Dubious practices #2: Buying gold
A secondary gold market has sprung up quickly within Azeroth, offering players the ability to use real world earnings
to endow their characters with virtual gold, and it's now flourishing. There are two sides to this business -- buying
and selling -- and we'll leave discussion of the farming aspect for a future article, concentrating for the moment on
the activity players either love or loathe: buying gold.Our recent survey of readers showed that a surprisingly large percentage of you have bought gold or are considering doing so. Especially for the casual player, without spare hours every day to dedicate to endgame raids or grinding for mount money, buying other people's hard-farmed gold may seem like an easy option which enables you to keep up with your guildmates and friends. The benefits for your character are immediate: you can shop in the AH to your heart's content, buy that epic mount, and have some cash to flash when twinking an alt.
However, let's look outside your own personal gain for a moment. Gold buying can have a seriously negative impact on the server economy and on the game in general. A fairly stable auction house can be destabilised by the introduction of people with a lot of money to burn, leading to a form of hyper-inflation where prices rise and rise because money is, quite literally, cheap. People start listing items at incredibly high prices because they know the gold buyers won't think twice about buying them, and those who cannot afford to buy gold -- or who choose not to -- have to work twice as hard for their loot. Additionally, the gold farmers supplying the industry don't buy items, but hoard their cash--breaking the game economy which is designed for gold to be spent as much as it's obtained.
Beyond the AH, gold buying has other knock-on effects in PvP and similar situations. Players with top-end (bought) gear for their level can best others in combat -- provided they have the skills to match their items -- purely because they have more money outside the game. This destroys the equalising ability of the virtual world, defeating the point for many players.
Additionally, probably the most important thing to consider is Blizzard's Terms of Service, which state:
"No one has the right to "sell" Blizzard Entertainment's content, except Blizzard Entertainment! So Blizzard Entertainment does not recognize any property claims outside of World of Warcraft or the purported sale, gift or trade in the "real world" of anything related to World of Warcraft. Accordingly, you may not sell items for "real" money or exchange items outside of World of Warcraft."
Several accounts have purportedly been suspended for buying gold, so Blizzard take the issue seriously, although not seriously enough to clamp down on the entire secondary market.
Finally, we'll not go into this in much depth, but supporting the gold farmer industry is seen as a bad thing by many players and individuals, thanks to its dubious practices which include sweatshop-like working conditions out of game -- and rare item camping in-game -- amongst many other things.
While we don't wish to dictate how players choose to use their own cash and how they play their own characters, it's interesting comparing gold buyers to other players. I recently spoke to a player who proudly showed off her epic mount and armour set, and I openly admired her dedication and skill. She promptly admitted she'd bought gold and had never run a single endgame instance -- wanting to appear "the best" without putting in the effort herself, she merely laid on a facade of appearing experienced. A casual inspection ingame would mark her up as a player who clearly knows her stuff, and if she ever gets invited to an instance she will immediately stand out as a gold buyer and be shunned by the party once her lack of knowledge becomes clear, so she has achieved her goal at a price. Also, it seems that the level of satisfaction you can get from admiring your epic items is much greater if you worked for them for weeks ingame.
Ultimately, there's no major harm in buying 100g at level 40 to pay for your mount rather than spending ten hours grinding mobs or playing the AH, but be very careful if you choose to buy gold, and bear in mind that selfish use of huge amounts of gold does affect other players and may damage your reputation in the long run. If you want to buy gold, you'll find plenty of sites online that sell it; if you want to help the campaign against gold selling, watch out for players that seem too well kitted out for their apparent skill level, and support sites like nogold.org. There are other ways to make money in-game and various websites offer guides to how to make anything from 10 to 100 gold an hour legitimately, if you're the farming type.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, WoW Social Conventions, Economy






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Harpo Dec 29th 2005 1:49PM
Any player with some sense could /inspect a person, see them clad fully in BoE Purples, and figure out they're a worthless goldbuyer. It's like a fat kid driving a Corvette his daddy bought him.
Spending $100 to become ostracized by everyone: GG!
Paul Dec 29th 2005 2:03PM
I do think that Blizzard already did a few things that makes gold buying less-than-ideal to be well-kitted. First of all, the *best* items in-game are BoP only or only obtainable by PvP rep. The PvP items have relatively low prices considering how powerful they are, so you can actually afford them.
You can't buy that Stormrage set, that Dragonstalker set. You have to *earn* it through hard work and dedication.
It's too bad that all epic mounts didn't have epic quests associated with them like the warlock and palladins, then there'd be much less bought-gold paying for the epic frostsaber.
Paul Dec 29th 2005 2:06PM
Also, I find a great deal of irony in the fact that a all of the google adwords advertisements on this page are for websites selling WoW gold.
grimgash Dec 29th 2005 2:47PM
I wonder if some close-market type of economy could solve this issue. That is, only those players who got a particular item without purchasing it could then be eligible to buy a similar item. For example, only characters who obtained an epic purple item through questing/raiding could be eligible to buy purple items? In a sense, you would have to prove your worth first before you could trade in these types of goods?
L'Emmerdeur Dec 29th 2005 2:48PM
I doubt a gold buyer would stop at a measly 100g for a regular mount.
