Also for resources like weeds, nuggets, stone, fruitI know they are used to find villagers and such, but people trade them in such large quantities. Do they have any other value to them?
People are selling huge quantities of tickets on ebay for irl money and I'm ASSUMING these tickets are not legitimate.They are for going to mystery tours to find villagers or special islands. Usually when I buy one on the NM program I end up with a generic island. I haven't really been lucky.
I would really love to know how people can spend 30 NMT on a simple trade without batting an eye. Are these things being hacked?
Not necessarily, it's fairly easy to acquire Nook Miles. And if you trade items/bells/villagers/TBT for NMT it's also fairly easy to get a nice amount. But those listings on ebay are definitely from cfw Switches.I would really love to know how people can spend 30 NMT on a simple trade without batting an eye. Are these things being hacked?
the worst part is we can't even prove that people are using hacked tickets. I think there's a few people around here who have earned them legitimately (like artists asking for tickets in exchange for artwork?) but I do share the belief that the majority of tickets circulating around here are from hackers or people who bought them with real money.I understand you can accumulate a lot of tickets over time by doing plus/regular miles yourself and by trading for some here or there. But the rate they are being thrown about (and traded for items that don't warrant such excess) screams hacking. That's my beef. It messes up the trading economy for the rest of us who want to still trade legitimately.
The current situation isn't even messed up, in my opinion. It's just the way an online trading economy works, and you can see it in MMOs. Something that has a lot of demand and is difficult to spawn into the game carries a high price tag. You have speculation that hacked NMTs are coming into the game, but that hasn't been proven. Those ebay sellers that have been brought up here could be buying them cheaply in bulk and trying to flip them for a higher price. I don't condone real world trading, but what we have seen so far doesn't necessarily 'scream' hacking.I never got into the NL scene until Xmas of 2014. I know they had to make a bunch of patches before I got in. Was the trading economy messed up in the early days? Probably not to this extent I'd imagine, but was there a divide?
The current situation isn't even messed up, in my opinion. It's just the way an online trading economy works, and you can see it in MMOs. Something that has a lot of demand and is difficult to spawn into the game carries a high price tag. You have speculation that hacked NMTs are coming into the game, but that hasn't been proven. Those ebay sellers that have been brought up here could be buying them cheaply in bulk and trying to flip them for a higher price. I don't condone real world trading, but what we have seen so far doesn't necessarily 'scream' hacking.
The New Leaf situation was incredibly messed up. There was a save-scumming duplication trick that was never patched, so literally nothing had value except for villagers. But then you trade those villagers for what? Bells? That also had no value, and just took time transferring it back and forth. I guess that's where TBT bells came in.
That's just the tip of the iceberg as far as how broken the New Leaf economy was. There were later hacking programs developed that could do 'text to item' which spawned whatever you wanted, infinitely, at whim.
It's been happening in animal crossing since Wild World, I don't think that's going to stop.Seems like something Nintendo should cease and desist.