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Should I Sell My Items On This One Game For Real Money

Where can I sell my gold in an MMORPG for real money?

There are many C2C platforms offering such services. As a gamer, I personally would recommend G2G, the Gaming Virtual Goods Marketplace & Trading PlatformG2G platform offers over thousand of games for gamers to buy / sell their virtual goods. When i was still playing Runescape or FF14, i used to sell my runescape gold and ff14 gil there. At the moment i am still reselling some wow accounts here.This platform offering quite some payment methods for sellers, after you sold your virtual goods, you can withdraw the payment to your Paypal, Skrill, Banks, etc. Check their available payment methods before you selling there.If you stop playing a game, or have extra gold / items to sell, then give this platform a try. And if you intend to buy something, check this platform too. I highly suggest this C2C platform to anyone serious about buying / selling MMORPG goods / services.

Could you earn real money from cs go?

Is it possible? Yes.Is it likely going to happen? No.It is very unlikely to make money from CS:GO, but here are a few of the ways that I am familiar with, and note that most of the time you will lose money attempting to do these things:Get lucky opening cases and sell the skins for real money.This requires you to put down $2.49 minimum just to open it, and you can get cases for free by just playing the game.Get an insanely rare drop and sell it for money.It is possible to get something like a Dragon Lore or a Medusa which sell for a good amount, and the float can also determine how much people are willing to buy it for.A nice time to get drops is during a major tournament, since they drop souvenir cases to random spectators of the tournament. Some of the souvenir cases are valuable alone, and some are a pretty crap price, so you would have to open it and try to get lucky.Win big on gambling sites.Most sites give you an extremely small starting balance that the majority of users lose instantly, but if you get lucky enough, you can win some cash by selling the skins you win from it.Trading up.By just playing the game, you can slowly build up a collection of shitty tier items, and eventually trade them up with contracts to get a weapon of the next highest tier. Afterwards, you can sell the final weapon you get after a classified contract, and if it is a good covert, it can go for a lot.These are just some of the ways that are common and that I am personally aware of, but I am certain there are many more methods.You can sell your skins for real money on websites like OPSkins, BitSkins, and SKFPay.

Has anyone ever thought of selling items from Wow for real money rather than gold?

The idea of selling virtual items for real money is almost as old as MMORPG’s. There is a company that was briefly valued at more than a billion dollars which ONLY did this, ten or fifteen years ago.Services vary. Some will provide you gold or transferrable items after you’ve paid them a certain amount of real money. Some will include you in a party to level you quickly or get you very hard to obtain items. Others will take your username and password, and ‘power level’ you up, playing your character quicklly up to a desired level and/or gold amount / item set.All of these services are risky to use.At one point academic estimates of the number of people gathering resources / power leveling for real world money was over 50% of ALL players. I think the market has shrunk now because margins are lower, but there are still dedicated cyber sweatshops in China and developing nations where sets of people work many hours a day farming to get virtual items to trade for real money.As another poster says, these activities are a bannable offense. HOWEVER, last time I looked (a few years ago) most of the people who were violating Terms of Service in this manner were being banned for a few days or weeks, then being allowed to play again. Why? Because they provide a significant source of revenue to the game company, and a desired service to players with disposable income.

I'm trying to make money by selling game items. Which game is better, CSGO or DOTA 2?

I guess what you're trying to do is Drop Ship some products, and make out a good fat ROI out of it.Gaming Niche is quite good to begin with. The Gaming Fandom is quite rich. Dota and CS franchises have dominated the Online Gaming Community since the past decade.IMO, I think CSGO would be a better choice here. CSGO gaming apparels, and other collectibles sell quite well. I have friends who earned a fortune by drop shipping CSGO Custom Made Knives from China.But the point I will like you to enlighten you is, it all depends on the product and ho you market your product. Why I think CSGO will be better choice, as it is already tried out niche. Valve has been just printing money by selling skins. Heck, I know people who are making a living by trading Skins. Yeah, they trade in-game skins, like you trade stocks and make out a decent living out of it. Let that sink in.So coming back, CSGO is already tested, so I would choose CSGO over Dota 2. And this bias is also because I like CSGO more than Dota 2. So I have a clear picture in my head that kind of products can work, and with type of targeting.Also, you should be considering some other games. Other Games which you know are expensive, in which people don't mind spending their money in abundance. And have a decent fandom, some of them could be FIFA, GTA, etc.In the end, it's all probability. You never know what will work and what not. So why not do one thing, go out there and try it all? Keep the Winners, Ditch the Losers. ;)

In skyrim where can I sell my enchanted items.?

General traders will buy anything. Though they usually don't have enough money to pay you what your item is worth.

Is selling virtual items illegal ?

Almost all online games have end user agreements which make selling in game items against the terms of the contract. As such, you are subject to fines and penalties as laid out in their user agreements -- which typically includes forfeiting of the money, fines, and bans. However, it is not a criminal act -- nothing the police would get involved with and as a civil matter that company would need to sue you for breach of the agreement.

