Meet the Bloggers: Basil "Euripides" Berntsen

What do you do for WoW Insider?
I write Gold Capped. I used to write Time is Money and Insider Trader as well, but then I decided to stop trying to categorize my thoughts and simply dump them all into Gold Capped and let my editors sort it out.
What's your main?
I have exactly one level 85 character: my hunter. I raid and PVP with him, as well as use him for my alchemy and blacksmithing businesses. I will continue to have one max-level character until all the jewelcrafting dailies my JC mule does dings him 85 without having set foot outside Stormwind.
I have way too much on my plate to actually take care of my alts. For one, I hate leveling. Once you've seen it once, doing it again doesn't have enough reward to justify the time. Secondly, if I had more playtime to use, I'd use it to do more of what I already do. I could be doing 10-man extensions of my 25-man raid if I had another raid night per week, or I could do more than a rated BG now and then. Starting a second gear grind with another character isn't something that's on my radar.
What's the best 5-man instance in the game? What's the best raid?
All 5-man instances are boring and irrelevant to me once I have what I need from them. The best raid is always the 25-man heroic version of whatever the current raid is; however, assuming we're comparing each raid when they were the best, then I'd have to say Ulduar. It was a long, well-done raid with a lot of depth, and I missed it when it became irrelevant. Black Temple was a close second.
I am well engaged by and enjoy the current raiding design, where each new patch is a small reset and an opportunity to increase your character's gear compared to the last patch. That said, I wish there were more rewards for going back to older raids than an unspendable currency that I might already have earned just by being a raider when the content was fresh. The weekly quests we enjoyed last expansion were a step in the right direction, but I wish there were something more.
What's been your favorite expansion?
Probably The Burning Crusade, although I liked how they opened everything up in Wrath of the Lich King. I'd love it if they could have figured out some design where raid groups had an incentive to experience all the tiers of raiding instead of jumping straight into the latest and greatest tier; however, somehow Blizzard's kept raiding as accessible as it was in Wrath. That said, I am not a game designer and have no idea how that could have been accomplished.
What accomplishments are most proud of in game?
My two greatest in-game accomplishments are the guild I lead and the gold I've made. The guild is run the way I've always wanted my guilds to be run: completely transparently. We posted our charter with a set of rules, and we follow them to the letter. People are given raid spots based on performance and raid composition, not politics. We are light on drama and can accommodate good players with wonky play schedules since we have no minimum attendance.
Gold is what I write about here and is by far the most interesting part of WoW for me. People tend to consider the economy of WoW a necessary evil or worse yet, an unnecessary one. I, on the other hand, find making money to be a very interesting intellectual challenge, on par with any of the other more popular in-game pursuits. I also believe that when WoW is a free-to-play ghost town (or whatever happens to MMO games when they die), it'll be remembered for having had the first really large and important virtual economy. Virtual dragonslaying and player-killing is a commodity -- other games have done them as well or better before WoW, but WoW's economy is unique in its scale.
Making gold is something that's doable with any amount of time. The frequency and duration of your play time is certainly going to have an effect; however, you can play this part of the game even if you have almost no time.
That said, I dump all my unscheduled play time into the money-making game and have achieved a level of success that is rare. I hit the original gold cap a few months after I started writing about it here, and I hit the new gold cap (1 million) right after Cataclysm launched. I now make 20k-60k profit a week, depending on how much time I spend on it and how much my competition plays. Every new patch represents hundreds of thousands of gold earned (and spent ...), mostly through stockpiling goods and releasing them when people get a rush of upgrades.
The last one and a half years has taught me a lot about economics -- not just virtual economics, either. I find myself looking at the world in a whole new way now that I have been thinking and writing about economics, even if only virtual, for so long.
Horde or Alliance?
Alliance all the way. I don't care about lore and I don't read quest text, but it's obvious to me that the Horde are the bad guys and the Alliance are the good guys. I don't want to discuss it, and I don't want to hear how the Horde has factions within them that are more reasonable. The Hordies are good at two things as far as I'm concerned: paying more for my trade goods than Alliance, and PVP. And they're only good at PVP because people who see themselves as "good guys" must tend to be worse at PVP.
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 6)
Tom Jul 20th 2011 6:03PM
"but i'm just going with what i see"
You're seeing an awful lot more than I am, I guess.
