AlexDougherty wrote: »Might run a foul of internet gambling laws, it would have to comply with American, Canadian, Mexican (inside North America so it's laws apply equally), EU, and any Non-EU European country since it has NA and EU servers.
Not sure if it technically has to comply with laws from other countries that have players, but if it sold to those countries (rather than those countries importing) it would.
Not against this, but I wouldn't gamble either.
ThatArgonianGuy wrote: »Last time I checked the game's gold wasn't a real currency.
AlexDougherty wrote: »Might run a foul of internet gambling laws, it would have to comply with American, Canadian, Mexican (inside North America so it's laws apply equally), EU, and any Non-EU European country since it has NA and EU servers.
Not sure if it technically has to comply with laws from other countries that have players, but if it sold to those countries (rather than those countries importing) it would.
Not against this, but I wouldn't gamble either.
I would not mind lottery... might even buy ticket or two from time to time when the grand prize gets high enough... who would not want 1 million gold.
Though gambling in general is decease for some people and as immersive ESO can be they can develop gambling problem in ESO too which then would possibly lead them using real money to buy game money so they can gamble in game.
Irrelevant, ask Turbine, Blizzard, Square Enix and any number of other games developers who all have massive legal problems devising such things so as to not fall foul of some asinine law in some EU country or other. None wanted to give away real-world cash, they were all in-game items.ThatArgonianGuy wrote: »AlexDougherty wrote: »Might run a foul of internet gambling laws, it would have to comply with American, Canadian, Mexican (inside North America so it's laws apply equally), EU, and any Non-EU European country since it has NA and EU servers.
Not sure if it technically has to comply with laws from other countries that have players, but if it sold to those countries (rather than those countries importing) it would.
Not against this, but I wouldn't gamble either.
Last time I checked the game's gold wasn't a real currency.
Blackwidow wrote: »Dungeons and Dragons Online had gambling. So, i don't see this being a problem.
Actually, GW2 had some gambling as well.
I think EQ2 had something like this, except it was an instant roll every purchase, slot machine style. I don't really remember hearing how that worked out for them as far as an inflation check though.
That's slightly different, that's a guaranteed bonus, only the content is variable, thus may not count as gambling from legal standpoint.michaelpatrickjonesnub18_ESO wrote: »Lord of the Rings implemented their little slot machine style gimmick last year.
For every day you log on you win something.
How long ago was D&D online?Blackwidow wrote: »Dungeons and Dragons Online had gambling. So, i don't see this being a problem.
Actually, GW2 had some gambling as well.
AlexDougherty wrote: »Any details on how GW2's gambling worked, because if it's clear cut enough, and was available to all, then it would be proof it's doable.