video and the OP.

    I come to this in not saving us all... I know people who are not invested in cosmetics like us RPers are could care less.. just as I could care less if they added a P2W mechanic in the game.. not anymore. I use to. But RPers have been abandoned and dismissed because our cosmetics are not essential to YOU and YOUR playstyle.

    I fight not for YOU. I fight for ME. For MY enjoyment of this game being tarnished everytime I see a really useful cosmetic in a crown crate. One that would blow my next story arch session up to new levels just as much as it would give you all those easy kills if you could only pay to win. But I also speak up for those role players like myself who for years have been negatively affected because we are forced into GAMBLING if we are going to get that next aesthetic that will immerse us into our RP experiences. It's enough that we pay over $100 for some of the houses (which I have done gladly several times over because at least it is NOT gambling and I understand and appreciate the server load it must impact especially when I furnish that place up). But continuing to put not useful for YOU but VERY USEFUL FOR US cosmetics into a gambling system is harmful. I DO NOT want to gamble to get that hairstyle. And I already mentioned endeavors (CTRL+F "endeavors" because I'm not repeating myself again).

    Well as a Solo Role Player I totally feel for you, I really does suck to miss out on those goodies from the Crown Crates.

    And it's quite sad that much of the cosmetics are really valuable for people during their play sessions, I remember having to get the /Campfire emote for 40 Gems, and thinking how grateful I am that I have crafters for the gold I need to buy crates and benefactors for the RP and AddOn I am creating helping me with crowns if I ever needed any.

    True endgame is fashion for lots of us and being hidden behind the crates if someone does not adapt is quite hardcore.

    Our Time or our Money it shall cost if we wish to be in the fashion world of ESO, ignoring it is possible but it always will catch our eye.

    I see you do commissions, that is a neat way to earn crowns in the RP community, I myself might contact you as a commission would a cool prize for the addon we are creating for the writers.

    I indeed do art commissions but I am currently working on a final piece after being booked and I'm finishing up that one before I open up to anymore but if you are seriously interested, you can find out more information from that link as to how to contact me in discord. :) Just remind me that you're WiseSky from the ESO forums.
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Syldras
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    Lostar wrote: »
    So.. Who else wants to defend the ABSO-HECKING-LOOTLY PREDATORIAL PRACTICE of loot boxes.

    I didn't defend them. As I said, I don't like the concept of microtransactions at all, and still remember the "good old days" where you just bought a game or at least had a subscription with a fixed monthly rate, and that was it - no extra costs. But microtransactions seem unavoidable now, as many publishers have made their games free to play and earn their money through "extras" instead. This is nothing consumers can change (except for avoiding games with this financial concept, if they aren't okay with it - if enough people did this, companies would have to reconsider their strategy; but let's be honest: I don't think this will happen anymore).

    I just think that it's problematic to expect everything that can be potentially harmful to people to be legally banned. Already now I have the impression that many people tend to rely too much on what other people tell them (whether it's the government, "experts" of all sorts, media, or whatever types of authority figures) and therefore stop thinking for themselves. They blindly assume that other people may decide what's good and correct for them, and they don't even question it anymore. If it's truly an informed and well-meaning person, it does no direct harm - but as soon as it's not, blind trust can be really harmful. Same goes for the problem that some people already rely on official statements so much that they consider everything harmless that's not officially warned about or forbidden.

    So, in my opinion, people should be encouraged to think, to question and to be responsible adults who are able to make their own informed decisions. They should be informed about problems - but in the end, they should decide for themselves. That's all I was about.
    @Syldras | PC | EU
    The forceful expression of will gives true honor to the Ancestors.
    Sarayn Andrethi, Telvanni mage (Main)
    Darvasa Andrethi, his "I'm NOT a Necromancer!" sister
    Malacar Sunavarlas, Altmer Ayleid vampire
    Soris Rethandus, a Sleeper not yet awake
  • Lostar
    Lostar
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    tonyblack wrote: »
    When i read threads like that I always think that those who complain about it assume that all crown crate items would suddenly become affordable but I doubt it would be the case. Ok, let’s imagine crates outlawed and gone, instead we’d get same shiny apex mounts selling for 25000 crowns and radiant apexes for 150000 (approximate rates comparable to amounts you need to get one from crates now). Would something like that be actually better? Because I can’t imagine them abandoning one of the main source of revenue. Personally i find current mini game a bit more entertaining mechanic than just outright spending huge amount of money on one specific item.

