Insert The Well of goodwill to combat inflation and give...

Dingbest Discussion started by Dingbest 4 years ago
Give a hiscores webpage to it and lets see who dumps the most GP from OSRS gold. But understanding how boss kc got the whole thing fucked I am not positive whether it can take care of that. Boss KCs fucked up everything because the number of datapoints the highscores were tracking for every single player doubled overnight. Adding just 1 category would have almost no impact, I think. When clues were inserted it had no actual impact which has been 5 new classes. And they can have a minimum amount donated to show up like regular hiscores. Something similar to 1 mil gp would most likely be fine.

It'd be nice if jagex really used it though. Even if only once or twice a year. They did do leveling for charity that's nice, but this is a good way to strengthen the market while making a real-world impact. Iirc it in RuneScape, but was just removed after the event, there is no reason it couldn't be added. Even if I'm misremembering it's not exactly a complicated update, including high scores and these are a little more work I imagine. But this would be something that's absolutely worth the time spent either way there is no downside to eliminating some gold out of RuneScape.

We are already seeing quite serious inflation and gold becoming less precious, in addition to the nuking of essentially any equipment up to dragon sitting in alch prices thanks to their own overabundance on drop tables. This is 1 regard where RS3 warrants some serious charge, the introduction of the intention skill made hint hunting plus a lot of other things viable again instantly, and gave players a way to remove items from RuneScape whilst nevertheless being rewarded for it. It was probably among the best turnarounds for the market in gambling history, and it is loved by people.

We need thing sinks with the loss of the capacity to shed items. Even the death mechanics aren't a fantastic sink. This is something jagex really must think about for osrs and put actual time into creating real and workable sinks instead of just charging for dying or using artificial and unnecessary sinks such as 100m to get a home decoration, or even a 250m cosmetic crown which literally nobody cares about. Complete support, get on it jagex.

Didn't they have to offset the well of goodwill because of real world trading thing? Help me. It included a lot of consequences to Jagex's monetization model. It officially implied GP has real world value by donating money based on how much gp was thrown to the well. When you run a gambling service such as RS3 mtx you can not hide from it being labeled as betting when your in RuneScape game currency legally has real life value.

The way gaming laws are composed it is technically not betting till you can take out your"winnings" into real money. Since bonds and treasure hunter are one way trades (you pay actual money for a product ingame) they technically aren't gambling. The problem is when jagex ties a world dollar amount into the cash in reverse. If state for every 1M at the nicely $1 comes out of jagex into a charity there are an argument you could make that since jagex would be encouraging the transference of ingame riches into a real world value they're adding a method to"cash out" and would no longer be not gambling.

At this time they get away with it since the reverse of bonds (selling gold) is against the rules and isn't something jagex supports. There is not any jagex supported way to have a real world effect from your wealth in runescape. The laws will need to be rewritten with the net and contemporary practices in your mind. Eliminate the loot boxes, because you can't exchange them back? Kinda crazy.

There are many more I want to tell you, but time is limited. These views and ideas are all from this website, if you are interested, you can browse them in detail. URL: https://www.winrsgold.com/
Loading content, please wait.
Replies
You need to be a member of this group before you can participate in this discussion.

Hello Me