Whoosh is the sound of it going over your head.
So why no classic boosts because the game begins at 60?
Everyone? Not saying everyone bought gold. But the amount of gold being thrown around in gdkp is absolutely obtained through tainted means.
Classic doesn’t begin at 60. It begins at 1.
Just like TBC doesn’t begin at 70… it begins at 58 (unless you are leveling a new race)
That’s nice. And has nothing to do with the boost.
You are so wrong it’s funny. As I said before I’m an Economist by profession and I have read plenty of economics text books and papers, thank you very much.
I don’t really know if you actually think you are right or you are just trying to appear like you know about the topic but anyways continue to be happy with your false knowledge/ignorance.
Good luck in life, you will probably need it.
Reading comprehension is difficult for you, I’m sure. If you have no interest in maintaining the context, don’t comment on the post.
Oh so it’s only whatever you decide is irrelevant.
Level 60s have nothing to do with the boost. Level 60s aren’t buying the boost.
The content is only relevant at 60.
It also begins at level 1 if you’re not boosting.
Ok.
That is true, a lot of the gold in gdkp is dirty gold.
But I personally have 2 level 60s and never bought any gold, I leveled my first character all the way to 60 by myself and then a warrior also by myself except a couple of levels that I tried boosting in maraudon but found it too expensive and boring.
Currently i have 1.8k gold made by farming DMN tribute runs.
I’m not an exception by the way, there are plenty of other players like me who did not buy gold and still play the game.
So I’m wrong believing hardware isn’t fixed, finite, or limited?
Diminishing returns kicks in when one can’t adjust the capital requirements - or it becomes cost prohibitive to do so.
If the cost of adding a new hardware remains constant to the money that hardware produces… diminishing returns doesn’t exist.
In theory the 1st pc running bots should make the same money as the 100000th pc running bots.
Which defeats the notion of diminishing returns.
No. The base game begins at level 1. TBC doesn’t begin until you start leveling in Outland OR a new race.
Mid level dungeons are better content than most raids
Yes, playing the game and actually earning your gold is one thing. But as you just said, boosting is expensive. And I doubt anybody who is going to mind-numbingly grind gold legitimately is going to throw it to a booster. And the sheer volume of boosters just shows there’s very clearly a booming business in it, otherwise it wouldn’t be a thing. And it’s not being funded by clean gold.
How is it wrong?
Are you saying if you add additional hardware… those bots will make less relative money?
Your logic only makes sense if the hardware requirements become relatively more expensive the more bots you add…
which isn’t true to my knowledge
I agree they’re fun, and an integral part of the game. During TBC I did far more Azeroth dungeons than I did in Vanilla. The world was full of players. Boosts take that away, or at least greatly diminish it. I think of all the friends I made during that process. Boosts take that away too.
We’ve seen where this leads. But some people don’t care.
False, There are quests outside of the tbc starting areas that exist, that were added for tbc.
Incorrect. You had access to those quests even without TBC back in 2007.
They are not tied to TBC expansion.