    Honestly. I would prefer this. Yes. Definitely. You mean I can just BUY it and not be coerced into gambling to acquire it? Yes. Please. This isn't about personal affordability. What I can afford differs from what others can afford and visa versa. That is not the point.

    The point is, as a role player, where I find most of my enjoyment is from cosmetics and acquiring that immersive look or emote for my playstyle, I should not be coerced into gambling in order to gain this item. I would rather buy it outright.
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Lostar
    Lostar
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    BretonMage wrote: »
    bmnoble wrote: »
    I am sorry but if someone has that little self control they should not be playing an online game with a cash shop. That goes for anyone young or old if you cannot prioritize your household bills over some shiny thing in a video game you should not be playing a game with in game purchases at all or at the very least have a guardian controlling their ability to make purchases.

    In any civilised society, people *should* be discouraged from preying on the vulnerable, and predatory practices are specifically designed to manipulate those with a weakness. I know people on the spectrum who really do have issues with impulse control and it can be a nightmare for them and those around them. And it goes without saying that these are people with just as many rights as any other person, including rights to gaming entertainment. To be honest, I'm embarrassed I even have to mention all this.

    It's nothing to us players not to have loot crate gambling. I think Endeavors was a great step in the right direction, and ZOS (and other companies) should continue to look into other ways to entice us with shinies without taking advantage of the more vulnerable amongst us.

    The endeavors were a step.. there certainly needs to be a few more steps. It should not take almost an entire calendar year of doing endeavors every day, the weekly every week, to acquire just one of the top mounts. Along with constantly shifting what is available and taking advantage of people's sense of FOMO.

    Also, well said. All of this. Thank you!
    Edited by Lostar on June 26, 2022 3:51AM
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Lostar
    Lostar
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    Syldras wrote: »
    Lostar wrote: »
    So.. Who else wants to defend the ABSO-HECKING-LOOTLY PREDATORIAL PRACTICE of loot boxes.

    "I didn't defend them."

    Sorry. That was not to you. That was to the general community at large and those who have, in earlier posts, dismissed the claims that the loot boxes are predatorial. Anyways, reading the rest of your post.
    Edited by Lostar on June 26, 2022 3:46AM
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Lostar
    Lostar
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    Syldras wrote: »
    Lostar wrote: »
    So.. Who else wants to defend the ABSO-HECKING-LOOTLY PREDATORIAL PRACTICE of loot boxes.

    I didn't defend them. As I said, I don't like the concept of microtransactions at all, and still remember the "good old days" where you just bought a game or at least had a subscription with a fixed monthly rate, and that was it - no extra costs. But microtransactions seem unavoidable now, as many publishers have made their games free to play and earn their money through "extras" instead. This is nothing consumers can change (except for avoiding games with this financial concept, if they aren't okay with it - if enough people did this, companies would have to reconsider their strategy; but let's be honest: I don't think this will happen anymore).

    I just think that it's problematic to expect everything that can be potentially harmful to people to be legally banned. Already now I have the impression that many people tend to rely too much on what other people tell them (whether it's the government, "experts" of all sorts, media, or whatever types of authority figures) and therefore stop thinking for themselves. They blindly assume that other people may decide what's good and correct for them, and they don't even question it anymore. If it's truly an informed and well-meaning person, it does no direct harm - but as soon as it's not, blind trust can be really harmful. Same goes for the problem that some people already rely on official statements so much that they consider everything harmless that's not officially warned about or forbidden.

    So, in my opinion, people should be encouraged to think, to question and to be responsible adults who are able to make their own informed decisions. They should be informed about problems - but in the end, they should decide for themselves. That's all I was about.

