![]() ![]() All that to say, this makes sense for Blizzard. As Gamasutra notes, Blizzard already has a partnership with NetEase (a Chinese internet company that has a web portal and its own massively multiplayer role-playing game), which operates a version of Diablo 3 in the country. ![]() Basically, the type of microtransactions that are fairly common in free-to-play games. On the developer's American and European forums, an employee writes that an upcoming patch will add a new currency ("platinum"), timed experience boosts, cosmetic items, character slots and a tweaked UI to handle all of the above. The difference here is that it's doing it in territories that are pretty accustomed to this sort of thing already - most likely China. ![]() Blizzard may have shut down the Real Money Auction House after contention from the community, but it's opening up a new way to potentially use real money for in-game items. ![]()
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