Watch these reactions: I offered 14 Billion ISK and got called a scammer instantly

#eveonlinetutorial #eveonline #eveonlinegameplay 1 MILLION FREE SKILL POINTS. If you did not done it until now: Use that link to receive your 1 million free skill points: https://www.eveonline.com/signup?invc... ************************************* Over the years, EVE Online has cultivated a reputation unlike any other game: It's the internet’s longest running experiment in what happens when you give nerds spreadsheets and less laws :-) But with that freedom came something even more special: a culture where scamming isn't just allowed it's practically a career path. From knife in the back betrayals by your "loyal" corp mates, deception isn’t an outlier in EVE it’s one of the main event. Sure, CCP calls it “emergent gameplay.” Everyone else just calls it maybe huge trust issues. Nowadays, offer someone something for free say, a modest 13 billion ISK and you’ll get probably a paranoid reddit thread about how you're clearly baiting noobs for content. Generosity in EVE? That’s a red flag with a killmail attached. So, how did we get here? And is there still room for actual kindness in a universe held together by paranoia, betrayal, and the soothing sound of warp drives? Or did EVE finally teach us the ultimate MMO truth: "If it sounds too good to be true… it’s probably a trap."