Very easy, Turbine did it in LOTRO and Square Enix do though not much.Braumeisterlein wrote: »
The numbers of accounts in an MMO is trivially small in data handling terms, and analysing transactional data like this is bread and butter, the hardware and software needed to do this is cheap and easily deployed.Braumeisterlein wrote: ». I mean I'm really no expert in IT, but wouldn't you need a gigantic datacenter to record (and analyse!) every single ingame Transaction over days and probably weeks
the thing is is the holder of all the gold will not have some random name like that the holders are valuable they will have thought up names and you wont be seeing those spam trade to buy goldgamebouncerb16_ESO wrote: »One would think they could trace back items gold to account or player name? If it came from aaaghyt , then flags should be a waving .. big red ones
Doubt it is as high as 50%, more like 30%.I bet if you will do that ESO will lose 50% of the playerbase, there are so many goldbuyers out there it is unbelievable.
AlexDougherty wrote: »
Why not just report the sites to the FBI Cyber Crimes Unit? I mean the gold spammers post the names of the websites. That gives the FBI an "in" on how to track the origin of the sites. They can shut the original site down, and block the creators from creating new ones.
Not that simple...
Slantasiam wrote: »the thing is is the holder of all the gold will not have some random name like that the holders are valuable they will have thought up names and you wont be seeing those spam trade to buy goldgamebouncerb16_ESO wrote: »One would think they could trace back items gold to account or player name? If it came from aaaghyt , then flags should be a waving .. big red ones
I doubt the figure it 50% but wouldn't argue their numbers aren't large.I bet if you will do that ESO will lose 50% of the playerbase, there are so many goldbuyers out there it is unbelievable.
These threads are stupid. Really it doesn't matter if 1% of the game buys gil, or if a gold seller sells one item a day. Or better yet, they trade items for cash. Oh and its not just botters. Many gold sellers are westerners. I know many who power lvl characters, toons and get paypal cash from people or companies.
Even in old games that are free to play now LOTR, AION, gold sellers are still there. They won't go away, period!
The game developer has to make it so either you can quest most items you want, or have a cash store where you can buy. Personally, I said it many times ESO should make horses, modif books quest able, and have a repair skill learnable. In addition they could have some npc sell basic craft able items, lvl 1-2. After that you go out and farm. This is to encourage people to craft.
But no,ESO rather bots take over there game and make player life hard. The botters get far more resources and zero nerfs vs the players who get all nerfs and very little support from the developer.
Beat Molag ball, get a 17k non sellable hore.
Get a craft to 50, receive a book from a quest. Maybe do extra.
steveb16_ESO46 wrote: »I don't know how you can read what kasian says and pain him as a gold-seller when his suggestions would hurt gold-selling a lot.
steveb16_ESO46 wrote: »I think, especially considering your other posts, that you are doing him a disservice.
There's plenty Z can do and he reiterated some of them. And he is right - make changes to the reward and pricing structures to reduce the demand for gold. That has to be one weapon in the armoury.
TheGrandAlliance wrote: »Love how every time a guy comes in and says "it simply requires XYZ" - like ZOS doesn't have that and *he* does, the ole high-and-mighty logic-haver. There's obviously more to it than you're not grasping.
Same with politics, economics, monday-morning quarterbacking, etc. If your response begins with "all you have to do is" or "it simply requires", then you don't have a full appreciation and scope of complex systems or their requirements to operate.
YOu are missing the point: My OP should be obvious to everyone that is true. What is not so is that ZeniMax has yet to fully commit to banning botting activities. It is a business decision... they don't want to ban paying sub customers who cheat.
The solution is very simple. It is a mere matter of will.
TheGrandAlliance wrote: »
You are forgetting everything is traceable. Everything the small acounts did can be traced to bigger accounts. There is no break in the chain.
Catflinger wrote: »steveb16_ESO46 wrote: »I don't know how you can read what kasian says and pain him as a gold-seller when his suggestions would hurt gold-selling a lot.
Because I think he knows that at this point, there's little Zenimax can do. It's after the fact and the game is a sinking ship. He's laughing all the way to the bank.
I hate to say that, because in every other way, it's gorgeous. But they really, truly, and horribly dropped the ball on this. It's inexcusable, really.
steveb16_ESO46 wrote: »All he is saying is that you cannot eradicate gold selling and he is right. What you can do is limit the usefulness of it. Again, he is right.
ESO makes gold hard to come by and gates key features like transport and respecs behind a giant pile of the stuff. Not to mention the escalating costs of repairs.
LOTRO has gold sellers but you can play for years and not see a bot. There's not a whole lot you can do with gold. You can get anything worthwhile as part of the dtory. There are not insanely rare things that both drop by chance and are tradeable and you aren't charged gold for game features. (They are often monetised in their store but that's a different topic).
LOTRO is an example of a game defensively designed to limit the impact of gold-selling.
ESO unfortunately is an object lesson of the opposite kind.
They should just ban boters and wipe mats/gold which was send to other accounts, that way they would lose customers and they would stop boting.
I do not agree with baning gold buyers tho, it's something common these days and if they have money for it, well why shouldn't they buy it ( they do not get any advantage with gold ).