Because you read the ToS and know that I am right?
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I'm flattered to have a fan.
But to elaborate:
There is no limitations, neither in the system nor in the ToS, as to how many times and why you relocate so long as you can pay up the fee.
Likewise, there is no limitations, neither in the system nor in the ToS, as to how much you can put an item for in a vendor. If you put it for a ridiculously price compared to the market media, then no one will buy it.
Unless they are botting.
At which point it's your fault.
You decided to trust a 3rd party program to play the game for you and you found out that the 3rd party program wasn't so smart. As some others have said in this thread, you are responsible for every click you make in the game, or in this case, for relegating the clicking to a program.
Gotta love people who view clicking your mouse as a task that requires bots. Basically a giant sign over your head that says: "I'm lazy and don't deserve a house, please rob me."
Got what you deserved buddy.
Before anyone chimes in with: "I'm not lazy!!! I just have a life," cool bbdoll, so does everyone. People with lives still click on the placard. Just wait till the lottery system comes in for housing in 6.1 and be lazy there.
Ripperoni.
There already is a cooldown on relocation, it just isnt long enough(currently its 5 mins). And the reason they get priority is that they arent removing any available houses from the market, just changing the location the available house is in. But you could still greatly improve the feature by changing two things. 1. Lengthen the cooldown on relocation. Easiest way would be to tie it to either the daily or weekly reset(honestly daily would be long enough, but if you wanted to be harsh you could set it to the week). If you need to wait til tomorrow, you probly arent getting your original lot back so the number of people who would be willing to transfer to troll would be greatly reduced. 2. If someone transfers into a lot, rather then re-starting the random purchase timer just transfer the time remaining over to the newly opened lot. This ensures the timer is always getting closer to 0 and a transfer no longer changes how long someone would have to wait for their purchase.