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.
Filed under: About the Bloggers
Patch 5.2 interview with Dave Kosak
Inside an old alt's vault
The latest patch 5.2 news
All of the latest Mists of Pandaria news





Reader Comments (Page 3 of 6)
Pyromelter Jul 20th 2011 2:58PM
I don't get all the hate here. Basil is the gold guy. That's what he does. He's been writing and talking about it for years. Why is it surprising he's not a fan of other stuff - and why are y'all upset about it? I feel like if they asked Breanni what his favorite vanilla raid was, and he was all like "i dunno," why would that matter - he's a pet collector.
I actually found it interesting to see his interests and how he plays.
Joerendous Jul 20th 2011 3:04PM
QFT
DonNochay Jul 20th 2011 3:10PM
Just like you don't understand why I'm "hating" on it, I don't understand/like that you don't care about it. See how that works?
While I'm not going to claim that I take personal offense to the fact that he sees a large portion of the game as "irrelevant", I think it's pretty backwards and offensive that he decided to go about his article in this manner.
"let my editors sort it out." Clearly. Keep up the "good" work, bud.
Jason Jul 20th 2011 3:39PM
I have to agree with the confusion over the hate towards Basil.
From what I understand the purpose of these articles is to give us a brief insight into the people behind the blogs that we read on a regular basis. Like Pyro stated, Basil is the "money guy", he enjoys that aspect of the game among the other things listed. If you read his blogs he isn't the “sugar coating” type of personality in most cases. He tells you how to get from point A to point B and how many toes you may need to step on to get there. His articles tend to spark the occasional outrage of ethics and values within the game due to his approach; however he is good at what he does and would've expected nothing less in this article.
I would have been disappointed if he secretly wished for Warcraft peace among the factions or collected beanie babies in his spare time.
JC_Icefox Jul 20th 2011 3:40PM
It helps to kinda quote the truthiness when you're 'quoting for truth'.
Since, you know, you're quoting it. For truth.
Bapo Jul 20th 2011 3:45PM
Short and to the point?
I think Basil's MTB probably would have received a better attitude, if he would have done a video instead. In Gold Capped, it's very easy to understand what he's aiming at (even though I don't actually do much for the AH, always nice to know what to expect though, buying and selling).
Outside of that, it seems he's writing how he talks, and comes off as really snobby. (Read anthonycwoods comment). Rather than humorous, or sarcastic at points (always difficult to interpret sarcasm and the like via txt)
Ignoring the opening comment, and going with the "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"
There's truth in that, and it's funny, because it's not like they asked him "What's your favorite instance / raid". Just "What's the best?". All the other editors changed that to their Favorite instance, and he gave what they asked. (he did mention his favorites as well though)
Atleast, that's how I took it.
The Dewd Jul 20th 2011 3:54PM
I think Joerendous was quoting the entirety of Pyromelter's post as being truthy.
Honestly, while I don't care for the flatness of this, it does serve its purpose. I know know that Basil doesn't care about 5-mans beyond what it takes to get into pre-raid gear. He doesn't mess around with alts or leveling or anything like that. He takes his money-making seriously and does so with an efficiency of time and effort.
Am I jealous that I don't have 1M+ gold? Sure, who wouldn't be? If I had that much and didn't need to spend it on anything, I'd probably buy gifts for folks.
And, yes, I do agree - it'd be nice to know more about Basil's background in economics (or lack thereof) given how he attacks the AH with such a voracious appetite.
Tim Jul 20th 2011 8:44PM
At the same time I think they need to add a few questions so we can get to know "About the Bloggers" for crying out loud. I play warcraft. I think a few questions for them about warcraft are okay. But then, how bout, some damn questions about the bloggers. Nothing personal, just some odds and ends about them. Basil seemed a little pissy in his short, curt, paragraphs. Though I don't agree with his approach to an article that is supposed to be laid back and fun, he probably thought, "There, I did it. Happy now?" Either way, he did his and he's done. NEXT!
omedon666 Jul 20th 2011 3:02PM
What a charmer.
Though, to be fair, we can't really be surprised that the "money game guy" is the absolute extremity of "all about the numbers".
