That was, before the first of the
Osrs gold hugely unpopular changes of Jagex arrived, and also the runescape game's downfall -- in the eyes of many -- began. The'Grand Exchange' was used as a way to allow runescape players to exchange more readily -- albeit less straight -- with one another.
In the past, buying a new set of armour or even a fresh weapon demanded a runescape participant to park themselves in one of the runescape game's unofficial'trading hub' cities and arduously type out the lineup"Selling 145k lobsters" for hours on end until sufficient deals may be struck to unburden the runescape player of the excess shellfish. With the execution of this Grand Exchange, a runescape participant could hunt for an item list each the items they wished to market for the market cost, or any other custom value, or to buy. The objectively helpful upgrade was criticised by many as the'death of free trade', but the worst was to follow along.
Whilst Jagex were pleased to allow things run amok there was one glaring problem so-called real-world trading; this is, the trade of money for items that are in-game -- and rightfully which they would not abide. In late 2007, Jagex eliminated the notion of'free' trade from the runescape game -- meaning that all transactions must be fair with a restricted allowance for imbalance.
This meant that the rewards for PvP were hugely neutered -- as the victorious runescape player would keep 100 percent of their spoils, the most value that would be dropped by a combatant was severely confined to prevent trades. No more could a runescape participant lend their friend a sum of cash to help get their account began; nor can a runescape player winning a PvP duel pocket over a few million coins -- compared to the
Cheap Runescape gold hundreds of millions which were often put at stake. To say this upgrade was very unpopular is a massive understatement, and it was the decision that led to many fans quitting the runescape game only months following one million was passed by the membership foundation.