willix
Legend
Well, I wasn't going to respond to this garbage, but here's the fact:
Blizzard owns every portion of this game, including the guild in question and the gold that was spent. Derv owned the actual real life currency he spent, so if anyone has any claim to the guild, it's derv (since he was ultimately given guild lead).
I don't mean to trivialize the whole issue, but dems da breaks. Blizzard DOES NOT support these kinds of transactions (as you have no doubt already learned by talking to a GM), so they are literally 'at your own risk.' Considering you didn't actually lose anything IRL, you should count yourself lucky and use this as a learning experience: don't treat a video game transaction as a real life transaction.
The other part of this which is baffling to me is the fact that a player would completely screw over another player by leveling his tinker, and think that all would be magically forgotten/forgiven. Some would call it fate that the player responsible for destroying Druin, would find his own plans destroyed. It's even ironic that he would trust someone who was close to Druin with his plans, completely oblivious of the things he did himself.
Justice has been served.
Blizzard owns every portion of this game, including the guild in question and the gold that was spent. Derv owned the actual real life currency he spent, so if anyone has any claim to the guild, it's derv (since he was ultimately given guild lead).
I don't mean to trivialize the whole issue, but dems da breaks. Blizzard DOES NOT support these kinds of transactions (as you have no doubt already learned by talking to a GM), so they are literally 'at your own risk.' Considering you didn't actually lose anything IRL, you should count yourself lucky and use this as a learning experience: don't treat a video game transaction as a real life transaction.
The other part of this which is baffling to me is the fact that a player would completely screw over another player by leveling his tinker, and think that all would be magically forgotten/forgiven. Some would call it fate that the player responsible for destroying Druin, would find his own plans destroyed. It's even ironic that he would trust someone who was close to Druin with his plans, completely oblivious of the things he did himself.
Justice has been served.