Welcome to a hopefully humorous look at World of Warcraft

World of Warcraft is many things and the meaning of the wht it is varies by what each person considers significant.

Programmers might be fascinated and engaged by the technology itself; highly customizable and sophisticated.

Gamers like it for being a cutting edge MMO RPG.

Adults and kids alike enjoy its social aspects; communication/collaboration with others.

Collectors and puzzle-solvers find plenty of items to collect and puzzles to solve.

Some, perhaps a very few, regardless of their involvement in the game if any, will gaze at it from a distance — ponder upon what they see — and perhaps wear a small grin.

This blog is for those with perspective, not just a narrow interest, and the ability to perceive things in context.

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Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Priest progressed at a prodigious pace

I had a priest mostly idle for a year on the same realm that The Instance podcast crew plays on, the AIE, guild.

I got a gumption to level it this weekend.  Last night, I managed to get it to reach level 40.

I have already gotten it its level rare WSG & Arathi Basin BG gear plus the level 40 WST epic bracers.   Not counting characters which I had the good fortune to have heirlooms on, this is the probably one of the best geared characters I have had at level 40.

Once the realm servers are back up tonight I will be buying my level 40 fast ground mount riding skill.

I am really looking forward to leveling this character to 60 as fast as I can.  There are some great level 60 epic cloth armor patterns out there.  The patterns usually run about 100g; not bad.  The reason they are so affordable is that they make BoP gear and the gear can only be equipped by priests.

That boils down to only priests who are tailors can use those patterns to make gear that can be equipped.

This will be my first time to be able to take advantage of those patterns.

This priest is a Shadow Priest (primary) and Discipline (secondary).  These days, two clothie specs I enjoy playing the most are Shadow Priest and Arcane Mage.  I usually pick tailoring+enchanting as my two professions for characters of these classes.

Ditto for warlock but I think my next warlock might be engineering+inscription, or something like that. By the way, never pick engineering for a main character.  Use it for alts that you level up after you already have a miner and a skinner character.

Otherwise, you are gold poor all the time and you will not skill up or level up.

Enchanting also goes extremely well with Inscription or Jewelcrafting.  The reason is both those crafting professions have some patterns available that make BoP blues for fairly easy mats.  Jewelcrafting, in particular is great for this.

The result is you can make shards shards fairly easily and cheaply, whereas other people cannot.  You need shards in order to do certain enchants.  Most of the time, weapon enchants require shards.  Cloak enchants also tend to require shards.  Some glove & boot enchants require them as well.

A few things make it really easy for me to level these days.

I have been playing WoW for a number of years.  So I am very familiar with it in general.  I know where to get patterns from, when/where to get my gear from battlegrounds (BGs), how to get crafting materials (mats), and generally what items are usually cheap or expensive in the auction house (AH).

I also know how to get well geared and then do BGs.  A lot of people dislike BGs because they get killed a lot.  I know of several ways to deal with this and come out feeling pretty good.

First, accept that you are going to get killed in the BG many times.  It is okay because everyone does.

Second, get those honor points!  The way to do that is for your team to win.  Killing a player here and there really gives very little honor.

Winning the match gives you and everyone else on your team a ton of honor points.  Plus, you finish the BG a little quicker if you win by actually getting the objective completed before winning because you were ahead when the clock ran out.

Third, learn to write WoW macros.  I am serious!  They are pretty easy to learn.  The most useful type of macro usually just has two lines in it.

The first line looks like this:   #showtooltip
The second line is something like the following:

/castsequence reset=/combat/target14 Shadow Word: Pain,Mind Flay,Mind Flay,Mind Flay

I use that one a lot on my Shadow Priest. For other classes, it will look like that but instead of Shadow Priest spells you will have other spells.

Macros are very worth learning to write and then spending time to write a few and drag them to your action bar.  If you are running out of space then a wonderful WoW addon named Button Forge is on Curse.  Button Forge lets you create action bar strips or grids.

You set them up and then drag your spell icons from spellbook or macro icons from the macro editor onto an action slot.

Macros free you from having to hit a lot of different keys every second or two.  You will only need to hit several different keys during a fight and can keep hitting the same one over and over most of the time.

I have another macro that I bind to a different key that has spells that take some cast time.  If I am on the run, I like to tap a key that applies dots and perhaps does some channeling.  If I am standing still for a bit, then I am more likely to want to rap a key to run a macro that does serious DPS but requires standing in once place for about a second or two per sell.

Hope this extemporaneous dump of info is a little helpful to someone out there.