Here's another article on Chinese gold farmers... this time from the NY Times...

Twelve hours a night, seven nights a week, with only two or three nights off per month, this is what Li does — for a living. On this summer night in 2006, the game on his screen was, as always, World of Warcraft, an online fantasy title in which players, in the guise of self-created avatars — night-elf wizards, warrior orcs and other Tolkienesque characters — battle their way through the mythical realm of Azeroth, earning points for every monster slain and rising, over many months, from the game’s lowest level of death-dealing power (1) to the highest (70). More than eight million people around the world play World of Warcraft — approximately one in every thousand on the planet — and whenever Li is logged on, thousands of other players are, too. They share the game’s vast, virtual world with him, converging in its towns to trade their loot or turning up from time to time in Li’s own wooded corner of it, looking for enemies to kill and coins to gather. Every World of Warcraft player needs those coins, and mostly for one reason: to pay for the virtual gear to fight the monsters to earn the points to reach the next level. And there are only two ways players can get as much of this virtual money as the game requires: they can spend hours collecting it or they can pay someone real money to do it for them. 

An American company promoting power supply units seem to be aiming for gold farmers - cause when there's cash involved, you don't want the power going down...

Farming in World of Warcraft can be a pain in the ass. It takes time, its boring, and you are doing the same thing over and over again. WoW Insider list some ways to make it "better".

  • Farm in a group, preferably with someone who can AOE or heal. This makes farming much easier. Also, if you're after a drop, try to confirm that they're not interested in the same drop.
  • Set short-term goals. "I'll kill fifty guys, then I'll go quest." "I'll circle this three times and then I'm going to go to bed."
  • Put something on in the background.
Want to farm some expensive items in the Burning Crusade? Well here's a list of good hotspots where you can earn nearly 1,000 gold in just 2 hours of farming!

I had never even heard of this application, WoW Glider, but apparently it will grind and farm for you automatically...

Anyway, they are apparently suing Blizzard telling them to back off, because Blizzard has been trying to strong arm them into stopping sales of their software (which they say is undetectable... for now). 

What do you think of the software? Not that I think anyone would own up to using it, but have you? 

MTV interviewed some guy who actually went and visited some of the gold farming operations in China, there is video footage of them too.

Also, interesting to note, apparently virtual game goods, like WoW gold, will reach something stupid like $US7 billion per year soon!

Video here - http://www.mtv.com/overdrive/?name=news&id=1545907#/overdrive/?id=1545907&name=news 

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