Sadly there is nothing Blizzard can do unless they know the accounts on which this prisoners are being forced to play on. Even *if* they find that out and ban those accounts, they will quickly open up new accounts and just carry on.
I can't think of a worst punishment than being forced to play WoW.
The concentration camps currently being run in North Korea disagree.I can't think of a worst punishment than being forced to play WoW.
god dammit the man makes sense, its like slow torture
What happens when they are released?
In a criminal
Out a MMPORG addict
i fail to see the rehabilitation, its like cutting someones crack supply only to hand them weed
This amount seems absurdly high. Is gold farming really that lucrative?We worked 12-hour shifts in the camp. I heard them say they could earn 5,000-6,000rmb [£470-570] a day
I think the solution is blizzard open there own official site that sells Gold and then undercut all the farmers. That way bliz will kill the black market of WoW Gold.
WoW has an economy of its own and that's not just ingame. There are lots of sites where you pay real money for Wow gold. Some people sell their accounts on ebay. A few people I know got well over 1k for their accounts on ebay. And a friend of mine sold gold to his other friends/guild mates....
Assuming the earnings mentioned in the article are correct, then about R500 per hour. I really don't think that's accurate though.So indulge a non-wow player here, how do you "farm" gold? How much can one earn in an hour rand wise?
Going to start farming...Assuming the earnings mentioned in the article are correct, then about R500 per hour. I really don't think that's accurate though.
WoW veterans would probably give u a better answer about high level farming but I assume it would involved killing mobs that drop sought after materials or items that could be sold in-game to other players for WoW gold.
Sound like a cushy way to do your time? Well, Liu explained that the gaming was in addition to a full day's work chiseling chopsticks and constructing car seat covers. Not only that, but penalties were harsh for not meeting the daily gold quota.
I only realised after reading the full article on Guardian/Eurogamer that Mr Liu was in fact a political prisoner. Don't mess with the Chinese gov!! :wtf:Putting food on plates by doing something ultimately illegal (gold selling) is one thing - see the stories of Chinese gold farms ad infinity.
Punishing prison inmates (that probably deserve punishment, seeing as though they're in prison) by making them do the same thing is another.
<snip>
Liu says he was one of scores of prisoners forced to play online games to build up credits that prison guards would then trade for real money. The 54-year-old, a former prison guard who was jailed for three years in 2004 for "illegally petitioning" the central government about corruption in his hometown, reckons the operation was even more lucrative than the physical labour that prisoners were also forced to do.