A new window will automatically open. The Buy button lets you buy Gold, the Sell button lets you sell gold, and the password button allows you to set and change the account password. The rest of the window can be divided into four basic sections: the Set Price window, the Available Funds window, the Price Listings, and the bottom area. This area in the upper left of the window, is where you set your prices for buying and selling. Regardless of whether you are buying or selling, the layout is the same.
The price box is where you set the amount of money in gold coins. This is how much you want to spend for buying, and your price for selling. This needs to be in a value that is divisible by The amount box is the amount of gold you want to buy or sell, and must be less than Input the amount you wish to use for each.
For buying prices, it will take the lowest price under whatever value you set first. For example, if I placed the value of 1,, in price, and 10 in amount, it would take the gold from the next lowest 1,, first. The value next to Total is the amount of money you will spend or make, again depending on whether you're buying or selling. The Fee is an additional cost that goes to the NPC, paid in gold coins for buying, and gold or silver for selling.
Using the example above, the fee paid would be , gold coins. This is the same regardless of how much you actually spend. This is located just under the Set Price window, and lists how much gold and gold coins you have available to use.
It is not how much of each you have in total, but just what can be used for gold trading. All of this was intentional on the part of Perfect World.
They have given us a wonderful game, but they need to pay the programmers, graphic artists, and other PW staff members. You can use real cash to buy Zen which converts to in-game gold. So in-game gold is Legal Tender, the basis of the PW economy, and the basis of all transactions sometimes directly, sometimes indirectly.
Buy Low — Sell High. So what does all this actually mean to you? Well, it means that if you understand the Gold Market you can make cash, and lots of it, and sometimes extremely rapidly. So I set out to learn by experience and by asking numerous friends. I hated when friends gave me this advice.
I would ask for specific numbers, but none could answer me. Others would say the Gold Market is too volatile, risky or complicated and they avoided it. I was not satisfied with any of these answers and I was determined to understand the Gold Market. Gold Trading Market Analysis. I started to collect data on various aspects of the Gold Market, and turned it into a chart. To make this easier, I am going to refer to the graphic from the Gold trading website.
Notice that in the Price: Sell the numbers range from , to , In other words, if I owned one gold I would be able to sell it anywhere from , to , coins assuming someone else were willing to buy it from me at those prices. Also notice in the Price: Buy the numbers range from , to , In other words, if I had anywhere from , coins to , coins I could buy one gold again assuming someone were willing to sell me their gold at those prices. Now, just like in the real world, these prices fluctuate.
They have no set meaning, and that is the problem. For example, if I had previously bought gold for ,, then for me gold is low and I do not stand to make much of a profit trying to sell it between , and , So for me, gold is not high.
However, had I previously bought gold at ,, then I would be happy to sell it for between , and , So for me I would consider gold as being high while someone else might consider gold as being low.
Gold Trading Market Fluctuation. Again, lets look at the Gold Trading graphic. This time I want to talk about market fluctuation and splits. I want to look at four numbers specifically:. This represents our average potential profit. Now I will tell you from experience that splits like this represent a flat market which is stagnant and not moving. There is no risk to the buyer, as daniel stated above. The buyer simply puts their coin at the agreed upon exchange rate into the trade window for the item they desire.
The risk is all with the seller. The seller is buying something from the Boutique, using their own Gold, and then will turn around and sell it at the agreed upon gold exchange rate. I've seen a few arguments in world chat where someone backed out of a transaction after the seller had already purchased the item from the Boutique.
Rule No 1.
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