    Certainly, with such a beloved Ip that I've had a long affair with since the days of Daggerfall, there is no stopping this train so long as we ride its rails. But we are still allowed to insist that this is bad for the game. That this is predatory to the vulnerable. [snip] I hate to mention World of Warcraft; and yes, it was a subscription, but they managed without even a cash shop. As did many others from EverQuest and on up back in the golden years.. the pressure of making money and outperforming each other within the gaming industry not through gaming innovation but instead through monetization has long been an insidious boil that we just tolerate now. Some of us are far better at it than others.

    As to your final point, BretonMage really does speak my own thoughts on the manner quite well. They posted just before you. A good read.

    [edited for bashing]
    Edited by ZOS_Icy on June 26, 2022 4:05PM
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • kargen27
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    xaraan wrote: »
    kargen27 wrote: »
    Crown crates are not gambling. You purchase a crown crate knowing it will give you a minimum number of items. You always get at least that minimum number. Crown crates are no more gambling than trading cards that come with a stick of gum are gambling.
    That said I would prefer they got rid of the crown crates and maybe even the crown store altogether and went back to a required subscription to play.

    They are gambling. If all it took was to give someone a base reward not worth the money they paid to mean something wasn't gambling, then it would be happening everywhere in the US not just Vegas. There is a reason that loophole doesn't just let people open casinos nationwide and give everyone a nikel for every game they enter and say "look, they always win something, it doesn't count."

    The stick of gun/trading card thing is a strawman, which is just a way to get people arguing about a different topic instead of the current one (But I'd be all for banning that sort o crap with cards as well). So back to real topic:

    Gambling: "staking of something of value, with consciousness of risk and hope of gain, on the outcome of a game, a contest, or an uncertain event whose result may be determined by chance" -- Crowns = something of value (bought with real world cash). Risk and hope of gain? Are people buying the crates to get the smallest reward possible? Would crates still sell if that's all they had? Or are the taking that risk hoping they will win a valuable item and gain something greater? Are crates a certain event? Do you always know what you will get before you get it, or could you get items of varying value? -- So sounds like gambling to me.

    Crowns have no real world value. ZoS is very precise and clear on that being the case. Crowns can only be redeemed for in game items. Again I am not saying there is no problem with crown crates. I am saying they are not legally nor by definition gambling. You spend money to get a set number of crowns that are then used to get a set number of crates. US gambling laws do not apply to crowns or crown crates because they do not meet the legal definition of gambling. Addictive maybe, but not gambling. Just like buying a pack of sports cards is not considered gambling. I know you don't like that comparison but it is exactly the same thing other than with the cards you are spending actual real world currency. You know how many cards you will get just not which cards. Same with crates you know how many items you will get just not what items.
    This is actually becoming a popular device for selling things across the business spectrum. You can pay a certain amount each month to get a "surprise" box. A company offers sewing kits. You know you will get something to sew but not exactly what. Another offers fishing equipment. You know you will get an assortment of lures but not what lures.
    Crates can prey on people with a certain personality but that doesn't make them gambling.

    Edited to add the casino thing doesn't apply because the chips can be redeemed for real world currency. You can cash out when you leave the casino. With crowns they are worth nothing outside the game.
    Edited by kargen27 on June 26, 2022 3:55AM
    and then the parrot said, "must be the water mines green too."
  • Ratzkifal
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    Lostar wrote: »
    BretonMage wrote: »
    bmnoble wrote: »
    I am sorry but if someone has that little self control they should not be playing an online game with a cash shop. That goes for anyone young or old if you cannot prioritize your household bills over some shiny thing in a video game you should not be playing a game with in game purchases at all or at the very least have a guardian controlling their ability to make purchases.

    In any civilised society, people *should* be discouraged from preying on the vulnerable, and predatory practices are specifically designed to manipulate those with a weakness. I know people on the spectrum who really do have issues with impulse control and it can be a nightmare for them and those around them. And it goes without saying that these are people with just as many rights as any other person, including rights to gaming entertainment. To be honest, I'm embarrassed I even have to mention all this.

