Like many workers in China today,
most gold farmers are migrants.
Note: As I'm reading over the comments here and from referrer links, I'm noticing that a lot of people are under the mistaken impression that I'm mainly arguing that
most gold farmers are not Chinese and that it's this aspect of the stereotype that I'm writing about.
Not exact matches
Then on Sunday G whipped me up my favorite homemade breakfast — German pancakes, surprised me with the prettiest rose
gold Apple watch and we spent the afternoon with his family browsing the
farmers market and then his mom and sis made my favorite black forest cake and we had our favorite deli food in the city — the
most scrumptious Jewish deli called DZ Akins.
As we've seen,
most of the profit from
gold farming does not go to the actual
gold farmers.
Dennis: Whether
most (or all)
gold farmers are Chinese or not is not something I actually argue about in this article.
If 20 % of players buy
gold, if
most players are too low - level to encounter
gold farmers, and if
gold farming may stabilize some game economies, is it really the case that
gold farmers do more harm than good?
However when we look at the people that have met the actual
gold farmers, we find that
most have a relatively pleasant experience.
Part of what I'm getting at (in the article and that
most recent comment) is that «
gold farmers» are a socially - constructed category.
Most of my
gold farmers are college students right here in the USA.