Seems that for some people the answer to addiction is to just not get addicted in the first place.
Seems that for some people the answer to addiction is to just not get addicted in the first place.
No.
The answer to addiction is is: if you are suffering from an addiction, make sure you stay away from activities that are triggering it.
There are lots of addictions out there and every one of them responds to certain triggers. Apparently, some people in this community only seem to care about this one group of gambling addicts. Not a single word about the trigger potential of perma-drunk Sereyne or Skooma pipes or whatever. For some reason, there is no room under the wings of protection for alcoholics and drug addicts. I wonder why. Maybe the reasons behind the calls for a ban are not as philantrophic as they appear.
MindOfTheSwarm wrote: »No-one is forcing you to buy Crown Crates. Also, requiring subscription as an alternative will immediately result in about a 50% loss of player base. This will effectively kill the game. Crown Crates accounts for most of the revenue and pays for the new content. The price we pay for DLC will go up dramatically if they remove crown crates and go to a subscription based requirement for playing. This will happen due to less net revenue coming in, loss of players due to forced subscription and no extra income from crown crates.
Do not be under the illusion that DLC will remain free if it reverted to a subscription only model because it won't, unless of course the price of subscription goes up to accommodate. This subscription only idea, will only increase the amount players are paying monthly while eliminating a lot of players from the game. The bespoke nature of choosing what content to buy and what not to buy is appealing for some players. Not every DLC is something that a player wants. Some players only pick the DLC's that have sets that they want or a storyline they are interested in. If a player does not want High Isle for example they should have the choice. The current nature of making subscription optional is better. Those that want everything can save money by subscribing, while those that only want specific content can also save money by not subscribing and simply getting what they want and ignoring the rest. It is a win win.
Crown Crates on the other hand are optional. purely optional. You lose nothing by not buying them outside of a few aesthetics. Now I do feel that it would be simply better to remove the chance aspect and simply have the stuff available to buy even if it means boosting the cost a bit for individual items. I don't like Crown Crates so please don't misunderstand that I am defending them, but they are optional as I have said. Besides this games Crown Crate system is nowhere near as pernicious and vindictive as it is in a game like COD for example. Activision are the absolute worst for this kind of thing. At least in ESO the pool of potential rewards is not obnoxiously big and it rotates. Also they have gems that mean you can save and eventually use them on something specific if you want. Not every game offers this option.
In summary, maybe they could be a bit cheaper and maybe they could only contain stuff that's new, so no consumables for example. Although, I am never disappointed with Lethal Poisons as they are a staple on one of my toons.
Crown Crates aren't ideal, but remember that other companies implement it far more greedily.
Seems that for some people the answer to addiction is to just not get addicted in the first place.
No.
The answer to addiction is is: if you are suffering from an addiction, make sure you stay away from activities that are triggering it.
There are lots of addictions out there and every one of them responds to certain triggers. Apparently, some people in this community only seem to care about this one group of gambling addicts. Not a single word about the trigger potential of perma-drunk Sereyne or Skooma pipes or whatever. For some reason, there is no room under the wings of protection for alcoholics and drug addicts. I wonder why. Maybe the reasons behind the calls for a ban are not as philantrophic as they appear.
Seems that for some people the answer to addiction is to just not get addicted in the first place.
No.
The answer to addiction is is: if you are suffering from an addiction, make sure you stay away from activities that are triggering it.
etchedpixels wrote: »Seems that for some people the answer to addiction is to just not get addicted in the first place.
No.
The answer to addiction is is: if you are suffering from an addiction, make sure you stay away from activities that are triggering it.
If you can stay away from it you are not seriously addicted.
etchedpixels wrote: »Seems that for some people the answer to addiction is to just not get addicted in the first place.
No.
The answer to addiction is is: if you are suffering from an addiction, make sure you stay away from activities that are triggering it.
If you can stay away from it you are not seriously addicted.
Not defending loot boxes, but just wondering: How do former alcoholics manage it? In many countries you can buy alcohol in every supermarket and buying groceries is something no one can avoid.
etchedpixels wrote: »etchedpixels wrote: »Seems that for some people the answer to addiction is to just not get addicted in the first place.
No.
The answer to addiction is is: if you are suffering from an addiction, make sure you stay away from activities that are triggering it.
If you can stay away from it you are not seriously addicted.
Not defending loot boxes, but just wondering: How do former alcoholics manage it? In many countries you can buy alcohol in every supermarket and buying groceries is something no one can avoid.
