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Blizzard Raid Inc?

There is a long-standing question of how law deals with virtual property. Is in-game theft theft? Does a raid produce wealth of a taxable value? And then there are the questions that come from RMT, since we can translate in-game values to US dollars pretty easily. (Last weekend’s math: a set of City of Heroes’ new purple enhancement recipes was worth ~$200 at the going consignment house/RMT rates.)

Have you ever wondered if having virtual gold could get you arrested? Last month, the US government raided a group that set up its own hard currency, under the claim that having any competing currency to the US dollar is a federal crime and a form of counterfeit (no word yet about attempts to enforce this on people using loonies and pesos). Unlike your raids from the weekend, this one came away with literal tons of gold, silver, and copper coins “medallions.”

At what point does in-game currency become a competing currency that the government will attempt to seize? We already have at least one example of meatspace prostitution for cyberspace gold. Second Life has been bobbing and weaving about its relationship to property, but Linden dollars are more or less fully convertible to US dollars, and Project Entropia has bragged about how its currency connects to out-of-game value. Most games even refer to their currencies as gold coins or dollars.

The Secret Service has not let “it’s just a game” get in the way before. Nor are the Lindens protected by operating outside the US. Note that the IRS considers barter and in-kind exchanges to be taxable income, so the raid could also be done on the grounds of tax evasion.

: Zubon

Obeying Outer Meanings

I am reading Douglas Hofstadter, and I am to his chapter “The Location of Meaning.” He argues that messages have three levels of meaning: frame, outer, and inner. The frame meaning is “this is a message”: you must recognize that there is something to decode here. The outer meaning is how to decode the message, to get from marks on a page to what the writer was trying to express. The inner meaning is what the writer was trying to express. To read a message in Japanese, you must (1) realize that it is writing, not a bunch of little pictures; (2) realize that it is Japanese (and be able to translate it); and (3) read it.

There are many puzzles yet to be solved because the fact that they are puzzles is not explicit. Games Magazine hides a puzzle in each issue, perhaps in the page layout or the structure of another puzzle. At least they tell you that there is a game afoot, if only you can find it. The titular Da Vinci Code is hidden in plain sight because nothing says, “This is a code!”

Continue reading Obeying Outer Meanings

Holidays of Loathing

As a note to occasional Kingdom of Loathing players, the holidays are on again. You have your advent calendar and a new moon is visiting. The pirate cove has been revamped with a new quest. Really, I’m not the guy to ask about all this, since I am deeply into CoX at the moment and not paying much attention to KoL, but I thought I would mention. At least pop by to get your holiday candy at some point.

: Zubon

WoW Combat Tactics Saves Real Lives

Via Wonderland:

“…a young boy and his sister were attacked by a moose, and the boy reportedly “taunted” the moose away from his sister, and then feigned death, causing the moose to lose aggro and leave.

“Just like you learn in level 30 in World of Warcraft,” the boy is reportedly quoted as saying.”

Truly Epic.

~Cyndre

Activision and Blizzard Merger

Yep. That’s right. Activision and Blizzard merging

Wow. I’m not quite sure what I think about this right now, although I’ll probably comment on it on my personal blog from the business perspective.

The gamer half of me is a bit perplexed though. Blizzard probably realizes they can’t rely on their Warcraft/Starcraft franchise forever and simply can’t come up with any good new ideas. Activision might be a good source of established IP and franchises, but it has quite a checkered history. I almost feel like Activision just won the lottery here and Blizzard could have had better merger partners.

The one thing I am thankful for though, is that they did not merge with EA. Because as you all know, EA has the touch of death. The only people that win in a EA acquisition are a few execs. Everyone else gets a wedgie and kick in the mouth.

More commentary later…

Men are from sometime in the future…

… women are from 19th. century Britain. Or so I’ve found out. Allow me to relate to you a conversation I recently had with my amazing spousal unit. It will be summarized and paraphrased, of course, but I’m sure you’ll get the idea. Even if the names have been removed to protect the innocent.

Developers, designers and psychology students take good note, because this is how deep the rabbit hole goes sometimes.

Continue reading Men are from sometime in the future…

For the Lore!

I’m a lore junky. For those who knew me back in my EQ days, they would attest to that. I used to run trivia contests using my intimate knowledge of the game’s lore to entertain. I even had devs of the game ask me lore-based questions, which, for me, was a highlight of playing that game. However, as EQ progressed, the lore changed. Now, when a game lasts as long as EQ has, you have to have growth to the lore, and no one would look askew at you if you occasionally revamped some lore based on, perhaps, some “old hidden scrolls that have just recently come to light” or something. That’s good storytelling. Because that was one of the reasons EQ had such immersion – it told a fantastic story. Around about the third time Kerra Island’s back-story was completely written, I came to understand that the story had been left on the cutting room floor. One of the most interesting complaints I see from WoW lore junkies is the way a major element of the lore is being completely re-written for Wrath of the Lich King.

Continue reading For the Lore!

WoW Update I

Some quick thoughts before the jump…

  • The Blood Elf noob zones are amazingly well designed.  They have continuity, great quest synergy and are beautiful and full of unique flavor.
  • Starting over from scratch is tough to get used to.   I ran out of cash because I trained all of the weapon skills at L10, forgetting that I still have to pinch pennies.  Compared to my Twink alliance alt that I started for the 10-19 battlegrounds, who had 2000 gold sitting in her mailbox when she got to the very first mailbox in Goldshire.
  • Warcraft, with all of its many flaws is still an amazing game, and nothing can compare to the incredible population levels available in every zone.  Many games have whole swaths of territory vacant after the first leveling rush passes, but no matter your level, you can always find others in WoW, no matter where you are or what you are working on.

Continue reading WoW Update I

Break Open The Piggy Bank

There comes a time when the costs of running a site become overwhelming and so you turn to your loyal readers to ask for their support. If your readers like what you do, they will frequently help keep things running smoothly. They appreciate what you do and want to keep it going. That time has come. No, not for us here at KTR.

My good friend Brent over at VirginWorlds has offered up some memberships to help support his site. If you enjoy the many services he provides, I encourage you to consider joining up over there. From the latest MMO news and articles to a large collection of podcasts and enough links to make even me cry – nobody does it better than Brent.

– Ethic