Banks are required to submit information to Canada Revenue Agency, including *all* foreign transactions, deposits over $10,000, and all interest earned. You are required to declare any income make through online gaming as self-employment income or capital gains. If you don't, computers checking against bank information and your income tax forms will often notice the difference and CRA will trigger an audit or questions. CRA will then require details on these earnings. It is also possible that the RCMP will look at the foreign transaction list and wonder what these transactions are for and trigger investigation for drug or money laundering.

However, there is nothing illegal per say about making money in online games. If you fail to pay taxes on it... CRA will fine you and the audit process can be annoying. It can also trigger questions to the gaming company (i.e. is this gambling, what kind of game is this, etc.) which can get the company to sue your for violating their license/terms agreement.

TF2 selling very rare items? (How do I and what can I sell)?

Hello, I recently went through my TF2 inventory from 2011-2012, and I have found very rare hats (IE Holiday hats from 2011) and items.
Here are my questions:
Where do I sell them? (For real money preferably)
Which ones CAN I sell?
What does non-marketable? (I hope this means I can't sell it, if it does, who checks?)
How much are they worth? (I will put the list of items at the end of the post)
This kinda goes with the first question but how do I sell it? Like is there a website? How do I know who to trust or how do I make the transaction?
How do I get someone to professionally price the items?

Here are the items:
16 Mann Co. Supply Crates
Face-Melting Backburner (1229 kills)
Wicked Nasty Direct Hit (506 kills)
Gore-Spattered Knife (460 kills)
Sufficiently Lethal Jarate (214 sodden victims)
Mildly Menacing Brass Beast (63 kills)
Strange Crusader's Crossbow (0 kills)
The Birdcage (Level 10 Hat) (Not Marketable)
The Seal Mask (Not Tradeable) (Not Marketable)
The Scottish Snarl, "Special Halloween 2011 item" (Level 35 Costume Piece) (Not Marketable)
The Anger (Level 10 Hat) (Not Marketable)
Tail From the Crypt "Special Halloween 2011 item" (Level 28 Costume Piece) (Not Marketable)
Horseless Headless Horsemann's Head (Level 31 Hat) (Not Tradeable) (Not Marketable)
Noise Maker - Winter Holiday "Unlimited use" (Level 5 Party Favor) (Not Marketable)
Vintage Escape Plan
Vintage Pyrovision Goggles "Witnessed the 2012 inferno" (Level 97 Pyrovision Goggles)

Is paying for virtual items in games a discguised scam? I.e. loot boxes / emotes / skins

I’m thinking that your real question is are microtransactions for real life money a scam?My immediate response is “Absolutely not.” If the item is not necessary to progress in a game, you don’t need it. If you don’t need it and you can’t afford it, don’t purchase it. If you want it and you purchase it, that’s your decision. That’s like asking if it’s a scam that an amusement park (which you’ve paid money to get into) sells merchandise or cotton candy.I’ve been fortunate enough to avoid games with a pay-to-win scenario. By fortunate, I only mean that I haven’t paid for a game that would require me to pay real money to continue playing. I don’t count games that are free, but in which forward progression is blocked by a paywall. I would just quit those games as soon as the situation arises. I have a stack of games to play—there’s no reason to plunk down money I don’t want to spend.I’ll admit that I don’t like the microtransaction program in Heroes of the Storm. You have to level a character to the point at which you unlock a skin, but if you wanted that skin, you have to buy it. I haven’t played in a few years—it may have changed. But, it felt like a slap that I had to earn the skin, but still had to pay to have it. This still isn’t a scam though. They made me want it—good on them. I don’t have to have it to play the game.There are also games with drops so rare that you almost have to buy the items or components to get them. GW2 is one. But, again, I don’t need the items to play and there are a lot of things to do in that game. It’s my choice whether or not to grind for something, do something else in the game, or pay-to-play. I have chosen to pay for some things that make my experience better, but I didn’t have to.

FLYFF NPCs!? Where to sell item drops?

Okay if you want to sell an item to a NPC you:
1. Find an npc and right click them (or left click it kinda comes natural to me) and if you can sell/ buy stuff from them there will be an option to trade, click it.
2. Find the item in your inventory and drag it to the window of the NPC you are trading with and click okay and you will get the money for that item (make sure your selling the right item though) i once accidently sold 79 sprotects to a shop and got like 79 penya.)
3. take your money and spend it!

If your selling to a other person there is 2 ways.

1st way.
Find a person and hold the alt key down and click the person and select trade.

2nd way.
Click Start (bottom left of screen) and press private shop. then drag the items you are selling to the window that comes up.
Set a price for the item and quanity.
Give your shop a name and press open.
Wait for people to come and buy your stuff.
good luck!

In Elder Scrolls: Oblivion where can i sell my items for the highest price?

It varies depending on your Mercantile skill and your character level. The higher they both go, the more money the shop owners and buyers will be able to sell you.

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