In addition to his pocket change earned working at a OSRS gold  nearby pizzeria, Marinez earns around 60 dollars a month playing RuneScape enough to buy cornmeal for arepas and rice for himself and his younger sister. For Marinez working online doesn't mean just arepas. It's about escape--even if he thinks the medieval fantasy games are boring.

As a result of one of the largest economic recessions of the past 45 years without conflict, the president and other people in Venezuela are turning to a video game as a way to survive and potential migration. It's not just about sitting in front of a computer screen. It can mean movement. Herbiboar hunting in RuneScape can fund the cost of food today and tomorrow's future within Colombia or Chile Countries where Marinez has family.

across in the Caribbean Sea in Atlanta, about 2,000 miles from Marinez There lives Bryan Mobley. When he was a kid He played RuneScape incessantly, he told me over the phone. "It was enjoyable. It was a method to avoid homework, and shit like this," he said.

Aged 26 now, Mobley is a different person to the game. "I do not view it as the same as a virtual reality," he told me. It's for him an "number simulator," like virtual roulette. An increase in a stash of in-game currency is an injection of dopamine.

Since Mobley started playing RuneScape in the aughts the black market has been bubbling under the game's economy. In the lands of Gielinor the players can trade in items such as mithril longswords and yak-hide armor, herbs from herbiboars--and gold, the in-game currency. Eventually, players began exchanging gold in the game for actual dollars, a practice known as real-world trading. Jagex is the game's creator restricts exchanges like this.

The first time, real-time trading occurred informally. "You could buy some gold from a friend at the school." Jacob Reed, one of the most popular creators of YouTube videos on RuneScape who goes by Crumb wrote via email. Lateron, demand for gold outstripped supply, and some players became full-time gold farmers or those who produce an in-game currency that they can sell to real-world cash.

Internet-age miners had always accompanied enormously multiplayer online games, or MMOs like Ultima Online or World of Warcraft. They also worked in several text-based virtual realms, stated Julian Dibbell, now a technology transactions lawyer who once wrote about virtual economies in his journalistic work.

In the past of these gold miners were placed in China. Many of them hid in small factories, where they slayed virtual ogres and pillaged their bodies in 12-hour shifts. There were even stories of Chinese government using prisoners to create gold farms.

In RuneScape the black market industry that was backed by gold farmers was relatively modest until the year 2013. Many players were not happy with the extent to which the game had changed since it was first introduced in 2001. So, they asked Jagex to bring back an earlier version. Jagex made available a previous version of its archives, and players returned to what was to be called Old School RuneScape.

Many of these players were like Mobley. They played RuneScape in their teens, and then looked back fondly on the graphically slick graphics and a groovy soundtrack. While these 20- and 30-year-olds had hours to spare as children They now had responsibilities beyond their homework.

"People have jobs right now, have families potentially," said Stefan Kempe, another popular creator of videos on RuneScape which has nearly 100,000 subscribers, and goes under the SoupRS. SoupRS, when he was interviewed. "It's a limiting factor to cheap OSRS gold how much time they have to play every day."