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 6 of 6)
cakeordeath Jul 22nd 2011 11:32AM
sorry but this guy is a jerk and disgrace to the hunter community. I remember listening to him on his call to auction podcast laughing about how much gold he was making selling 1 piece of ammo for the price of a full stack. Back then that practice was deceitful at best, and to exploit other hunters only rubs salt in the wounds.
Basil Berntsen Jul 22nd 2011 11:46AM
actually, http://wow.joystiq.com/2010/05/17/insider-trader-selling-arrows-in-singles-for-the-price-of-a-sta/.
I was the, seemingly, only voice in the blogosphere who felt that this was a scam and should be treated as such. Maybe you were mistaking me for a cohost?
dk_5150 Jul 22nd 2011 1:59PM
my apologies. I had to go back and find the podcast, it was the feb 10, 2010 episode and it was marcko and faygaliss on that episode, and you were not involved at all.
Xenikos Jul 22nd 2011 11:32AM
Nothing in his post was elitist nor snobbish. And Lipstick, I have no idea where you're coming from - Basil is easily the most upright and ethical of all of the gold-making "personalities" out there.
I don't understand why the man isn't allowed to say he only really enjoys fresh content. Or that he wants to identify with his faction.
emberdione Jul 22nd 2011 12:59PM
I read this the other day, smiled at knowing a bit more about Basil, and moved on. Today in the Queue, I saw the question and was like wuh? People were being rude to Basil??? This guy, above most of the others, helps *everyone* across the board. Sure our class posts help us and others of our class, but *everyone* needs gold.
Add to this that the point of these articles is to get to know the bloggers. Clearly Basil is a money guy, the fact he calls it a "money making game" and an "intellectual" challenge, shows that he likes the deeply academic play that has been created with the economy. That doesn't make him elitist or arrogant, that makes him different from people who jsut bash in skulls of mobs all day. WoW needs all kinds, and some people find fun in other things. I know a great deal more about him, in that I know he is likely very smart, like puzzles, and likes tracking things. He sees the underlying connections in more than just money.
As for only having one 85, well, it's called focus people. And you can learn and unlearn professions. Clearly, he can afford it. Why level a second toon when you can do the thing you find most fun with the one you have?
Don't listen to em Basil. Tons of us love your work.
Kazdur Jul 22nd 2011 3:51PM
I ended up doing the exact same thing. I was surprised it was answered as a question and hope it doesn't cause even more negative comments. I don't read Gold Capped regularly(I'm not that ambitious nor do I have the long-term attention span required), but I do catch some here and there that apply to my professions. His columns are what I would expect and I like it. He gets two thumbs up from me, keep em coming :)
Andrew Jul 22nd 2011 1:34PM
I'm wondering how many of the commentators on this article have actually met an ultra-successful businessperson. I've run into quite a few of them in real life, admittedly a small sample size, but very few of them were what I'd call "cute" or "cuddly." Not that they were bad or unpleasant people, but they weren't the type to waste time with small talk or niceties except perhaps when networking. They were all about the bottom line, getting where they wanted to be and what they wanted to have with as little time and sacrifice as possible. And you know what, they were fantastic about it. Sure, they floated in morally gray areas sometimes, and it became pretty difficult to like them at times for it, but the business world isn't exactly a culture focused on everyone else, or even playing totally fair. It's focused on one's self and what one can achieve and make and do. So I'm not sure why it's surprising that the WoW economy would attract similar personalities as well. If anything, it's surprising that Basil would be helping possible competition be more successful through his blogs.
Lemons Jul 23rd 2011 6:16AM
Woah boy. People wanted to meet the bloggers and they got it. Basil does not sugar coat his opinions does he? I for one respect that. Everyone has unpopular opinions, if you don't then you're a drone. It's just that Basil has the balls to actually express them.
Bumblebee Jul 23rd 2011 6:46AM
These comments are priceless. Especially the ones Basil actually replies to. He doesn't seem to care if people like him or not, but when stuff is taken out of context, or is factually wrong, then he feels the need to point out what actually happened. Seems like the right guy to write about making a profit.
You don't need to like the guy to respect him. That being said, I've always enjoyed the Gold Capped articles. I'm more of the opposite as a player, I enjoy the lore-side of things immensely, read all quest texts and go after achievements, not because it profits me, but because I find them fun. I can totally see why some people could find things like that boring, or irrelevant to what they get enjoyment from.
I can see how a player who doesn't care about lore could come up with the idea that Alliance are the good guys. People who don't know, or care, for the story context often over-simplify things. I personally get more out of the game knowing the whole story, but hey, long as people are having fun and aren't griefing each other to do it, I don't really mind.