Gossamer Jul 20th 2011 6:03PM
Wow, I'm sad to see all the Basil hate in here. The guy spends most of his WoW time helping other people, whether this be through leading his guild or writing to help scrubs like me learn how to make epic tons of gold. I think you folks are a little harsh to some one who is just expressing his opinion in an article designed for that very purpose. And the faction complaints are just silly. So he prefers the alliance over the horde and is very vocal about it. Him and everyone else with a preference.
Oh, and FOR THE ALLIANCE.
:P
Hob Jul 20th 2011 9:05PM
@Jordan
Why don't I think it was tongue-in-cheek? Because there's nothing in the post that suggests the author is being anything more than direct and straightforward with his opinion. No jokes, no humor, no goofing around.
When the mage and warlock columnists bash their "opposite" class ~ it's obviously a joke. It's intended to be funny.
But for the sake of argument - what part of the quote was supposed to be tongue in cheek? What part was supposed to be funny?
Spellotape Jul 21st 2011 4:36AM
@ Mortenebra
I agree with "to each his own", but this is a blog and the response just sounded ridiculous - not answering at all would have been more interesting.
Toothy Jul 21st 2011 8:13AM
Actually confirms what I have always gotten from goldcapped (don't do podcast):
He's a maximizer, and very goal oriented - exactly the kind of personality you want to mine the min/max of market systems, so he is the right guy for the column. Not someone I would want to play with (sounds intolerant of folks going off script, I enjoy improv), but I definitely appreciate the insights - its stuff that's good to know, but would bore me to death mining it on my own.
joepsu777 Jul 20th 2011 2:49PM
EVE online had the first "real" economy because nothing in the game is bound to anything. You can sell anything, to anyone.
WoW has an economy based solely on trade goods.
Taer Jul 20th 2011 5:17PM
Agreed. I think Basil did himself a major disservice by just brushing over that. To top it, WoW's economy is split over loads of servers: EVE online's is truly global.
All materials procured by players, refined and processed by players, to be sold to players (in the form of weapons/ammo/ships/etc.) and used by players. Often by different people, since you can't have alts for different aspects of the "professions" unlike with WoW. You *can* theoretically learn everything yourself given time, but the most profits are to be had with specialization, so being a jack-of-all trades is a trade-off, much more than in WoW (where it's enough to level a few crafting alts each expansion).
Other than that, I was a bit ... annoyed at some of the answers too. Not the 5man one so much (although an answer other than just irrelevant would've been nice). The fact that the "best" raid to him is the current one does come off as arrogant, especially to me, someone who raided in vanilla, where none of the raids ever really went obsolete in the same sense they do now (with smaller raidsizes and widespread PUGgin), but rather everything depended on your guild's progress.
I guess I got the feeling that he acknowledges that anyone can make money with even small time investments, but also basically says that unless you're doing the heroic 25man version of the newest raid tier, you don't matter, or your efforts are somehow less meaningful.
Oh, and Alliance has (nearly) always come off as racist, genocidal s to me. Ever since Warcraft 3, or was it the expansion... anyway.
Tom Jul 20th 2011 6:03PM
"also basically says that unless you're doing the heroic 25man version of the newest raid tier, you don't matter, or your efforts are somehow less meaningful."
But he doesn't say that. At all. I can't find anything that suggests that he thinks other people's fun is wrong, and there's no reason to assume that's what he meant.
Here's something he did say, though, which you seem to have missed:
"; however, assuming we're comparing each raid when they were the best, then I'd have to say Ulduar."
DonNochay Jul 20th 2011 2:50PM
Far and away the worst, worst, worst of the Meet the Bloggers articles. It's clear that Ziebart set a high bar, and here, we have a new measuring stick for the opposite end of the spectrum.
"All 5-man instances are boring and irrelevant to me once I have what I need from them. The best raid is always the 25-man heroic version of whatever the current raid is;"
"I don't care about lore and I don't read quest text, but it's obvious to me that the Horde are the bad guys and the Alliance are the good guys. I don't want to discuss it, and I don't want to hear how the Horde has factions within them that are more reasonable."
Yeah, I used to read Gold Capped (even though I have zero ambition when it comes to making gold in the asinine WoW economy, and I completely despise it), but it looks like that's over. The other Meet the Bloggers were interesting, engaging articles that put us in the shoes of the writers, letting us see the game through their characters. This article? Come on man, you make it sound like someone had a gun to your head while you were writing it, and someone else was threatening to put a nail through your metaphorical WoW dick. You play a virtual economic currency simulator; the rest of us play World of Warcraft.
