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In ready player one Wade buys a boot suit from IOI using Oasis currency. From the movie it seems that people can collect coins pretty easily. How did IOI become the second largest company in the world if they accept the Oasis currency, which seems to be pretty easy to come by?

Maybe this is answered in the book.

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  • Same way you can buy non existing things in games with real money. Sold both by players and by producer alike. World of Warcraft is easiest example as in game coins have it own currency converter. For example 1 Gold = US $0.00014978. IOI does the same thing but they are the one that hold the market. So you cannot switch from gold to real currency without them involved. Commented Aug 27, 2018 at 7:37
  • Just look into Eve online and you will easily see that virtual currency can have a large value in the real world.
    – Styxsksu
    Commented Apr 25, 2023 at 20:36

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"Coin"/Credit is a stable currency in OASIS...but it seems valued outside of the OASIS.

The IOI doesn't necessarily have to make a profit on these things, after all, they don't really exist so it gives the players something to aim for while using IOI's services...since they are the leading internet provider.

Innovative Online Industries. IOI (pronounced eye-oh-eye) was a global communications conglomerate and the world’s largest Internet service provider. A large portion of IOI’s business centered around providing access to the OASIS and on selling goods and services inside it.


Items in the OASIS had just as much value as things in the real world (sometimes more), and you couldn’t pay for them with food vouchers. The OASIS credit was the coin of the realm, and in these dark times, it was also one of the world’s most stable currencies, valued higher than the dollar, pound, euro, or yen.


Over the past five years, I’d managed to slowly, gradually raise my avatar up to third level. This hadn’t been easy. I’d done it by hitching rides off-world with other students (mostly Aech) who happened to be headed to a planet where my wuss avatar could survive. I’d have them drop me near a newbie-level gaming zone and spend the rest of the night or weekend slaying orcs, kobolds, or some other piddly class of monster that was too weak to kill me. For each NPC my avatar defeated, I would earn a few meager experience points and, usually, a handful of copper or silver coins dropped by my slain foes. These coins were instantly converted to credits, which I used to pay the teleportation fare back to Ludus, often just before the final school bell rang. Sometimes, but not often, one of the NPCs I killed would drop an item. That was how I’d obtained my avatar’s sword, shield, and armor

Ready Player One - Ernest Cline

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    I'm not sure that "they don't really exist" in all cases. The O.P. mentioned that Wade bought a boot suit, which I believe is a real-world, tangible piece of tech. Commented Jul 25, 2018 at 18:20
  • For a whole lot of additional background, read Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash and see 'virtual worlds' such as Second Life which has a very similar 'virtual currency' transferrable in & out-world as real money [my partner makes a real-world living out of this structure.]
    – Tetsujin
    Commented Jul 25, 2018 at 18:22

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