Character Card (Lv.50)
Price: 8,000 NX
Character Card (Lv.100)
Price: 15,000 NX
Character Card (Lv.150)
Price: 25,000 NX
Are you ready to try out a different job, but you don’t want to have to spend a long time leveling up your character? Pre-leveled character cards are the answer! (Note: These items are only sold during special promotions in the Cash Shop.)
Choose from Lv. 50, Lv. 100, or Lv. 150 character cards. Each card allows you to create a character with that level! The card also grants your new character some mesos and helpful items for the level.
Character Card (Lv.50) comes with:
Character Card (Lv.100) comes with:
Character Card (Lv.150) comes with:
Requirements:
Available Jobs:
Not all jobs are available for creation with these character cards. At this time, you can create the following jobs using character cards:
Warrior, Magician, Bowman, Thief, Pirate, Dual Blade, Jett, Cannoneer, Aran, Evan, Mercedes, Demon Slayer, Demon Avenger, Phantom, Mihile, Luminous, Kaiser, Battle Mage, Wild Hunter, Mechanic, Angelic Buster, and Blaster.
Here’s how to use a Pre-Leveled Character Card:
Price (1): 300 NX
Price (11): 3,000 NX
Andersen’s Box is a special item that will give you one random in-game item when you open it! When you enter the Cash Shop, you can find it in the Random Rewards > Special Items section. Each Andersen’s Box can only be used once. Although Andersen’s Box will only give one reward per use, please make sure you have at least the following amount of slots open in your inventory for the item to work correctly: 1 Equip, 1 Use, 1 Etc, 1 Set-Up.
Possible rewards include:
Here’s how it works:
1. Purchase Andersen’s Box and double-click it in your Cash inventory to move it to your item inventory.
2. Exit the Cash Shop.
3. Double-click Andersen's Box in your inventory to open it, and receive one random item!
Here are some of the chairs and mounts that are possible rewards:
This list would be updated every month or so (mostly the Main List). This is a really long list to keep track of, so updates might take awhile. If you don't want to guess which farms expired, typically some of the Farm Series (see the list below) keep their farms up-to-date.
Here is a list of farms and what monsters you can find in those farms. You can contribute some farm name(s) to this list. Also, if any of the following are incorrect, please post it here.
This Farm List would make it easier to find the monsters you are looking for, just by referring to this thread.
Please add your own list of farms in the following format:
Notes:
"Farm Series" are farms, owned by one or more users, with specific monster types, and are solely created for questing purposes. Known Farm Series are:
For more information about this list, please read the details on the [post=9834569]Special List's Descriptions post[/post]. These lists are mostly going to focus on farms that constantly replenish and/or keep permanent monsters.
Please do check out BasilMarket's Special List for the lists of special combo parents monsters.
A person will be selling an item you desire for a very cheap price. Usually a scroll or attack work glove. They will trade you once, tell you to hurry up and then will close the trade. They will say they are sorry and to please hurry. Now they have replaced the item you were going to get in the first place, for something that looks identical on quick inspection, but is not worth nearly what you are paying. Usually a clean work glove or cheap scroll.
Prevention - Examine all items closely before accepting a trade. Double-check them again, then you are free to trade.
A person will Super Megaphone saying that they are quitting and are selling some rare item at a very cheap price. (Ex: 1 meso Ilbis) They will then have their fm store open and will be telling you to keep clicking and hitting enter to get in. This will cause you to buy whatever they have in their top slot, which usually is worth noting for whatever price they choose.
Prevention - Anything that seems to good to be true, usually is. Never click + hit enter going into a store.
Users in the Free Market can be seen selling or trading their accounts. This is against the games Terms of Service first of all, and can result in you being scammed out of your account or your money as well as banned. They usually ask for your information or money first, and simply run off.??
Prevention - Don't buy/sell/trade accounts.
These kinds are posted in videos and are mostly found on YouTube as well as other video sharing sites. The user states that he has found a glitch through a GM approval system or a NX Cash maker. He then asks you to compose an email to a fake NEXON email (Ex: NexonGameMasterApp@randomemail.com or Nexon@email.com) with a supposed code which includes putting in your account ID, password, and PIN in the code. They then show supposed proof that this works, (Ex: they show a video of supposed GM in there, but it's really from a client-sided hack.) If you fall for this and send it to the supposed email, the user simply logs into the fake NEXON email, and gets the information through the supposed code to hack into your account.
Prevention - NEXON doesn't use free email programs like Hotmail, GMail, Yahoo!, Email.com, etc. They have their own email accounts, which look like, *email@nexon.net. There are no such glitches when charging NX or ways to become a GM. Game Masters are hired employees of Nexon as it is a real job.
A person will*offer an NX prize for winning*match cards,*or various other games. They may*let you win, getting 1 or 2 matches to reduce*suspicion. They then ask you for your login details.*
Prevention - Never give out your account info to anyone. Not even to Nexon Game Masters as they will NEVER ask for this information.
A user*tells you that if you want free mesos/NX/items/etc you should go on a website that makes you put in your ID, Pass, and PIN. As soon as this information is added, your account is now gone.
Prevention - Never give out your account info to anyone. Not even to Nexon Game Masters as they will NEVER ask for this information.
This is a somewhat common practice lately, and it's not as hard to fall for as one might think. While in your shop over a period of time, a player will come in and tell you that they've used pictures of you in a video they have online. They also give you a link, saying to watch it and let them know if you want your pictures removed. If you follow the link, it will inform you your Flash Player is out of date and request to update. This update is where the keylogger comes in.*
Prevention - Be wary of any links you visit that are advertised in game through any means. If you aren't familiar with a website, google about it first.*
It's becoming more and more common to see Smegas, messages, forum posts, or youtube comments from so people pretending to be GM's informing you of an event going on where you can get FREE BAN!!, NX items, mesos, etc. When you visit the website, it asks for your personal account information. When you enter it, you get nothing though you've just given them everything they need to steal your account.Scam 15: Powerball Casino (submitte Khongi)
Prevention - Practice safe browsing. Always keep your personal information safe, and always verify websites you visit are indeed real. Any "event" websites that do not end in .nexon.net are almost certainly phishing for your information as any official event would be on Nexons servers. Be especially wary for .tk domains. And remember, Nexon's website will never need your pin or birthdate for an event. If you do fall victim and realize before you are hacked, change your information ASAP.
This game is often announced via Super Megaphone, often calling it 'the most equitable powerball casino, try your luck on ch... fm ...".
It's basically a scam disguised as a 'fair' gambling game. The players are encouraged to place bets of a couple millions of mesos, usually on numbers 1 through 6. You 'win' through a preset ratio (ie: you win the amount you bet multiplied by a number). The way this scam works is that the scammers target usually high-ranked, well known players and let them win alot, and have them perform word-of-mouth advertisement of this 'sure-thing' gamble drawing in more potential victims. The odds increase and players start to place in higher bets because they keep 'winning', once a player has placed a bet of a lot of mesos (more than 100 million) the scammer takes the money and the scam ends. The victim ends up losing a lot of mesos.
Prevention - Don't ever participate in this PowerBall Casino, as you'll end up getting scammed. Should you ever encounter this scam or an equivalent scam, the best way to go is to report the players using the in-game report feature.