Difference between revisions of "Accounts"

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If the character was a member of a player-run corporation, the following will happen:  
 
If the character was a member of a player-run corporation, the following will happen:  
  
* All assets (ships, modules, etc) owned by the pilot, including their [[capsule]], are transferred to their corporation and moved to the corporation's first hangar division. If the corporation does not have any offices, then the assets are destroyed.  
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* All assets (ships, modules, etc) owned by the pilot, including their [[capsule]], are transferred to their corporation and moved to the corporation's first hangar division. If the corporation does not have any offices, then the assets are destroyed. If the character is a member of an NPC corporation, all assets will be lost irrecoverably.  
 
* Any ISK in the pilot's wallet is transferred to the corporation (into the first wallet division). This is listed in the corporation wallet journal as "Inheritance".
 
* Any ISK in the pilot's wallet is transferred to the corporation (into the first wallet division). This is listed in the corporation wallet journal as "Inheritance".
* All members of the corporation receive an EVE-mail message, notifying them of the character's "permanent death".  
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* All members of the corporation receive an [[EVE Mail]] message, notifying them of the character's "permanent death".  
  
 
For characters in a [[NPC Corporations|NPC corporation]], all their assets and ISK are destroyed when they are biomassed.  
 
For characters in a [[NPC Corporations|NPC corporation]], all their assets and ISK are destroyed when they are biomassed.  

Revision as of 06:24, 28 December 2022

This page is about EVE game accounts. For EVE University forum/wiki accounts, see Applying to EVE University.

In order to play EVE you must have an Account, which links your real-world identity (e.g. e-mail address, payment information) to your in-game characters. You can have up to three characters per account. Your account name is never used in-game; it is only used for out-of-game interactions (e.g. logging into the game, paying for a game subscription, submitting support tickets, etc).

Creating an account

You can create an account on the EVE Online website. If you were invited to EVE by a friend (i.e. have a referral link), use it when creating your account, as you will get some free skill points (equivalent to 2-6 weeks of training time). Additionally, your friend will receive free game time or some PLEX if you subscribe to the game. If you create an alt account of your own using the Recruit-A-Friend option and then transfer a character from one of your other accounts to the newly created account, you will be able to redeem the free skill points on the transferred character.

Starter packs

Starting to play EVE is free (there is no cost to "buying a box", and expansions to the game are also free), but you can subsequently choose to pay for a recurring subscription. Additionally, you can buy "starter packs", which give you additional items or temporary in-game boosts. Each starter pack can only be used one time per account. Starter packs are intended to give new players a boost when starting out.

In reality, many of the items (such as ships, ship SKINs, modules, and clothing) included in these starter packs are of very limited value, as they can be bought on the in-game market for modest quantities of ISK. The only significantly valuable items included are:

  • Cerebral accelerators, which temporarily (usually for around 2-4 weeks) increase the speed at which a character learns skills (by boosting their attributes)
  • Skill extractors, which allow you to extract skill points from a character for transfer or sale to another character
  • Multiple Character Training Certificates, which allow more than one character on an account to train simultaneously (one additional skill queue for 30 days per certificate used)
  • PLEX, used to pay for game time, in-game services (such as character remodelling and transfer), buy certain items (including cosmetic items for your character, ship SKINs, and skill extractors), or can be sold for ISK
  • Game time (usually 30 days)

There are a number of starter packs available, the contents of which vary. When deciding whether a starter pack is worth it, compare its cost to the cost of its components (game time and PLEX are sold directly), ignoring everything that isn't on the list above. Usually, the starter packs are not worth buying, unless they are significantly discounted. Packs are sold by CCP as well as authorised third-party retailers, and include:

  • Naval Capsuleer Starter Pack: 220 PLEX, 2 x race-specific frigates with fittings, and a couple of cosmetic items (pilot and SKINs)
  • Alpha Pack: 60 PLEX, 2 x Daily Alpha Injectors, and a Kapis Edge Tristan SKIN
  • Meteor Pack: 1 Month of Omega subscription time, 110 PLEX, and 3 Astero SKINs from the Cell bundle
  • Star Pack: 1 Month of Omega subscription time, 500 PLEX, and 2 x Multiple Character Training certificates (useful for Alternate characters)
  • Galaxy Pack: 3 Months of Omega subscription time, 1100 PLEX, 2 x Multiple Character Training certificates (useful for Alternate characters), 5 Skill Extractors (useful for Skill trading), SOE Spectral Shift SKIN Bundle with SKINs for the Astero, Stratios, and Nestor, SOE Expeditionary cosmetic items

Subscriptions

See also: Clone States

While EVE can be played in a limited fashion for free, accessing all its gameplay aspects requires you to pay a recurring monthly subscription. The game subscription can be paid for in two ways:

  • Buying game time for real-life money
  • Buying PLEX with in-game money (ISK)

Game time can be bought either from CCP directly, or from a authorised third-party retailer. It can be paid as either a recurring payment, or by buying a "block" of game time (e.g. 6 months) in advance, which is usually cheaper on a per-month basis. Depending on your local currency it may be worth shopping around to get the best deal on game time.

