Not really a issue. There are already many so called mentors who dont belong in there , if I believe my friend who just started playing.
Not really a issue. There are already many so called mentors who dont belong in there , if I believe my friend who just started playing.
Really.. What's the point in all that?
Bad mentors and RMT are completely different beasts.
To say RMT being in the network isn't an issue because there are bad mentors in it is just....wild, to say the least.
Could also be 2 (or more) RMT "masters" one that invites all the bots and one that remains silent until the first master is kicked.. then re-invites him.
Lodestone Profile
http://na.finalfantasyxiv.com/lodestone/character/2183636/
My question is, what benefit does a "Master RMT" gain by inviting a bunch of sprout bots into a channel where everyone can clearly tell that these're bots? Wouldn't it be dumb for a "Master RMT" to be inviting their slave accounts into the network where a bunch of mentors can alert the GMs of these potential accounts?
(If they were advertising in the novice network, then yeah, I could see that being the case; however we don't seem to have that issue on Balmung. At least, right now.)
Last edited by Vivi_Bushido; 03-12-2016 at 09:07 AM.
How would RMT even get the qualifications to be a Mentor? They have to get 300 coms and complete 1k duties. I dont see anyone giving RMT bots coms lol
It's pretty likely that the bot master(s) have an authentic main account to play the game with. After all, how else would they be able to research the game's economies and know what markets are the in-demands for business? The bots would have to have knowledge of how the game works from a player PoV, before they could even sell a product. They don't just sell and advertise blindly.
Even if the bot master(s) had a serious account which they actually played the game on, (probably still using bots on themselves of course). It can't be too far fetched that some bots have real accounts they physically enjoy the game on. It can't be all work and no play on their part. After all, these're bots. They play themselves anyway, which would leave the bot master(s) with a lot of free time to pretty much do anything else they wanted. Who knows. Maybe to increase income, they sell carries on some accounts while making more on bot accounts. An unlikely, but not impossible theory I assure you.
Last edited by Vivi_Bushido; 03-12-2016 at 01:57 PM.
I think you're giving the RMTs too much credit. I'm going to agree, it's likely a troll or inviting without being aware. What gain would they get?
If you're looking at it from the RMT perspective, the Novice Network is gold for you. It's a chat people can't leave, and you are focusing your advertisements to a group of new players who probably don't know that RMT is against the rules. If a newbie buys $20 worth of gil from them, and then they get banned, what does RMT care? They made $20. They only do what they do for profit, anyways.
It's like a candy company finding a way to advertise inside of a school or daycare.
I believe that the mentor system should have a daily or weekly requirement to keep your crown on your head. It is a system that easily gives the ability to mentor people based on just playing the game. You don't really need to go out there to be a mentor. Just play the game and eventually you are a mentor with out aiming for it. There should be something that should set good mentors from bad ones. The ones who want to mentor and the ones who only want the crown on their head.
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