World of Warcraft

Gold Selling: Effects and Consequences

Anti gold buying and selling

Selling/buying/trading for gold and items in World of Warcraft is mainly frowned upon, yet, many still continue to do it. There's also quite a few people buying so-called powerleveling services.

Blizzard Europe have made a really clear statement about their thoughts and views surrounding this. It's no surprise that they are completely against it. As am I and the Curse staff as well. Cheating should always be frowned upon. It only ruin the overall gaming experience and make things feel cheap and less exciting and fun.

We would like to make a clear statement here about the negative impact of buying gold and using power-leveling services. Every day, we encounter players who have been negatively affected and targeted by companies offering these services. So, we hope to raise awareness about the practices they engage in and the detrimental effects they have on all players, including their own customers, as well as on the game environment as a whole.

What many people don't realize when buying gold is the large impact it has on the game economy, and also how the companies selling gold obtain it. Our developers, in-game support, and anti-hack teams work diligently to stop the exploits these companies use and help players who have become victims of their services. We regularly track the source of the gold these companies sell, and find that an alarmingly high amount comes from hacked accounts. These are the friends, relatives, and guildmates you may know who have gone through the experience of having characters, gold, and items stripped from them after visiting a website or opening a file containing a trojan virus. Our teams work to educate players and assist them in avoiding account compromise, but the fact remains that the players themselves are often these companies' largest target as a source for gold, which the companies then turn around and sell to other players.

Through our normal support processes and the assistance of players, we also find that many accounts that have been shared with power-leveling services are then hacked into months later, and all of the items on the account are stripped and sold off. Basically, players have paid money to these companies, sometimes large amounts, and they're then targeted by these same companies down the road. We come across stories every week of the aftereffects of players using these services, and some players now have to deal with long-term repercussions -- In addition to consequences such as possible account suspension or closure, in many cases the companies they paid then use their personal information to perpetrate identity theft and credit card fraud. These are long-lasting effects on players' personal lives that can take years to recover from.

We also want players to recognize that these companies often employ people to do their work through the use of disruptive hacks in the game, which can cause realm performance and stability issues. The companies essentially take time away from our development and in-game support efforts as we work to stop their exploits and assist players who have become their victims in recovering characters and items. They spam advertisements, use bots that make it hard for players to find the resources they need, and raise the cost of items through inflation.

The negative effects these companies create depend directly on people using their services. Without them, the companies have no way to continue their unethical actions. Furthermore, it’s important to keep in mind that players are responsible for what happens with the account they play on. Selling gold for real money and having characters power-leveled are violations of our Terms of Use and End User License Agreement, and we regularly take corrective action when we find that these services have been used. We hope the information presented here is helpful to anyone considering buying gold or using a power-leveling service; these are just a few reasons that those services can negatively impact World of Warcraft and other games, and we strongly encourage players not to support the companies that offer them.

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  • avalance said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    personally Im neither neither for nor against gold selling or power leveling. If we wanted this to be a perfect working community that the economy was thriving and blah blah blah, then we should not only focus on other people getting money or getting twinked to 70 in a month but to other things. How many of you have never replied back when asked if wanted to join for an instance.raid run? How many of you have ganked a member of the opposing faction when he was PvE-ing and had his back turned to you? How many have /ignore on keybind for every low0level char that begs for a run through DM or Stockades?
    Exactly my point. WoW is not RL and if it was then probably lotteries should be banned as gold-selling and other kinds of life improvement as powerleveling. The end result is the same. Whoever buys gold does not destroy your game experience nor ends up stronger than you. You both can get the same equipment and have the same skills. He might get it faster but what the heck? Are we here to make sure that the character next to us does not get things quicker than us or are we here for your own personal fun ? Personally for the latter and I dont care whether the lock, war, loladin or whatever has more gold, better equipment or lvled up faster than me. As long as they do not get immunity in shadow bolts I just dont care. :)

  • Rofocal said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    Personally I think it's pretty sad you have to do this. Gold buying I can understand a bit but if you power-level you're just pathetic. If you can't even level from 1-70 (which isn't hard especially after 2.3) then you don't really have any business playing the game. Doesn't matter if you have X amount of 70's already and you don't want to level again. If you don't want to level again then don't start another toon. Gold buying I'd probably be ok with except for most of the gold is stolen gold. Saying it's their fault for clicking on a bad link is like saying it's the fault of someone who's been mugged because they walk down the wrong alley. Yeah they should probably be more careful but it's the person who uses the keylogger's fault for being a greedy *** who has to exploit people. So I don't support buying gold and I'll say that (especially if you're conservative about your leveling in outlands) getting gold isn't really a problem.

