More details: The issue is with the 1-2 Level Up! Mega Burning Project once the Burning Character reaches level 35 the player can claim unlimited rewards from the 1-2 Level Up! Mega Burning Project.
Steps to reproduce: Make a Burning Character get it to level 35 and then click the Star Icon on the left side take start the 1+2 thing and repeat it gives unlimited of the rewards.
Character name: Character level: Character job: World name: Date and time of the incident: Started on December 27th 2016
The new Name Change makes it really great for the script kiddies to bot up to 215-220ish and then stop botting and when you record them like I do and upload it to YouTube they can now use the Name Change to get a new name I mean best win ever right?
I mean I love how the Buddy list Offline Mode is being abused by the script kiddies to the point that it's posssibly gonna be removed soon because of it.
I mean Nexon keeps making things so much better for people who bot. I mean the elite boss allows them to make a ton of mesos by selling Clean Slate Scrolls, Goodness Scrolls, Protection scrolls, now to forget when you see a shop open and it has like 9999 arrows all for 9.9mil and GM's claim they don't have enough proof to ban these players?
I mean yeah totally legit players always have a ton of arrows in their shops for 9.9mil each. I mean really I'm surprised they ban people who buy mesos from gold farming websites but players who are botting don't get ban? I mean their is a player in GRAZED who always has a shop setup in Channel 1 FM 13 and one morning around 3 AM EST I saw his bots all flood into FM 13 I went into his shop just before the bots came in watched as his bots with jiggerish names came in and were buying his arrows at 9.9mil each and then left to Herb Town and then as soon as they got to Herb Town they switched to Offline Mode so you can't track them.
Submitted a ticket to nexon showed multiple pictures of the bots GM replies they're looking into it mean while this player will still be doing this months from now.
Hacker: In computing, a hacker is any highly skilled computer expert capable of breaking into computer systems and networks using bugs and exploits. Depending on the field of computing it has slightly different meanings, and in some contexts has controversial moral and ethical connotations. In its original sense, the term refers to a person in any one of the communities and hacker subcultures:[1]
Hacker culture, an idea derived from a community of enthusiast computer programmers and systems designers, in the 1960s around the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's (MIT's) Tech Model Railroad Club (TMRC) and MIT Artificial Intelligence Laboratory.[2] The hobbyist home computing community, focusing on hardware in the late 1970s (e.g. the Homebrew Computer Club)[3] and on software (video games,[4] software cracking, the demoscene) in the 1980s/1990s. Later, this would go on to encompass many new definitions such as art, and Life hacking. Hacker (computer security). People involved with circumvention of computer security. This primarily concerns unauthorized remote computer break-ins via communication networks such as the Internet (Black hats), but also includes those who debug or fix security problems (White hats), and the morally ambiguous Grey hats. Grey hats are hackers who are neither good nor bad, and often include people who hack 'for fun' or to 'troll'. They may both fix and exploit, though grey hats are usually associated with black hat hackers.
Black hats are hackers with malicious intentions, and steal, exploit, and sell data. They are usually motivated by personal gain.
White hats are hackers employed with the efforts of keeping data safe from other hackers by looking for loopholes and hackable areas. This type of hacker typically gets paid quite well, and receives no jail time due to the consent of the company that hired them.
Script Kiddie: It is generally assumed that script kiddies are juveniles who lack the ability to write sophisticated programs or exploits on their own and that their objective is to try to impress their friends or gain credit in computer-enthusiast communities.[3] However, the term does not relate to the actual age of the participant. The term is generally considered to be pejorative.