Glad you at least enjoy your money, Basil. Guess us RPG types will just have to stay out of your way ;)
kaminari Jul 20th 2011 3:51PM
only if you are the competition.
otherwise by all means "come brave hero, and check my wares, i have mighty items that will aid you in your journey"
;)
kaminari Jul 20th 2011 4:04PM
*his
it shouldn't have been in first person, i guess i got caught on the RP xD
Shepherd57 Jul 20th 2011 3:15PM
Don't listen to the haters Euripides, I enjoyed your about the bloggers very much.
Sanguinal Jul 20th 2011 3:17PM
So, to paraphrase:
"There are only two interesting things in the game, everything else is boring and irrelevant. Also, your opinions? I'm not interested in hearing them because mine are right."
I've always quite enjoyed Gold Capped, but this isn't showing the man behind it in a good light, whether it's an accurate depiction of his viewpoint or just really, really badly worded.
Tom Jul 20th 2011 3:33PM
"boring and irrelevant to me"
"to me"
The bit about not wanting to discuss something seemed to be about Alliance vs. Horde, and I can't blame him for saying that in this setting. The people quickest to spout their opinions are usually the least reasonable about it.
Sanguinal Jul 20th 2011 4:17PM
@Tom
When you're working in a medium where the written word is the only way to get your message across, the words that you use are a lot more important than they would otherwise be. He could easily have said "I don't enjoy 5-mans very much, and so when I've geared up I don't run them any more" which is substantially less emotive than attaching the words "boring" and "irrelevant" to them.
Likewise with his comments on the factions. "I always play Alliance because they better fit my morality", is a lot less antagonising than "Alliance are good guys, Horde are bad guys. I don't want to hear any different."
It's the kind of thing that seems petty to people at times, but as can be seen by the reaction here the choice of words can substantially alter people's perception of the message. Adding the ubiquitous "my opinion" to emotive words doesn't dull their ability to inflame people, even when you're only talking about internet orcs and elves.
Tom Jul 20th 2011 4:37PM
Of course words have different connotations and emotional weights, but that doesn't excuse the reader from actually reading.
Scott Jul 20th 2011 3:30PM
OK, OK, settle down, people...
Basil is a great guy. I've never met him, but he is what he is - he enjoys the game on his own terms, and makes no pretenses otherwise.
I think these "Meet the Blogger" articles are being self-written, and i suspect that Basil isn't the kind of writer that thinks, "OOOH, let's talk about ME!" He took the questions and gave honest answers. Cut him some slack, and please don't take it personally.
Basil is part of the OutDPS podcast and the Call to Auction podcast, and just had a kid. He has lots of alts, but only to further his auction house game. And his auction house game furthers his PvP/Raiding main (he can afford those expensive BoEs).
While I'm sure basil has plenty of opinions/insights on gameplay (which he offers on other venues), his role here is to write about the economy - if he doesn't have an opinion on five-mans, fine. To each his own.
Mortenebra Jul 20th 2011 3:46PM
I'm glad you pointed out the "just had a kid" part. I actually stopped what I was doing to come back and point out that anyone living with a newborn can be, understandably, a little... how to put it... Abrupt? Less than rainbows-and-sunshiney? Just take the part where you get zero solid sleep for the next month because your newborn must feed erratically and takes nearly 35-45min to sip up that 1-2oz of formula/milk. It takes a lot out of you.
DonNochay Jul 20th 2011 3:54PM
@Mort
And? I'm going to go out on a limb here and assume that WoW Insider is something of a job for him, even if not full time, part time, and maybe even part, part time if we want to get extreme with it. That doesn't mean excuses should be made. All in all, it appears they should have known from the get go that Basil would be a pretty bad choice for this series of articles. I only know him through an occasional gold capped article, and don't do the podcast thing. Maybe they should have taken this into consideration.
Case in point: This article came before a Rossi one. Wth?
Mortenebra Jul 20th 2011 4:44PM
Okay, I'll bite.
Someone pointed out that the writer sounds petulant, that it seems like he didn't want to write the article, etc etc. For someone sleep-deprived due to a squalling and seemingly inconsolable bundle of delicate, human flesh that doesn't seem to have an off-switch, it kind of makes sense that the writer wouldn't want to write a fluff piece. It explains the, "Okay, I wrote it. Can I go now?" tone of the article. Think of it as not wanting to go to work when you're sick or, more appropriately, being at work when you're sick and not operating at 100%.
In the words of Miracle Max, "When you rush a miracle man, you get rotten miracles!"