Yomamma Jul 20th 2011 3:11PM
I agree. This is one author that I will avoid from now on. I enjoy reading wowinsider, but the arrogance coming from this article really gives me a sour taste.
Shepherd57 Jul 20th 2011 3:20PM
I think you are confusing arrogance with logic and reason. Those factors of the game are only irrelevant to him, not as a whole. If you don't like collecting vanity pets, then vanity pets are irrelevant to you, but that doesn't make you a jerk.
Tom Jul 20th 2011 3:27PM
It's okay to not like the answers, but that doesn't mean they're bad answers. You might not like him after reading his responses but you do know a bit more about him, and that's what Meet the Bloggers is all about.
DonNochay Jul 20th 2011 3:43PM
I honestly believe that the irrelevant areas that he mentions in the article, are not just being pointed out because he feels they are irrelevant to him. To me, it clearly seems that he believes they truly are irrelevant on a grand scale, and only exist to inconvenience HIM.
I know there will be (and looking at some of the comments, already is) a ton of folks who are lining up to defend him. This always happens on wow insider. Feel free to brush off his arrogance as an act, a style of writing, whatever you want it to be. It's still bad taste, from top to bottom.
Yomamma Jul 20th 2011 3:47PM
I don't mind the answers. I'm just not a fan of how the answers were delivered. I think Meet the bloggers is a great feature, and I look forward to reading and learning more about the writers. I just happened to learn that this is a blogger that I don't particularly care for, and I probably won't read any more of his work. To each his own. Just as he has the right to express himself as he sees fit, I have the right to not like it.
kaminari Jul 20th 2011 3:47PM
"Come on man, you make it sound like someone had a gun to your head while you were writing it"
no it doesn't it seems he enjoyed it, but only at the point when they talk about his accomplishments (which surprisingly from the gold guy it's the economy mini game)
what's wrong with playing a virtual currency simulator?
I mean not everyone has to like lore (if Anne had wrote that I'd say you have a point tho), but the if the guy giving advice on how to make gold prefers to play virtual market over lore (or only doing dungeons to get what valor points) I see nothing wrong with that.
I'm afraid not every one plays wow for the same reasons as you do, but of course those of us who doesn't are in the wrong ;)
DonNochay Jul 20th 2011 4:03PM
@Kaminari
You're darn right that there isn't a single thing wrong with playing a virtual currency simulator. However, when you devalue pretty much every other facet of the game, other than pvp'ing (or mindlessly zerging Tol Barad due to population imbalances......) and raiding, that's where the issue starts. Especially the "Lore doesn't matter, none of it matters, I play a good guy and so do all of my buddies, you're all wrong" part. This isn't a gold making blog. This article would fit much, much better on one.
Tom Jul 20th 2011 4:31PM
"you're all wrong"
But he never said that. He's not interested in some aspects of the game, sure, but there's nothing in the article to suggest that he begrudges other people their fun. Why do you assume he does?
kaminari Jul 20th 2011 4:36PM
However, when you devalue pretty much every other facet of the game, other than pvp'ing (or mindlessly zerging Tol Barad due to population imbalances......) and raiding...
of course hard core pvp'ers must raid at least some and raiders must not devalue pvp, and both of them should care about lore, because if not we're playing WoW the wrong way
"This isn't a gold making blog. This article would fit much, much better on one."
wait, I though this article was about the guy making a gold making blog.
however I agree with you about him sucking for his answer in horde vs alliance, 'cause everybody knows horde is the REAL faction.
Lok'tar Ogar.
Toothy Jul 23rd 2011 10:15PM
@many replies here.
He is dismissive of others play, which starts down the jerk path:
http://wow.joystiq.com/2011/02/13/breakfast-topic-did-you-accomplish-your-lunar-festival-goals/
Basil Berntsen Feb 13th 2011 8:42AM
I most certainly did! Not a single lunar fest NPC interacted with, and I spent absolutely no time working on vanity achievements.
CDave Jul 20th 2011 2:52PM
One thing id like to know is what type of economics background you have, if any. And also if you have other wow economy based projects besides your weekly column.