A Rocket League Garage flag on a car in Rocket League.

Rocket League trading site founder will never ‘build a product based on the decisions of another company’ again after one decision from Epic puts him out of a job

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Rocket League’s player-to-player trading system will be turned off in December. For someone like me, the news comes as a mild disappointment—I got my favorite set of wheels in a trade with a friend, but I haven’t used the feature in years—but for Berlin-based designer Laurids “Vicegold” Düllmann and a few others, the announcement means losing a job.

Vicegold doesn’t work at Rocket League developer Psyonix or owner Epic Games. He’s one of the founders of Rocket League Garage, a popular website that’s mainly used to coordinate trades between Rocket League players, and which makes money from banner ads and a premium subscription option. The site has been his sole source of income for five years now, and employs two others. (There are other Rocket League trading sites, too, such as RL Trades Finder and RL Exchange, the latter of which buys and sells items itself.)

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