    All in all, if you can't play the game like it is (doubtful blizzard will change the grinding aspect of it), then you probably shouldn't be playing it in the first place.

  • xwiser said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    As pointed out by the article,
    1.) Gold buying services cheapen the game.
    2.) Power-leveling defeats the purpose of the game.
    3.) By utilizing these scams, people leave themselves wide open to attacks on their account, their computer, their finances, and their lives.
    4.) People who make the mistake of using these scams need to learn from their stupidity.
    And finally,
    5.) I pity the fools but i do not feel sorry for them.
    If anything, I feel angered at the morons who perpetuate these scams and especially against young kids. Also, what in the world are young kids' parents doing allowing them access to that type of financial information?!? Thank you blizzard for at least attempting to stop the scammers.

  • Funky303 said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    in reply:

    so you are one of "these assmonkeys" who thinks his point of view and style & time to play is the one and only and everyone has to follow your personal rules.

    WOW is a GAME. Just a game. Maybe you forgot that.
    When i started to gather my money for my first epicmount, there were no dailys. Even though there are daily quests, it would take you at least 30-40 days to collect 5k gold even if you do 10 dailys a day (which is between 80 and 100 played hours playtime).

    So if someone won't or can't do that, it is his decision to do the simple math:

    Spending some 2-10 RL workhours for the same money he could buy the same money on ebay.

    The real *** behind leveling services and goldselling is Blizzard:

    - why do those morons have to make the same password which i use ingame for my account page too ? A simple 2 password system could stop all those frauds blizzard mentions. (like credit card fraud etc).

    - why isn't blizzard starting to offer some premades, starting at lvl 60 won't hurt anybody. One doesn't "learn his class" from lvl 1, you get most of your good skills with lvl60+. I have 5 Alts at lvl70, it IS pain in the ass to level the 6th. None i know does level his alt with quests, you get pulled through instances in a row until you hit lvl 50, then you get pulled by 2 friends through tmeple and as soon as you do some simple quests you're 58 and you're switching to BC. so i don't really see any point in "leveling is fun, you learn your class" speeches.

    If there were no need for leveling services (when blizz would allow premades) and there would be no heavy need to grind each crap in week and month long periods (reputation here, honor there) no one would use those services.

    So to come back to my response to sbseed:

    WoW is like sports, each one does as much as he likes.
    Some ppl do it as a profession, some for fun. so if you do daily wow and stuff, no one else has to do it.

    and the way you speak is clearly offensive.

    So to comment your last sentence:

    you obviously show that in fact YOU ARE a kid.

    P.S:
    I never used leveling or goldbuying.
    And i'm from germany, so sry for my english flaws.

  • Rofocal said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    Sadly it's not just young kids, I know adults who've done that. But yeah if young kids are doing this then shame on the parents for letting them do it or not knowing what their kid is doing.

  • Deadage said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    destroy,ban ,eliminate all gold selling-boost makeing services!!

  • Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    I sell my gold to my friends :D

  • Annisa said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    Like a lot of propaganda from Blizzard, the post quoted above is skewed and only partly true. It is, for instance, quite true people who have powerleveling done sometimes have their accounts hacked afterward. Sometimes within a month, sometimes a year. But its not all that common, despite the statements above, and afaik, most powerleveling companies tell you to change your password immediately upon completion of the service.

    There was an article about a year ago by a young Chinese woman who has a powerleveling and gold farming operation in Taiwan. They don't use hacks or exploits to power level, they do the same kind of playing as recommended in Joanna's leveling guide, and others like it. A set sequence of quests and grinds which take you the most efficient route from 1 to 60 or 70. So to refute Blizzards obfuscation of the truth, power leveling companies don't exploit, they play the game.

    I'm not going to pass judgement on whether its right or not, because Blizzard has a clear right to regulate their game as they see fit, and this includes punishments for power leveling and gold selling/buying. So it doesn't matter what we think, Blizzard is doing that for us.

    Also, in the years I've played WoW, since beta phase 2, I've found its hardly the gold farmers who ruin the economies on servers. Its the players. WoW economy is soley driven by the AH. Trade channel has little impact on anything but giving immature brats a place to show how stupid they are. The economy on a server is totally decided by what players post for sale on the AHs, and for how much, and by who buys it, and for how much.

