Thursday, June 19, 2008

FFXI Guide now available

Since the Chinese companies are engaging in click fraud, gilfinder.com is now offering various FFXI guide for sale. Don't buy ffxi gil if you have the time. Instead, use the final fantasy xi strategy guides to level your characters. There are guides for several ffxi jobs including Paladin, Red Mage, Beastmaster, and Ninja. Get your ffxi gil guide and earn tons of gil without having to buy gil. As always, if you don't have hour upon endless hour to spend leveling your character, or you need to buy some insanely expensive armor, you should check out the cheapest gil available online at Gilfinder first.

Clickfrauding from Chinese Gold Farmers

Some chinese gold farmers are now engaging in click fraud in order to blow their competion out of the water, and secure the top paid advertising positions for themselves. They say it doesn't pay to cheat, but apparently it does when it comes to this business. After multiple complaints to Google, it has become clear that Google couldn't care less about the issue. As far as I can tell, Google is earning more cash due to all the click fraud being committed. Even with clear server log evidence of hundreds of IP addresses originating from China, they still completely ignore any support requests or any abuse reports to them.

Friday, April 11, 2008

Please post your argument regarding RMT. Your opinion, please?

Please read past the fist topic.

Current Journals:

Profile of an RMT
Who GaS (Gives a Shit) about RMT?
Tobold interviews an RMT.
RMT and U.S. Law

Tobold's MMORPG Blog: Interview with a Gold Seller

I am RMT: Response to Tobold Interview with a Gold Seller

PR for Mogs? Yes. Interesting? Sure. Self-righteous attacks against anything RMT as a result? Absolutely.

Full time MMORPG players are pissed off at the mere mention of RMT. Some are even unsubscribing to Tobold's blog (check the comments), lol! I happen to buy virtual currency, so it makes me laugh to see how worked up "serious gamers" get about the issue.

Sometimes I feel sorry for full-time gamers. Then I remember how arrogant and condescending some have been towards me. Then I remember that people need to excel at things. Humans need to succeed, and for some, games are where achievement can be found.

We're all human. We all find achievement in different places. Some of us like to dominate others with accomplishments. Gamers, included, are humans too. :)

Anyways, the article opens up many questions. It brings up a perspective that many won't even speak of. Many of the comments center around questions about the validity of the interviewee. I'd like to comment on the interview, and the interviewee in particular. Mogs.com does have higher customer support and satisfaction than it's competitors. How do I know? I run an independent web site dedicated to increasing game experiences for Final Fantasy XI players, through FFXI guides, along with FFXI price comparisons. I happen to know that Mogs.com recieves high reviews for it's services.

I'm not posting this in order to promote Gilfinder.com, or other RMTs such as Mogs.com. I am, however, stating the obvious. RMT is alive and well - chances are, if you are a serious gamer, people that you know are engaged in the practice.

Monday, March 24, 2008

RMT and U.S. Law

Gamers,

At the time of this writing, U.S. law is uncertainly clear regarding intellectual property rights in the field of MMORPGs.

Some argue that individual property rights belong to people who play the game and spend time developing, enhancing, and building characters. Others argue that no profit should be earned, based on the creative rights of the software providers who create the game environment.

I can see both points of view.

If I were to create a company, based on a brand, image, and creative concept, I would be unsettled if people were profiting from sales of derivative items based on my creation.

However, suppose I am a gamer who has spent substantial time building a game character. As a free individual, do I have the right to give my character to someone else, perhaps a sibling or friend? Or does the character fully belong to the game company, without exception, regardless of time or value invested into the character?

My personal belief is that the resulting value of any character is a combination of both the software creator, along with the individual who has spent time developing and enhancing the character. I don't think it completely belongs to either party. It seems to me the similarity between a landlord and tenant of rental property. There is certainly a shared ownership within the relationship.

One without the other is an empty equation. Neither side can benefit without the other.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

FFXI and RMT - Who GaS?

I have recently been reading blogs from Tobold's MMORPG. I must admit that I am intrigued by the arguments that have been raised recently. The latest posts concern the ethics of RMT (Real Money Trading) within the world of Final Fantasy XI, WoW, and other massively multi-player online games.

Ethics of RMT? Many would rather shoot their own dog than even consider engaging in such an act. It has become the self-righteous evangelist's drum-beating tune of the MMORPG world to hate anything RMT, including an exploration of the mere viewpoint of those engaged in the practice. It is indeed hated by some players. But those who actually engage in RMT are not likely to speak up, mostly because of the threats and ridicule that are likely to ensue. But times are changing. It is estimated that millions of dollars change hands each year in the free trade of virtual currency for the various major MMORPG games. If millions of dollars (not to mention Euros and Yen) are trading hands, then just WTF is happening?

The short answer is this - many people are engaging in RMT. Enough people, in fact, that there is an entire market built around this industry. Why is this? One reason: time.

There are 2 types of players of MMORPGs - full-time and part-time players. How much time do you spend playing the game? Many students can spend 40+ hours each week playing. Older people with full time jobs and/or children often don't have that kind of time or energy.

My hypothesis and experience has been that most people who are completely enraged over RMT are the younger players who play the game for the longest hours. Older people with higher incomes and less disposable time, are open to the idea of trading a small amount of cash for virtual currency - which would otherwise require excessive amounts of time that is simply not available.

Younger players, who often have very little disposable income, have a hard time understanding the motivations for trading real money for virtual currency. The time value of money has not yet been realized. It is often considered cheating - as though one person's trading of money for time is somehow dis-enfranchising to other players. And many ignore the fact that most of these games are not directly competitive in nature (they are cooperative style games), so one's trading of money for time is not detrimental to other players.

It becomes apparent after playing these games for any significant length of time, that the currency earned vs. time spent is incredibly low - equating to a low value of experience for some players (many players). This is essentially why RMT exists. It simply isn't worth the time for many people to play the game, and the enjoyment factor rapidly diminishes.

So this leads me to the answer to this dilemma. People with time to earn virtual currency often disapprove of those who lack the time to earn their own virtual currency (damn those pesky, real world jobs). Those who lack time, but still want to enjoy the game, must often resort to trading time from another source - the real world.

About the Author:

Full time professional who loves MMORPGs.
More info about the author.