*** IF YOU'RE TOO LAZY TO READ THIS ENTIRE POST, JUST READ THE LAST PARAGRAPH*** - - - - -I, for one, am against luring. I understand that they give many warnings of trading in the wilderness, etc...but something that people fail to realise is that not all forms of luring are that simple. I recently lost my santa hat -all the money to my name - to a completely different kind of lure. - - - - -I was slaying bloodvelds last week when i got PM'd by a random person, who told me that I was an old friend of their's and that they were planning on quitting. So she invited me to - NO, not edgeville, not the bar near the wild's edge - but to the duel arena. As soon as i got there, she handed me 10M cash, without hesitation. Obviously, I thought that only a true friend would have given 10M to me if they were honestly quitting. Then she started ranged-only staking a bunch of people for fun, letting them win several mils at a time. I offered to stake 10m for another 10m, and she accepted, I won hands down. - - - - -I hardly took any damage at all, so i offered to stake my 20m and santa hat for a red mask. She asked if that's all i wanted to stake, and I told her it was all I had. As soon as the duel started, she took out obby rings and owned me in 5 hits. Seeing as how she was "quitting", I didn't think much of it, so I asked to have it back. However, she declined. I nearly cried when she told me I'd been scammed, and showed me 7 blue party hats that she'd obtained through the same process. - - - - -I realised that there was nothing completely against the rules against doing something like this...but if you look under the rule book, under item scamming - it is defined as "deceiving another player for your own personal gain." I don't know about anyone else here, but it seems to me that luring falls under that exact definition. For that reason, I believe luring, of all forms, should be considered item scamming, and therefore against the rules.