    It's nothing to us players not to have loot crate gambling. I think Endeavors was a great step in the right direction, and ZOS (and other companies) should continue to look into other ways to entice us with shinies without taking advantage of the more vulnerable amongst us.

    The endeavors were a step.. there certainly needs to be a few more steps. It should not take almost an entire calendar year of doing endeavors every day, the weekly every week, to acquire just one of the top mounts. Along with constantly shifting what is available and taking advantage of people's sense of FOMO.

    This is still an understatement of how bad this system is. They are adding more items to the endeavor shop faster than you can gain seals. So long as you are interested in at least one apex every season, you can never catch up, you can never do enough to get all the items you want and that is assuming you never miss a single day of endeavors.
    And this isn't even taking into account that the crown crates have a massive head start of things you might want to have from previous seasons.
    This Bosmer was tortured to death. There is nothing left to be done.
  • kargen27
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    Lostar wrote: »
    kargen27 wrote: »
    Lostar wrote: »
    kargen27 wrote: »
    I'm not arguing that crates might not be a problem for people with a personality that lends towards addictions. They certainly can be addictive. They are not gambling.
    I don't feel they need be restricted to all because the actions of the few. Again that responsible adult thing.

    How about adults who are atypical? You know, they exist right? Like Autistic adults? Adults who do not have the prowess to navigate the world with such ease. And yet, there are other predatory practices like scamming grandma because she doesn't know Microsoft wouldn't have any interest in her Google Play Gift Cards, and no one has an issue shunning those scammers?? Grandpa has been around for years.. he should know better, right??! How about them? You know... you're right.. we shouldn't bubble wrap society.. BUT WE SHOULD ban practices that were CONSTRUCTED from the ground up to be PREDATORY. Watch the video I posted. It is exactly what Zenimax Online Studios has been doing. Watch it.. and THEN tell me what you really think.

    You are comparing illegal activities to scam individuals to legal activities. I watched the video. None of that is new nor exclusive to the gaming industry. McDonalds monopoly game where you can earn a medium fry on your next visit by scratching a piece of paper is an example. Farther back (late 1800s) we had S&H Green Stamps. Businesses are built around two things. Serving their customers and making a profit. Different companies vary as to which is the priority and how much a priority.
    I believe if the majority of people can see the offer for what it is and have the information needed to make a sound decision for them then the offer is above board. Companies pick fonts and colors of their containers to entice more buying. Fast food places pick a different color scheme inside than other types of restaurants. In the 70s and 80s the colors were designed to make you not to want to linger. Then mid 90s or so they shifted some to more calming colors. McDonalds realized early on that children often pick where to eat when a family is traveling. That is in part why they had bright colors a clown and all that fun stuff. For the adults a burger is a burger. For kids McDonalds is fun.
    Slot machines have lots of lights and bells because people would rather play a machine that has a commotion when they win rather than one that pays more but has nothing special happen. Fear of missing out is a real thing and to that end limited time offers have been around basically as long as we have. Fear of missing out might be why the apple was eaten so long ago in the garden. Two for one sales or punch your card eight times get a free sandwich have both been used for decades.

    All that is fine so long as the majority of people have information available to reach what would be considered a reasonable decision. I would hope that adults that need the help to navigate the world get it. I know that isn't always true but we can't take things away from all in an attempt to protect them. That protection should come from the people around them.

    Concerning the Mcdonald's monopoly game; that isn't gambling. You are buying a product; the fries. The sticker with it that gives you a tiny chance to win something might be an incentive to some.. but at the end of the day, most people who buy McDonald's fries are just buying McDonald's fries. The chance to win something is just an added bonus.

    In short; As an RPer, cosmetics are essential for our playstyle, and our immersion. None of us should be coerced into gambling in the hopes of acquiring a cosmetic that is as useful to us just as the BiS weapon is to a high-end raider.. players have a fit when a game puts a BiS weapon in a cash shop. That cosmetic is OUR P2W... not really but there is a parallel and the gaming industry knows it and they have exploited it for years and will continue to because the RP community is not taken seriously.

