Quote Originally Posted by Xianghua View Post
your example doesn't work in this case. You see at the grocery store and real life Items have set prices and we have these things called Change. In-game there is no change, and the seller chooses the prices of said items.
So in this case the price of the repair was 14mil.
You're arguing over semantics when it is simply morals.

Point Norack is trying to make is that this is an honest mistake, it is the moral choice for the person who happened to encounter it to return the money. That is all this is. You can spin it whatever way you want, but it is still the same moral decision.

Either way it sucks that the guy you happen to run into has no moral standing.