Skip to main content
 

Actually, China Didn't Ban Gold Farming
 Bill Vaughan 

A closer look at China's legislation on the trade of virtual money reveals that 'gold farming' as we know it will, in fact, not be affected.

Contrary to reports earlier this week, the new rules state that virtual money may not be used to buy real goods, which is the opposite of a ban on gold selling. The restriction applies to the use of virtual currencies such as QQ coins, banning them from being used to purchase real items instead of virtual items as intended. Gambling with virtual currency has also been banned, as explained by Professor Richard Heeks:

“This therefore is not about what gold farming clients do: use real money to buy these virtual currencies; it’s the mirror image.  And it’s not about the major trade in gold farming such as World of Warcraft, which relates to other types of virtual currency.  And it’s not about buying/selling in-game items.  And it’s not about the power-levelling of avatars.” He summarises, “Bottom line: it’s not about gold farming.”

N4G : News for Gamers

Related Info

World of Warcraft

User comments

(1) Posted: 15:09 on 03 Jul 2009
Gunnar Petzall
Aha... More to stop trading that can not be taxed rather than fixing a problem :P
(2) Posted: 17:12 on 03 Jul 2009
Luke Kneller
All about the money!
(3) Posted: 18:10 on 07 Jul 2009
Raishida
I've read an article that enlightened me about the real score about the banning of gold farming in China which explained that it's not about WoW but about QQ coins that China is concerned about. http://www.wowgoldfacts.com/2009/07/06/the-story-behind-the-chinese-brouhaha-lost-in-translation-indeed/
please register or login to comment.
gamesbasesment PCGamestore.com

Popular Stories This Hour

Latest Comments

Game Releases

Most...