mikailborg: I can't even remember what event I was attending, but I must have been taking it seriously. (crusade)
[personal profile] mikailborg
In World of Warcraft, once you are high enough level, you get to ride around the lands instead of walking and running. At level 40, you can acquire a steed which moves at 160% of your running speed; at level 60, you can get one that moves at 200%. (At higher levels, you can get mounts that fly, but they are only good in certain areas.) When the necessities of the game force you to pass through the same area for the hundredth time, the bonus speed is quite welcome.

My gnome mage rides a large mechanical ostrich, while my warlock summons a demonic horse. Mounts are expensive, but not rare or difficult to acquire. (Poor gnome is still riding her lvl 40 ostrich because she hasn't yet made enough money for her lvl 60, but that's purely a matter of time.)

Like anything else in the game, there are rare and valuable steeds found only with the greatest of luck. To mirror this, the trading card game for WoW includes ultra-rare cards with a scratch-off code that can be entered into the game to provide the player's character with a mount that few in the lands of Azeroth will ever see. This ghostly tiger is pretty keen-looking; the regular tigers of the night elves are nice enough that some players of other races work for the right to them, and this one is certainly cooler than those.

My point here? One of those WoW "loot cards' just sold on eBay... for TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS.

Great C'Thun, people. It's a CGI tiger. In a game. It doesn't even go faster than [livejournal.com profile] shrewlet's armored warhorse or [livejournal.com profile] snidegrrl's giant rhino-lizard. Someone just paid the cost of my next Mac laptop for this virtual ride.

Arrrrgh.

(no subject)

Date: 2007-08-18 06:37 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jdunson.livejournal.com
I'm a FF-XI player, not a WOW player... I can only imagine what similar cards would go for. There is weirdness either going with a closed or an open economy, but any time you have ultra-rare items in a modern popular setting, they'll be unreasonable on the secondary markets (Black Lotus M:tG card, Four Horsemen clix, and so on). Credit to the WoW folks for successfully melding the CCG and MMORPG rare-item crazes for great, er, profit, I guess.

Weirdly enough, I rather like the idea of the beach chair. Miuramir, my feline ranger, spent a whole lot of her early career fishing to help pay for all the ammo she was shooting away, and I still go back to it occasionally when I need something low-stress to do.

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