    And I agree with a poster, above, who points out many players buy gold for one or two purposes.... mainly to buy 300 riding skill (which is ridiculously priced, and will change drastically when WotLK arrives) and also to skill up tradeskills. Its been my experience those who, for example, skill up alchemy, then go on to spend most of the gold they earn from dailys and such on making pots for guildmates for raids, or for their own use. Such a think has little impact on the economy of a server.

    I support Blizzard's hard stance on exploiting and hacking, but do not accept their assesment of what effects powerleveling and gold selling/buying have. As a player, I have simply not seen it to be true.

  • Malystra said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    you sir, are an ass. His anger over his account being banned is COMPLETELY justified....assuming he was being 100% truthful about how it happened. Get off Blizz's ***. The sad part is, he wouldn't be the first one to have this happen. The only reason I'm still paying to play is because it hasn't happened to me.

  • micutzu said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    to all the people who complain about how hard it is to get gold in game i tell u this....play the game before u can make gold i mean i have a lvl 70 holy paladin played the paladin for 1 year and 5 months now and all people know how hard it is for a paladin to farm ..so i chose a profession that dident involved fighting, mining ....and to be honest I'm very happy whit mi choice ...whit mining i was able to get mi epic flying mount mi repair bills are payed and i get to buy a lot of epic blacksmithing recepies from ah ...and not once felt the need to buy gold......i mean whats the point imagine mi satisfaction when i got to have mi epic flying mount i felt like i was king of the world......i cant help to feel disgusted when i hear people buy gold all i can say is shame..like i said play the game the solution is whit in the game itself

  • skiffler said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    Math was never a strongpoint, so correct me if I am way off base here. But it seems to me that:

    8 million people apparantly play Wow (latest Blizz figures)
    If even only one in 10 players bought gold (maybe that's conservative?) that would be
    800,000 people buying gold
    if they spent on average $100 a year on gold (very conservative) that means the wow gold industry alone is worth

    $80 million a year.

    That's more than the annual turnover of prolly 80% of businesses in New Zealand where I come from.

    Now add in the gold that is hacked, stolen, plus the revenues from power levelling services (i won't try to estimate the value of that as I have nothing to base estimates on) but it seems an awefully big industry to me and with that much money at stake I would not think that it is one that is going to disappear anytime soon.

    It is possible the industry is worth many times the amount suggested.
    Scary isnt it.

    PS How much do you think it might be worth?

  • morenho said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    First of all, I'd like to say I would never support paying with real money for anything that is virtual. But It is understandable, as i'll try to demonstrate.

    Several people already said this one way or another, but just to make a stand here: WoW gold selling and all the negative factors that destroy much of the game experience for everyone are exclusively Blizzard's fault.

    Why? Because of the way the game is designed. What Blizzard should realise, as one of the biggest and wealthiest gaming corporations ever, is that 90% of the people play the game for fun. The other 10% make the game theire non-paid 2nd job, and spend just as much time playing as they spend time working or studying (or probably more...). People are compelled to work in WoW. If they want money, items, or level, welcome to several hours of boredom killing the same mobs over and over, running around to mine, skin, gather herbs, etc.

    Blizzard thinks "If we make people work for hours to get anything, they will always play more time, so we earn more money". The truth is I already saw several people leaving the game because its moments of boredom are too much and too much time consuming, while the moments of joy are too few. Actually, just notice this: the game is easy and fun the first 15-20 levels, then it starts getting more time consuming, repetitive. I'm not saying that everything should be given away for free to everyone (like the pvp stuff, good job ruining the game even more...), it just should be funnier and less time consuming. Don't ask me how, ask the people that are being very well payed for it.

    Then some guys thought "Lets sell to people a service where they can skip the boredom of the game and only enjoy it". Gold selling was born. Do they ruin the game for all the others in the process? Of course they do: spam all day long, accounts get stolen, economy gets wracked. But its actually understandable that people do want to pay for someone to "work" for them.

    Bottom line: Gold selling is bad. Making a game that gather all conditions for it to appear is worse. Most people don't play WoW because they want to be rich and powerfull (though many exist...), they play it for fun. Blizzard has made a nice enough game, with beautifull and fun PvE content. Use that to attract new costumers, to keep the current ones, to make the gaming experience more enjoyable. Making 10 million people "work" so they lose time and pay a couple extra months of WoW is making fools out of 10 million people; Making a statement on your site blaming the gold selling companies for an overall bad gaming experience sounds more like a desperate move to blame someone else for a situation you created from the start while developing the game and divert the attention from one of the greatest flaws of WoW: the deliberate boredom you make paying costumers go through every day just to get more money out of them. You would get more money and less trouble (like gold selling, hacking, etc) if you focused on giving players a strong and fun gaming experience from level 1 to 70, not for only the 20 levels we can play as trials.