    I know the cards are not gambling. They are a mechanic to get you to return to McDonalds. If you scratch a winner you can use it on your next visit. It is a way to entice the customer to return. I brought it up to point out that video had nothing new. It just applied tried and true tactics for business to a new form of business (game apps).
    and then the parrot said, "must be the water mines green too."
  • Lostar
    Lostar
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    kargen27 wrote: »
    xaraan wrote: »
    kargen27 wrote: »
    Crown crates are not gambling. You purchase a crown crate knowing it will give you a minimum number of items. You always get at least that minimum number. Crown crates are no more gambling than trading cards that come with a stick of gum are gambling.
    That said I would prefer they got rid of the crown crates and maybe even the crown store altogether and went back to a required subscription to play.

    They are gambling. If all it took was to give someone a base reward not worth the money they paid to mean something wasn't gambling, then it would be happening everywhere in the US not just Vegas. There is a reason that loophole doesn't just let people open casinos nationwide and give everyone a nikel for every game they enter and say "look, they always win something, it doesn't count."

    The stick of gun/trading card thing is a strawman, which is just a way to get people arguing about a different topic instead of the current one (But I'd be all for banning that sort o crap with cards as well). So back to real topic:

    Gambling: "staking of something of value, with consciousness of risk and hope of gain, on the outcome of a game, a contest, or an uncertain event whose result may be determined by chance" -- Crowns = something of value (bought with real world cash). Risk and hope of gain? Are people buying the crates to get the smallest reward possible? Would crates still sell if that's all they had? Or are the taking that risk hoping they will win a valuable item and gain something greater? Are crates a certain event? Do you always know what you will get before you get it, or could you get items of varying value? -- So sounds like gambling to me.

    Crowns have no real world value. ZoS is very precise and clear on that being the case. Crowns can only be redeemed for in game items. Again I am not saying there is no problem with crown crates. I am saying they are not legally nor by definition gambling. You spend money to get a set number of crowns that are then used to get a set number of crates. US gambling laws do not apply to crowns or crown crates because they do not meet the legal definition of gambling. Addictive maybe, but not gambling. Just like buying a pack of sports cards is not considered gambling. I know you don't like that comparison but it is exactly the same thing other than with the cards you are spending actual real world currency. You know how many cards you will get just not which cards. Same with crates you know how many items you will get just not what items.
    This is actually becoming a popular device for selling things across the business spectrum. You can pay a certain amount each month to get a "surprise" box. A company offers sewing kits. You know you will get something to sew but not exactly what. Another offers fishing equipment. You know you will get an assortment of lures but not what lures.
    Crates can prey on people with a certain personality but that doesn't make them gambling.

    Referring to the text I've bolded. So.. because ZOS says the crowns have no real world value despite only being able to acquire them through cash (like at a casino when you exchange your cash for chips) ... then... ZOS is automatically right because.. ZOS said so. I know you don't like that comparison (because you never bring mention to it) but crowns when used to purchase loot crates utilize the same thing that tokens do in a slot machine.
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Lostar
    Lostar
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    Ratzkifal wrote: »
    Lostar wrote: »
    BretonMage wrote: »
    bmnoble wrote: »
    I am sorry but if someone has that little self control they should not be playing an online game with a cash shop. That goes for anyone young or old if you cannot prioritize your household bills over some shiny thing in a video game you should not be playing a game with in game purchases at all or at the very least have a guardian controlling their ability to make purchases.

    In any civilised society, people *should* be discouraged from preying on the vulnerable, and predatory practices are specifically designed to manipulate those with a weakness. I know people on the spectrum who really do have issues with impulse control and it can be a nightmare for them and those around them. And it goes without saying that these are people with just as many rights as any other person, including rights to gaming entertainment. To be honest, I'm embarrassed I even have to mention all this.

    It's nothing to us players not to have loot crate gambling. I think Endeavors was a great step in the right direction, and ZOS (and other companies) should continue to look into other ways to entice us with shinies without taking advantage of the more vulnerable amongst us.