Considering how hard I worked my mage to get the Transmute Water to Air recipe, so I could make around 8g a day, any amount of gold buying is a slap in the face.
Then again, considering that I see gold farmers who have been around FOREVER and still haven't been busted by Blizzard, I believe that at least some of the gold farms are run by Blizzard as a separate enterprise. They just don't want to alienate their hardcore contingent (the equivalent of celebrities in an MMG) by sanctioning it the way SOE did. So they pay lip service to the honest players with their bogus 18000-account-ban announcements, and rake in money via the farming backdoor.
Oh, and those 18000 banned accounts? That's 200 per day, since they were banned over a 3 month period. Anyone who plays WoW knows that farming websites are constantly registering using the 14-day free trial over and over, and using these accounts to spam players with whispered ads for their gold selling websites. These accounts are quickly reported, easily determined to be violating the TOS, and banned.
How many of those 200/day do you think were these non-accounts? I bet most of them, since they are so easy to kick. Furthermore, that 18000 number makes it look like Blizzard gave up on a LOT of monthly revenue to make the game better for the rest of us, but if my theory holds true, few of the 18000 banned accounts were paying accounts.
LiquidZero Dec 29th 2005 4:01PM
Harpo - Not totally true, on Thunderhorn I know quite a few people in full tier 1 who did it the honest(?) way: join a raiding guild and run MC at least every week, if not more often.
Anyway I don't see why people feel a need to buy gold, it's so easy to make money in WoW. I'm not even that hardcore into the money-making, but a friend of mine on Thunderhorn, an older, more established server, has over 2000g from working the AH and trade channels maybe an hour a week over 2 months. I have almost 800 myself following a similar pattern.
As an experiment, we even rolled new toons on a brand new server, Chromaggus, to try our skills there. Now, since the server is newer the amount of gold in the economy is much lower, but we still have 60g between us, our toons aren't even 20 yet, and we've only been at it 2 weeks.
Farming/grinding is a horrible way to make money. It works, but it's so slow. You're far better off playing the AH for trade items, and either crafting them into items that sell well, or buy during a market flood, hold them until the market dries, and resell at that higher current market value.
To sum it all up, "It's fine, learn2earn."
Windshadow Dec 29th 2005 7:30PM
Since well over 1/2 of the readers of this blog are against gold selling and buying by your own poll why do you accept advertising from these SweatShops? why not join the nogold.org folks and by providing fair and open tips to earn gold in the game (rather than the http://www.gold-world-of-warcraft.com/ link you provide which seems to have a bunch of banable exploits) honestly in a section of this website try to help reduce the problem
jennie Dec 29th 2005 7:48PM
Thanks for your comment, Windshadow. We are working on both of the things you suggest--vetting advertising and compiling our own list of gold-making tips--although we've already had several tips on how to make money on this site, for example playing the auction houses using Auctioneer.
Stimps Dec 30th 2005 5:11AM
Interesting theory, L'Emmerdeur, although given the amount of "honest" subscriptions that WoW has, do you really think Blizzard would need to run their own gold selling outfits? They're hardly short of cash...
Interesting guides you linked to... not only can we buy gold from the sites shown on your google ads, but now we can find out some nice exploits at the same time... ;-)
jennie Dec 30th 2005 6:56AM
Oh, I'm well aware that one of the sites linked to has some *ahem* dubious practices, although it does give tips on boss farming and the like too. However, in an effort to include an all-round view I included the link as people who shy away from buying gold might well be quite happy to dupe it ;)
L'Emmerdeur Dec 30th 2005 11:10AM
First off, don't blame jennie or WoWInsider for the link to a site that includes unethical practices. Frankly, I'd rather be a well-informed player. Knowing that people are doing such things will help me spot and report such behavior (unlike IRL, I LOVE getting scumbags banned in WoW) and know what I'm up against in the AH as well when I'm selling things.
I do agree on the gold buying ads, though. You really need to get rid of those.
I'm really shocked that so many of your readers buy gold. Sporting purple BoEs will get you nothing but ridicule, noobs. And earning that epic mount is a lot more satisfying.
Harpo Dec 30th 2005 11:20AM
LiquidZero, I was talking about BoE Purples, not Tier 1 gear. That's mostly BoP gear, minus the minor BoE gear that rarely makes it to the AH anyways. Only way to "cheat" that stuff (besides cascading) is to buy/trade accounts. It's one thing to have a lucky BoE epic or two, but if you see someone with almost all BoE epic gear, it's highly doubtful they earned it honestly. If you put in that sort of work to get the money yourself to buy such stuff on the AH, you'd have time time and smarts to be in an MC+ guild.
Krutch Jan 6th 2006 5:31PM
That's not entirely true, Harpo. I have a level 36 warrior, and he's got an epic BOE. I farmed that gold, and I plan to buy a ton more BoE epics from the AH when I'm level 40+, and 50+, and 60. Why? Because I'm a PVP warrior. I will never step foot into MC because the rewards are not as good as the PVP rewards. So anyone who has the time to grind all that gold, as you say, may not necessarily WANT to go to MC or any other high level raid. I know I sure as hell don't.