  • jon310 said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    I am someone most of you will hate.

    I have had multiple characters powerleveled
    I have bought thousands of gold, mostly for the epic flyer
    I have used many different bots
    I have even used hacks(like 3 years ago when I first started playing, they were stupid and pointless)

    I have had a few accounts banned, only for botting. (program detection)

    To start out, I don’t bot anymore, I don’t buy gold anymore, I don’t use powerleveling services anymore, and I don’t hack anymore.

    The reason I'm leaving a comment at all is to help you get into the mind of someone like me who used to use these services.

    Way back when, I got my first character to 60, my warrior. I loved him, but I wanted to try all the classes as they looked so fun. I officially had Alt-itis. I made one of each class and got them all to about 30.

    Thing is, I couldn’t try all the skills and I was stuck with very little to do other than level, which I don’t like.
    So I paid to have every class leveled to 60 except for a paladin and a priest. I never had any bad experiences with them. The companies I have worked with have been great.

    Come BC I took the warrior and Druid to 70 before I was banned. (I was botting on my mage 64).
    My warrior was my favorite character and he was gone. He had the Hand of rag on him as well, I miss it sometimes.

    Getting gold for the epic flyer Pre-daily quests was a ridiculous task. Grinding primals for hours on end, just for a few hundred gold. It was almost impossible. So I bought gold. I had the epic flyer and life was so much better. Easier. I had an arena team going that I was playing in, we were pretty good. This was the beginning of S1 when he got banned.

    I have used bots, but not for the reason you might think. I never did it for gold, I never did it to level. I used to bot because it was fun. There is something about the automation of something so complex that amazes me. Hell, I would even sit and watch it play.

    Even better when I switched from a closed source bot to an open one, because then I could edit the bot and it became my own. Small tweaks made it run perfectly. It was fun being apart of the community and developing something that was so complex and entertaining.

    My experience with Hacks for wow was out of curiosity. I teleported across the world, I walked up invisible mountains, pointless things that I quickly got bored of and stopped using immediately after I started.

    The thing that most people who I talk to about botting/cheating/breaking the TOS don’t understand is, World of Warcraft is a game. It is meant to be enjoyed. Believe it or not, my botting, hacking, powerleveling never effected anyone but me. Sure blizzard will tell you that you are supporting communism, terrorists, and who ever else they can get you to believe.

    It’s simply not true.

    Currently I have a 70 lock and a 70 shaman. Both are mine, by hand, no gold, no bots, no powerleveling. If I see a botter in game, I wont report him. If I see a guy spamming ad's in SW, I'll report him almost immediately.

    One is disrupting others gameplay, one is not.

  • Annisa said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    Its true, doing daily quests and using your tradeskill(s) to earn money can bring you 60-100 gold easy a day.

    How many days is that to get 5,000 gold for 300 riding skill? And when WotLK arrives, it will possibly get more expensive, even.

    The one thing I know is Blizzard is using the absolute worst case (and relatively rare, at that) to condemn all gold buying/selling and power leveling activities. But then it is Blizzard's game so they can do what they want, and they generally do. Don't they....

  • Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    Im tired of people whining about grinding, take your Playstation out of the closet and play the games that take no commitment or coordination, and stop crying about being broke, if your broke in the game your probably broke in real life. Besides the fact that most people that are broke in the game are only broke because they spend all day spending money in the AH when they could be out questing or farming. Stop being lazy and screwing it up for the rest of the real players. Most dont seem to realize that there is no need to buy gear every 2 lvls, go do instances and get your drops and stop crying about how u have no money or epics, if u were doin what u should be you wquld have the gear and money that u drool over when u see real players run by u, If it didnt take time to get things no one would know how to play there toons or work as a coordinated group wich is what it takes to really play.

  • boramir said 
    Sat, Feb 23 2008 4:34 AM ()

    Well i know the economy on my server is out of control. I think that if inflation and economy is out of control Blizz should take a play from Sony with what happened "on accident" in EQ1 and say there was a programming error and everyone's money was reset to zero and there is no way to fix it. that way the economy would get fixed, it would screw the gold farming companies really hard and would get things back on track again.

    I mean with doing daily quests you would be able to get your money back eventually.

    This is just a thought and i know ton of people would get pissed about it but it would fix everything quickly.

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