Storm Raven
First Post
mmadsen said:Does you game world have a modern, monetary, free-market economy? Is someone enforcing the Rule of Law strongly enough that you can offer up 50,000 gold pieces for a +5 sword and expect the trade to go through? Or do you have to enforce the contract yourself (as on a black market)?
This is an argument for the rise of an organization like Sotheby's. In point of fact, in any game world in which magic was anywhere near as common as the "standard" version of D&D, it would seem to make too much sense for such an entity to exist that it should be almost inevitable. Buyers and sellers looking for assurances that their transaction will be above board would turn to such a guarantor to broker the deal, paying a fee to the auction house that covers the costs of making such assurances. The fantasy "Sotheby's" would have an incentive to make sure each transaction it was involved in was kosher, since losing their reputation would ruin their business.
I wouldn't expect to see "magic shops" in which the proprietor had a bunch of inventory items on hand for sale that he owns. I would expect that one would more likely see a "high cost auction house" that would deal in expensive items (magical and nonmagical) where they offer a venue for others to market those items they want to sell, taking a commission on the sale (just like auction houses in the real world).