    The endeavors were a step.. there certainly needs to be a few more steps. It should not take almost an entire calendar year of doing endeavors every day, the weekly every week, to acquire just one of the top mounts. Along with constantly shifting what is available and taking advantage of people's sense of FOMO.

    This is still an understatement of how bad this system is. They are adding more items to the endeavor shop faster than you can gain seals. So long as you are interested in at least one apex every season, you can never catch up, you can never do enough to get all the items you want and that is assuming you never miss a single day of endeavors.
    And this isn't even taking into account that the crown crates have a massive head start of things you might want to have from previous seasons.

    I am trying to avoid being hyperbolic so yes, I understate just how absolutely absurd it is that the endeavor system is being used as a shield against criticism. XD
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
  • Lostar
    Lostar
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    Lostar wrote: »
    kargen27 wrote: »
    xaraan wrote: »
    kargen27 wrote: »
    Crown crates are not gambling. You purchase a crown crate knowing it will give you a minimum number of items. You always get at least that minimum number. Crown crates are no more gambling than trading cards that come with a stick of gum are gambling.
    That said I would prefer they got rid of the crown crates and maybe even the crown store altogether and went back to a required subscription to play.

    They are gambling. If all it took was to give someone a base reward not worth the money they paid to mean something wasn't gambling, then it would be happening everywhere in the US not just Vegas. There is a reason that loophole doesn't just let people open casinos nationwide and give everyone a nikel for every game they enter and say "look, they always win something, it doesn't count."

    The stick of gun/trading card thing is a strawman, which is just a way to get people arguing about a different topic instead of the current one (But I'd be all for banning that sort o crap with cards as well). So back to real topic:

    Gambling: "staking of something of value, with consciousness of risk and hope of gain, on the outcome of a game, a contest, or an uncertain event whose result may be determined by chance" -- Crowns = something of value (bought with real world cash). Risk and hope of gain? Are people buying the crates to get the smallest reward possible? Would crates still sell if that's all they had? Or are the taking that risk hoping they will win a valuable item and gain something greater? Are crates a certain event? Do you always know what you will get before you get it, or could you get items of varying value? -- So sounds like gambling to me.

    Crowns have no real world value. ZoS is very precise and clear on that being the case. Crowns can only be redeemed for in game items. Again I am not saying there is no problem with crown crates. I am saying they are not legally nor by definition gambling. You spend money to get a set number of crowns that are then used to get a set number of crates. US gambling laws do not apply to crowns or crown crates because they do not meet the legal definition of gambling. Addictive maybe, but not gambling. Just like buying a pack of sports cards is not considered gambling. I know you don't like that comparison but it is exactly the same thing other than with the cards you are spending actual real world currency. You know how many cards you will get just not which cards. Same with crates you know how many items you will get just not what items.
    This is actually becoming a popular device for selling things across the business spectrum. You can pay a certain amount each month to get a "surprise" box. A company offers sewing kits. You know you will get something to sew but not exactly what. Another offers fishing equipment. You know you will get an assortment of lures but not what lures.
    Crates can prey on people with a certain personality but that doesn't make them gambling.

    Referring to the text I've bolded. So.. because ZOS says the crowns have no real world value despite only being able to acquire them through cash (like at a casino when you exchange your cash for chips) ... then... ZOS is automatically right because.. ZOS said so. I know you don't like that comparison (because you never bring mention to it) but crowns when used to purchase loot crates utilize the same thing that tokens do in a slot machine.

    Also: the real world crates are GREAT.. they are usually WAY CHEAPER... like one of them I was subscribed to, a snack box from Turkey, was $26.. and I got like 20 PHYSICAL ITEMS... it is 5000 crowns which is $49.99 USD +tax... for digital goods.. digital goods that you can never claim actual ownership of.. so not only is it predatory and has no place in ESO .. it's overpriced.
    I paint stuff sometimes...
    https://www.instagram.com/artoflostar/
This discussion has been closed.