I can only speak for the UK - the same scheme designed to stop gambling applies to alcohol purchases with cards but it's much less effective for the reasons you give. Hardcore addicts usually die of it despite the best efforts of others.
Crown crates are 100% gambling. The sooner the US and EU implement loot box legislation to ban this predatory practice, the better.
It would require one to have much self-awareness as well as strong will to restor to such a solution.It's problematic for sure. And with physical goods I see a general conflict between the masses of people who have no addiction and who don't want to have huge efforts to buy something they want, and the people who are addicted and should at best not be confronted with their drug (whatever it is) at all. With digital goods such at loot boxes, maybe it would be possible to somehow optionally disable the function to buy them in game? Like, you send a message to ZOS and the loot box symbol completely vanishes from the menu? That would at least help the people who know that they have an addiction problem or who don't want to be tempted for any other reason.
barney2525 wrote: »Crates are : " I Want " ... Not : " I NEED " .
spartaxoxo wrote: »barney2525 wrote: »Crates are : " I Want " ... Not : " I NEED " .
Last I checked, Slot Machines are an "I want" too. Doesn't stop them from being gambling. Why do people keep using definitions for gambling that exclude things like poker, casinos, roulette, etc. to justify why crates aren't gambling? Like nobody's holding a gun to my head when I go hit the slots either. But I still show ID.
spartaxoxo wrote: »barney2525 wrote: »Crates are : " I Want " ... Not : " I NEED " .
Last I checked, Slot Machines are an "I want" too. Doesn't stop them from being gambling. Why do people keep using definitions for gambling that exclude things like poker, casinos, roulette, etc. to justify why crates aren't gambling? Like nobody's holding a gun to my head when I go hit the slots either. But I still show ID.
But before you collect enough Crown Gems, you'll be tempted / need to buy many Crates.barney2525 wrote: »Slot machines do not guarantee that eventually you will have enough winnings to buy the item you want.
Gems guarantee you will eventually have enough gems to buy the item you want.
Back to this old chestnut again?
The United States isn't Belgium...
barney2525 wrote: »Crown crates are 100% gambling. The sooner the US and EU implement loot box legislation to ban this predatory practice, the better.
No.
Its simply timing. Accumulating gems takes time.
Something you want costs 400 gems. You accumulate gems through various methods- buying crates, watching Twitch.
At some point you will have enough gems to buy what you want - unless you are lucky and it pops sooner for you, from a crate.
And since 100% of crates are Cosmetic - there is literally Nothing a player Needs from any crate in order to improve the character's competitiveness in the game. Crates are : " I Want " ... Not : " I NEED " .
Back to this old chestnut again?
The United States isn't Belgium...
The point of that remark being....?
You understand of course that this English speaking forum is international, yes? As is the Game. And that Zenimax has to operate within the laws of each country.
And thus a chap from Belgium has as much right to comment in how the game operates locally to him as someone from the USA does?
Nothing you say changes the fact that it is a manipulative business model. It would be much more consumer friendly for players to be able to straight up buy the cosmetics they want versus the monetary hoops they currently have to jump through.
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.
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.
MovesLikeJaguar 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.
Psychologically speaking, Crown Crates use the same practices and design choices as slot machines as casinos. It preys on you in a very similar way, and therefore is gambling and can stimulate a gambling addiction.
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.
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.
Following your reasoning, Poker is not gambling because even the mildly skilled players knows that they start the game already losing, so it's their decision to risk.
Crown crates pander to the naivety of many players -- many of them underage -- who truly believe they will get that amazing and juicy new mount, or polymorph, or any new stuff simply buying 4 or just one crate.
The new Seals of Endeavor system is extremely unfair and unbalanced. You need to spent several months to get tens of thousands (!!!!!) seals in order to get something, most of time that stuff you want so many was already removed for crown store months before you be able to get enough seals to buy it. And ZOS don't allow us to buy many crown store itens with seals of endeavors.
ESO is, in fact, a huge whale bait. Many MMO games are. But it is a shame to realize how insanely greedy those gaming companies are, simply because there is almost none legislation to curb their exploitation mechanisms.
Crown Crates ARE gambling, and the sad part is: that system is a FRINGE gambling one. They can keep the "Las Vegas" bait running and still trusting that even some players will defend the system, mostly because it is so shady to properly say, "yes, for sure it is a gambling".
The Crates should be banned for good. But I'm sure ZOS will find another way to induce players to spend thousands of dollars for... literally virtual nothing.