![]() The bottom line is you need to be smart about what offers you choose to accept. Complaints were so rampant about the offers, especially for a family-friendly game whose primary demographic was teenagers, that I wrote a guide on how to earn credits by completing the true surveys without subjecting oneself to downloading software, turning one's email over to the lords of spam, subscribing to services, etc. During Earth Eternal's first round, when it was still owned by Sparkplay, Peanut Labs hosted surveys and offers for free credits. "Free currency" offers have been the subject of ire for players in a number of F2P games. I can definitely see that being a problem with games like the "Legends" series. The problem is the "consumers" may be underage or simply naive and not fully understand what they're really getting into. At face value, it's up to consumers to decide whether or not to download potentially invasive software, be subjected to spam or get locked into deals in order to obtain free game currency. Generally speaking, studios have very little say in what offers their marketing partner(s) provide (Tapjoy, in this case). It's up to you to accept those terms or not. The platinum is offered in exchange for accepting offers, the terms of which differ, per offer. "What happened to the download a app and you get one plat?" You're not entitled to free platinum. The general tone of the original post implies a sense of entitlement. ![]()
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