If you pay real $$ to get ahead in the game, there is no point to even playing.

What do you mean by this? Disclaim responsibility for recognizing the validity of such a transaction? Disclaim responsibility for enforcing any rule against it?Zopar wrote:I think there should be a disclaimer of any real monetary transactions in game play
I think I understand this. We can't verify whether such transactions occurred, so there's nothing to act on?Sanity wrote:a rule that prohibits it would be unenforceable, and unenforceable rules are null and void.
If we can't enforce a rule that prohibits such a transaction, how can we enforce a rule that supports it? Maybe I misunderstand.Sanity wrote:Voted support
It has always been decided that we will never do this. The Mana World will always be free in both ways.Sanity wrote:Some games support RMT by having "premium currency" ingame, that is obtainable through payments/"donations" to game admins, and then can be traded for ingame items to other players or spent on some exclusive stuff from "premium shops". This is the way I see the "Support" option of RMT could work.
I agree, TMW will always be free no matter what. I personally oppose to anything that has anything to do with buying anything with real money on the game. TMW has always been completely free and should stay that way.o11c wrote:It has always been decided that we will never do this. The Mana World will always be free in both ways.
William James wrote:Act as If what you do make's a difference, because It does.
IMHO it's pointless to forbid what you can't check/enforce: it's not going to work well anyway. So it's like fighting windmils.Johanne Laliberté wrote:For the main reason is that game is free and no protection for this kind of transaction. So it must be forbidden.
Therefore since not all thieves can be caught, there should be no law against theft, being null and void. Not all murders are caught; so laws against murder would be null and void. That's some really brain-dead logic. Maybe you are selling items for real money and you answered this way.Sanity wrote:Voted support, because a rule that prohibits it would be unenforceable, and unenforceable rules are null and void.
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If law could not be enforced more or less reliably, there is no point to create it. It's unavoidable retribution what makes laws working. If retribution easily avoided, such law just not going to work and rather wastes everyone time and resources.wilddawg wrote:Therefore since not all thieves can be caught, there should be no law against theft,