Ok we NEED trading at somewhere in the tower for pillars like the vualts that players can access and enter smmpunts of glimmer to send to the other player and slots for weapons and armor and general items there are 5 slots for each category at a time and once the player clicks accept trade button and both players click it and boom items in thrbslots traded you could trade plasteel plating for some extra saphire wire or a timebreaker fora ev-30 tumbler we need this added in you put it behind thebdoor that xur occasionally stands by on the left side of the tower if anybody has suggestions comments and ideas to improve this please reply also we dont care if it takes a while so
You make sure nobofy csn duplicate a vex mythoclast or thorn as long as you brgin the process of making trading possible!!! Please bungie we NEED this
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This community: XUR BREAKS THE GAME AND NOTHING YOU GET FROM HIM IS EARNED! On the other hand, having a level 32 friend who has been playing this game since launch trade his spare set of raid armor, maxed 4th Gjallarhorn, maxed Fatebringer, and all other extra weapons to his friend who just got the game? Totally legit and NEEDED! lol Xur balances the RNG in my eyes. Trading is completely unnecessary and, in my opinion, would utterly break/unbalance/corrupt this game.
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[b]Post-Match trading would work.[/b] Please come and support my forum post here: https://www.bungie.net/en/Forum/Post/119278049/0/0 Leave a [i]like&comment[/i]! [b]Thank you![/b]
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I think you should be able to sell guns back for glimmer.....I'm always broke and farming is so monotonous.
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3 RespuestasWell I got two Gjallahorn, faithbringer, and some exotics that I'm more than willing to trade.
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If there were way more items in the game then i would agree with you. However bungie seems to only offer a handful of items, and rather than add new items, they rehash and keep same weapons. It seems this is what the community wants also, so there isnt really much reason to have a trade system with so few items in the game.
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Editado por RichyWoo: 4/16/2015 12:25:48 PMThis game could use the anonymous request kind of trading. Ie, you surrender your beloved Thorn to the postmaster, request a Hawkwind, it gets listed and then you wait for somebody to accept the terms and make the exchange, you can go to the postmaster and cancel the deal at anytime. Example: [b] Thorn offered in exchange for Hawkwind.[/b]
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7 RespuestasTrading is a horrible idea. Because everyone can inspect you everywhere and spam you with requests. This will destroy peoples game experience with lag from spammers. NO TRADING IN DESTINY EVER!
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1 RespuestaTrading was suppose to be in the game, actually a lot cool things were suppose to be in the game but they got cut from the full game.
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Trading would be the dumbest thing they could possible do to this game
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4 RespuestasWant a better game that has trading? Come with me I shall show you the way of the Tenno. If you are interested.
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1 Respuesta
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No the only people that want trading are the people that are too bad to earn there iwn things if trading got introduced they mayaswell hand everything out for free..... oh wait they have a xur
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never going to happen. A gifting system via the app or browser might.
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2 RespuestasI just don't think we should trade things like the Ev-30 its 50 glimmer per one sparrow and call me a stub but I feel so special with it or at least mostly my ghost
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19 RespuestasPlayer X has Seventeen gjallarhorns. Player Y has zero Gjallarhorns, but has disposable income. Player X sets up a website where he advertises his stock of Gjallarhorns, selling for $50 usd via PayPal. Player Y sees website, emails Player X, sets a time and date for deal. (He may send money via PayPal at this time. If so, Player Y is stupid.) Players X and Y meet in the Tower. Player Y sends money via PayPal if not done so already, and Player X trades him a Gjallarhorn and becomes $50 richer. This has been a morality tale from your friendly neighborhood zombie, entitled "Trading in Destiny: Why it Will Never Happen"
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Terrible idea. Next.
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1 RespuestaSentences are nice.
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1 RespuestaGamestop will take destiny in as trade.
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Hell yeah
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Editado por madgamer438: 4/15/2015 7:04:43 PMYou forgot these- .................. and ,,,,,,,,, perhaps some of these !!!!!! as well as these- ????? Just saying.......
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Holy run on sentence batman
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3 RespuestasThermodynamics is a branch of physics concerned with heat and temperature and their relation to energy and work. It defines macroscopic variables, such as internal energy, entropy, and pressure, that partly describe a body of matter or radiation. It states that the behavior of those variables is subject to general constraints, that are common to all materials, not the peculiar properties of particular materials. These general constraints are expressed in the four laws of thermodynamics. Thermodynamics describes the bulk behavior of the body, not the microscopic behaviors of the very large numbers of its microscopic constituents, such as molecules. Its laws are explained by statistical mechanics, in terms of the microscopic constituents. Thermodynamics applies to a wide variety of topics in science and engineering. Historically, thermodynamics developed out of a desire to increase the efficiency and power output of early steam engines, particularly through the work of the French physicist Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot (1824) who believed that the efficiency of heat engines was the key that could help France win the Napoleonic Wars.[1] The Irish-born British physicist Lord Kelvin was the first to formulate a concise definition of thermodynamics in 1854:[2] "Thermo-dynamics is the subject of the relation of heat to forces acting between contiguous parts of bodies, and the relation of heat to electrical agency." Initially, thermodynamics, as applied to heat engines, was concerned with the thermal properties of their 'working materials', such as steam, in an effort to increase the efficiency and power output of engines. Thermodynamics was later expanded to the study of energy transfers in chemical processes, such as the investigation, published in 1840, of the heats of chemical reactions[3] by Germain Hess, which was not originally explicitly concerned with the relation between energy exchanges by heat and work. From this evolved the study of Chemical thermodynamics and the role of entropy in chemical reactions.