1. Please make bounty/seals DESTROYABLE! At level 60, I'm never going to use Lion seals, honestly.
2. Raise or REMOVE the daily limits on rough astral diamond refining! You gave us Salvage and Lord Dailies, You made most purple loot BoP (Including Seal rewards, PvP Gear, etc..) One round of dailies puts us almost at refining cap. Of course level 60's are going to spend their seals and Glory on items to salvage, which quickly turns into DAYS worth of waiting to refine them. What's the point on having daily limits on refining rough diamonds anyways? (I'm not coming back tomorrow JUST to be able to refine diamonds, I'm coming back to play)
3. Level cap EXP rewards for quests: Most, if not all other MMO's were kind enough to switch from EXP to currency rewards for level capped players completing quests, why not Neverwinter?
1. You can trade the seals for items, then vendor the items for silver.
2. You can vendor the items for gold. The refine limit exists to limit the amount of AD added to the economy each day.
3. XP is used to level companions.
Whoohoo, silver! Imagine the gear you'll buy with it! Oh wait.
As for the refining AD limit, I tend to disagree. My personal opinion is that it exists for the sole purpose that F2P players would get abysmal AD generation rates, especially now with BoP gear, so they would be stimulated to buy Zen, and then exchange for whatever amount of AD they desire. I don't think there's a limit for that, eh Who cares for the economy, when the Zen commerce is flourishing.
Comments
2. You can vendor the items for gold. The refine limit exists to limit the amount of AD added to the economy each day.
3. XP is used to level companions.
Whoohoo, silver! Imagine the gear you'll buy with it! Oh wait.
As for the refining AD limit, I tend to disagree. My personal opinion is that it exists for the sole purpose that F2P players would get abysmal AD generation rates, especially now with BoP gear, so they would be stimulated to buy Zen, and then exchange for whatever amount of AD they desire. I don't think there's a limit for that, eh Who cares for the economy, when the Zen commerce is flourishing.