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EVE Devs Dissect, Explain Massive Economic Exploit

In December we discussed news that a major exploit in EVE Online had just been widely discovered after being abused by a few players for up to four years, creating thousands of real-life dollars worth of unearned in-game currency. Representatives from CCP Games assured players that the matter would be investigated and dealt with; a familiar line in such situations for other multiplayer games, and often the final official word on the matter. Yesterday, CCP completed their investigation and posted an incredibly detailed account of how the exploit worked, what they did to fix it, how it affected the game's economy, and what happened to the players who abused it. Their report ranges from descriptions of the involved algorithms to graphs of the related economic markets to theatrically swooping through the game universe nuking the malfunctioning structures. It's quite comprehensible to non-EVE-players, and Massively has summarized the report nicely. It's an excellent example of transparency and openness in dealing with a situation most companies would be anxious to sweep under the rug.

2 of 139 comments (clear)

  1. Real fast summary by arkham6 · · Score: 5, Informative

    There was a bug in the way items were produced, making free items.

    The economy reacted accordingly by decreasing the market cost for these items.

    Items that need these free items were also accordingly cheaper.

    When discovered, the costs of the free items and the items requiring them shot up due to market speculation and decreased supply.

    The economy in general will have some bumps, but will eventually recover.

    The perpetrators have been shot.

  2. RTFA you POS by ghmh · · Score: 5, Informative

    If anyone is wondering what POS is short for, it's "Player Owned Station".

    Personally I think the article reads a lot better if you instead use "Piece Of Shit":

    CCP Games explains the scenario from the ground up, detailing the POS game mechanics for those unfamiliar with the industrial side of the game, and pointing out how the POS exploit worked.

    The proper order in which to evaluate a POS is essentially breadth-first traversal....

    POS Reactors are complex beasts, but not quite so bad as POS Control Towers.

    and so on.