I check the market interface for orders regularly. I start by checking the wallet because it's faster. If an order has gone through, it shows up there. Whenever I see an order in the wallet, I head to the game website for more details. Today, I notice two orders came in: a sale of Fimbul Airbikes in Atlas currency. This means a cycle is complete. I sold 2 Fimbul Airbikes for 1,570 Atlas each, totaling 3,140 Atlas, which is $2.83. I had bought them 40 days ago for $1.16 each in Atlas, totaling $2.32. Selling them at $0.009 per Atlas today records $2.83, so my net is $0.51. That's $0.51 for just 5 minutes of work. Given the minimal time commitment on my end, I easily spend 5 minutes every 3 to 50 days to keep things flowing.
I also had a buy order for 2 Pearce X4s in Atlas come in, totaling 4,020 Atlas, or 2,010 Atlas each. I quickly turn around and post those for sale at the current market price of 3,770 Atlas each. When sold, this will total 7,540 Atlas, minus fees.
I've been waiting 15 minutes for the website to load—typical of interacting with an early-stage game with lots of moving parts, bugs, and common computer delays. It's been a 30-minute wait so far. Life goes on, but at current numbers, I read a net of 3,520 Atlas, or $3.168, and that concludes the trade. It requires 5 minutes or less of my commitment. During these loading times, I do something else until it works. Sometimes, I have to troubleshoot my computer to find the problem, but most of the time, I just wait.
The goal is to complete orders before the system bugs out because it pays off. Today's two orders were my trades. I stepped up to the plate and got base hits.
I just did a Fimbul Airbike trade. I bought two for $1.16 each,$2.32 and posted them for sale at $1.31 each, totaling $2.62, which nets me $0.30. It takes a minute or two to set up, and then comes the wait. This wait might be longer than usual because there are two fire sale sellers in the market. I have to wait them out and see where the price jumps around to. But with time, the trade comes in and completes—slow, but it's there.
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