Subscriptions are paid for per account (not per character); any character on an account with an active subscription are considered to have Omega status. If your subscription runs out, you can continue to play the game (with the limitations of Alpha status), or renew your subscription to regain Omega status.

For Steam users who created who started playing before June 2013; no EVE account is tied to the Steam account and purchases of PLEX or packages can not be delivered. A ticket to Player Experience will be required to resolve any purchases made through Steam for these accounts.

PLEX

The "Pilot's License Extension" (PLEX) is an in-game item with a variety of uses:

Just like all other player-traded items on the market, the price of PLEX fluctuates with supply and demand.

Acquiring PLEX

PLEX can be:

  • Bought from another player for ISK
  • Bought for real-life money from CCP (or an authorised third-party retailer)

This allows players with disposable real-world income to easily acquire large quantities of ISK, and, conversely, players with large quantities of ISK to pay for their game subscriptions with ISK instead of real-world money. It's also possible to buy PLEX with real-world money and use it to pay for game time; however, it's almost always cheaper to buy game time (with real-world money) directly instead of buying PLEX (PLEX is more versatile and therefore tends to be more expensive than straight-up game time).


Using PLEX

Characters

You can have up to three characters per account. When you log into the game you can play one of the existing characters, or click on an empty portrait to create a new character.

Alts and multiboxing

Main article: Alternate characters

While everyone starts out by playing only one character, many EVE players find it useful to create additional characters (also called "alternate characters", or "alts") to fulfill specific roles in the game.

If you have several accounts (you can have as many EVE accounts as you like) then you can play the game simultaneously with two (or more) characters, but only if:

  • The characters are on separate accounts (you can never play with two characters on the same account simultaneously), and
  • All the accounts involved have an active subscription (i.e. Omega status)

Multiple Character Training

Even if you have multiple characters on an account, only one of those characters can have a skill actively training; all the other characters' skill queues are paused. Therefore, if you want to train skills on an alt, you have to pause training on your main character.

When starting out with alts this is a perfectly acceptable thing to do (as you can still play all your characters even while their skill training is paused), and it continues to be a valid strategy if you only plan to have your alts training for a limited time. However, if you foresee training your alt(s) for a longer time period, and/or if you are impatient and don't want to pause training on your main character, you can train two characters (on the same account) simultaneously by buying "Multiple Character Training".

Buying Multiple Character Training

Multiple Character Training can be bought with PLEX (right-click on a PLEX item in your inventory) or by paying real-life money (through the EVE Account Management website). Multiple Character Training is account-based (not bound to an individual character), so you can buy it on any character on the account, and is bought in 30-day increments.

How Multiple Character Training works

Activating Multiple Character Training (MCT) opens up an additional character skill training queue for 30 days; if you want a longer period or a third training queue you have to buy multiple instances of MCT.

It doesn't matter which characters are training simultaneously, as long as the simultaneous limit is not reached. For example, you could have 3 characters named Anna, Bob and Charlie on the same account. If you have one MCT queue active on that account, you can train any combination of two characters (Anna and Bob, Anna and Charlie, or Bob and Charlie) at the same time for a period of 30 days. This provides extra flexibility if you want to train up several alternate characters. If you would like to train all three characters at once, you would have to buy an additional MCT queue.

The 30 days of MCT starts ticking from the moment you buy/activate it; you have to manually log into each additional character and start their training queues. Should their training queues run out or be paused, MCT will continue to tick down, irrespective of whether your characters are actively training or not; there is no way to "pause" MCT once it's been activated. Once the MCT queue runs out, the skill training for the character with the lowest number of skill points will be paused.

You can check how much time is remaining on your MCT queue on the EVE Account Management website.

Biomassing

You can permanently delete a character (this is referred to as "biomassing") from the character selection screen. When you first select a character for biomassing, you then have to wait 10 hours (this "biomassing queue" is to prevent you from deleting the wrong character by accident). Note that you cannot biomass a character who is the CEO of a corporation - the CEO must first resign or otherwise close the corporation before they can be added to the biomassing queue. Once the 10 hours are up, you can then biomass the character (accompanied by some mechanical sounds and an appropriate scream), deleting it permanently from the game.

If the character was a member of a player-run corporation, the following will happen:

  • All assets (ships, modules, etc) owned by the pilot, including their capsule, are transferred to their corporation and moved to the corporation's first hangar division. If the corporation does not have any offices, then the assets are destroyed. If the character is a member of an NPC corporation, all assets will be lost irrecoverably.
  • Any ISK in the pilot's wallet is transferred to the corporation (into the first wallet division). This is listed in the corporation wallet journal as "Inheritance".
  • All members of the corporation receive an EVE Mail message, notifying them of the character's "permanent death".

For characters in a NPC corporation, all their assets and ISK are destroyed when they are biomassed.

While it's possible for CCP to recover biomassed characters, it is unlikely they would be able to recover or return any lost/transferred assets. If a character is "reanimated" in this way, it occasionally leaves anomalies in the character's employment history (such as showing that they left a corporation and joined it again immediately without being in another corporation, which is not possible under normal conditions). Internally, biomassed characters have their corporation set as Doomheim though cannot be searched in-game.

External links