There has been a criticism out about magic items being monetized in the world where the PCs play. I am talking about having enough magic items in the world so that buying and selling them in larger cities is a normal act for PCs. I am not certain what the criticism of this is, except that it makes it potentially easier for lower level characters to become really strong. Mind you, I am not talking about buying a wish or a Ring of Wishes at your local super store for 5,000 GP. I am talking +1 and +2 items for sale in metropolises around your world, and at above book prices. Back to the criticism. To have a party of 5th-8th level PCs fighting a band of mercenaries laden with +1 weapons causes an excess in magic items. These the victorious party could sell for a good amount of cash.
Understand, I am all for a strict, even tight hold on the amount of magic available in the world, although that is not the game I am currently running. But to say that you can have a lot of magic but that it shouldn't be monetized, is ridiculous. That is my main point. If magic is widely available, like it is in pretty much every adventure module ever published (by the official company), then not being able to buy and sell it is totally unrealistic. If I have collected eighteen +1 longswords, then it stands that I should be able to sell them or at least trade them for an upgrade. To have a merchant say "I'll give you 2 flocks of goats and my daughter's hand for those swords" is without reason. If having a lot of magic in the world is a bad thing, and I am open to that idea, then fine. But if there is a lot of magic in the world then perhaps we shouldn't be critical of monetization.
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