Данный сайт активно использует технологию JavaScript.
Пожалуйста, включите JavaScript в вашем браузере.
Live
PTR
11.0.2
PTR
11.0.5
Бета
Profession Shuffling for Artisans Acuity - Wowhead Economy Weekly Wrap-Up 336
WoW
Опубликовано
21.07.2024 в 12:47
SamadanPlaysWoW
Hello! Welcome to the 336th edition of the WoW Economy Weekly Wrap-up!
This week we discuss how "Profession Shuffling" could be a thing with Artisan's Acuity and how best to make use of many Alts in The War Within. We also have a great guide for Inscription in Cataclysm Classic and talk about PVP Crafted gear in The War Within.
My name is
Samadan
and I'll be your guide through the World of Gold Making!
Artisan's Acuity Shuffle & Alts
As we get closer to the release of The War Within, more people are testing out systems and planning their first moves. One of which is to maximize the gains of
Artisan's Acuity
the new resource similar to
Artisan's Mettle
from Dragonflight...
Ok, yes, cooldown crafts will probably also be good profit. If you have a bazillion alts (which is easy with remix) you might as well get a whole bunch setup for tailor/alch cooldowns and churn free gold every day. But I'm here to explain a few other reasons why alt armies are more important than ever, and how I plan (hope) to make millions of gold per week in the next expac.
1 - artisans acuity
. For anyone unaware, artisans acuity is replacing artisans mettle. The primary purpose early on will be for buying profession equipment + knowledge points. The problem is that blizzard has heavily time gated the rate you can earn artisans acuity. Without some degenerate behavior, you'll get something like 300-400 acuity in the first week then have small amounts drip in per week. For context, you need
900 per profession
just for profession gear, plus more for buying the 1 time knowledge points and recipes.
So what's the degenerate behavior? Well, for one, you can use the profession shuffle. This essentially means you pick 2 professions you don't care about, collect all treasures, do a couple easy first crafts, then repeat over and over for all professions you don't care about. Choose your 2 main professions as your last two, and you'll be left with something like 1300-1500. An INSANE head start on anyone playing casually.
But we can take it even further. You probably don't plan on actually using all those alts you made in remix, so why not have a couple be acuity mules? Run the full profession shuffle, then either give them to your main or sell them in trade by offering personal orders of profession gear with your acuity.
Essentially, you can get ~1500 acuity, then either craft 5 blue pieces for yourself, sell 5 blue pieces on trade, or do some combination of each. This allows your main to have more than enough to buy all 6 blue tools/accessories + all knowledge points, and your alt that wasted all their acuity will slowly start building it back up anyways (if you want). Also, even green gear is now locked behind acuity so if you don't want to mess with crafting orders you can make greens and post on the auction house
2 - Profession gear.
I already mentioned profession gear in 1, but to expand on this, Im expecting most profession gear to be EXTREMELY expensive early on. I am planning on having 3 or 4 characters entire jobs to be maxing out all of the profession crafting skills. This will cut down on my costs, as I don't need to pay overpriced work order tips, while also allowing me to profit some by selling them.
3 - Duplicate Professions.
By this, I mean I plan on having ~4 jewelcrafters all focus into different areas. Early on, it'll be impossible for any 1 character to do more than 1 thing effectively. If you spec prospecting, you're locked out of gem cutting. If you spec necks, you're locked out of crafting profession gear. Etc etc. Also, it's impossible to know which of the trees will end up being the most lucrative. So why not do them all? I'll have 1 jewelcrafter create the profession gear, one prospect, one create reagents, 1 cut gems etc. I can either choose to be every part of the assembly line, or just do whatever one ends up being the most profit
4 - Concentration.
Everyone knows that alch/tailoring have cool downs, but concentration essentially means EVERYTHING has a cooldown. Gems, flask, potions, bar smelting, inks, etc etc etc. You can have an alt army setup for just about any type of sellable item, and thanks to concentration you'll be able to craft a handful of them per day for cheaper than anyone else. For anyone who doesn't know, concentration has replaced inspiration procs, and essentially works as a guaranteed inspiration proc that recharges over time. This means, for example, every day you can force craft a couple rank 3 gems for rank 2 materials.
5 - Cross Realm Sales.
One extra perk of having dozens of max level characters doing professions, is that these characters will likely almost all be posted up next to banks/auction houses for most of the expansion. Thanks to warbands, there's no need to have them on the same realm. This means you're able to have some of them spread out across low pop or high pop servers, allowing you to quickly flip things like BOEs and recipes for cheap. Obviously you can do that anyways with level 1 characters, but if you're going to be leveling a dozen alts why not choose some other realms? The main thing to keep in mind is that crafting orders are not cross realm unless you're in the same guild. All my alts will be in the same guild, but it'll make public work orders a pain
One other tip -
I believe having a second account will quickly pay for itself. Logging onto 65 characters one at a time sounds like a massive pain in the ass. Searching for treasures 65 times sounds even worse. By having a second account, you can speed up treasure time by 2x (set one to follow, fly on same mount, etc), and you can also have one screen afk prospecting/milling etc while the other is doing something more fun
With prepatch a week away, I think it should be pretty easy for anyone to get 30+ characters to max before launch (I'm averaging ~1.5 hr thanks to remix, likely <1 with prepatch)
Let me know if you guys have any other ideas I might've missed! This community has helped me out a lot over the last few years so I figured I'd give some back
There is a lot of solid advice here for those with an alt army, the first one of profession shuffling for Artisan's Acuity was also covered by
Manthieus
and he goes into detail how it works and why some long time crafters would be reluctant to ditch professions they have had for years.
However, fresh alts will have no such qualms circulating for maximum gains. I'm inclined to agree that "cheezing" the system for early gains does rather go against the spirit of the system as it's designed. Even if the treasure system gets nerfed, The War Within is designed with alts in mind.
Even if they nerf it, you can accomplish effectively the same thing by just having 4 throwaway characters for every 1 real character
There's no way to nerf the fact that you might make 1 main that makes their own profession tools while I make 4 alts that personal order craft all needed profession tools. The only real way to ruin the strategy would be to require acuity always be included by the buyer in personal orders
The other issue that will be a major factor for most is managing all these characters will take a lot of time and money to setup, a resource not always in abundance for many. It doesn't need to be done on such a massive scale with 65 characters, but 5-10 could easily get you covered with some alch/tailoring cooldowns and some specific profession trees explored.
Goldzen_tv
has a great video talking about their plans for utilizing an alt army and cooldowns.
What I really like about this video is the analogies between having employees IRL and how it compares with economy principles.
The other question many might ask is
"How many alts to have?"
The simple answer is as many as you can manage in a reasonable time that you have available.
As many or as few as you actually want to have. There are some good strategies and theories about just having loads of alts, even aside from having alt armies for CDs, but you need to do what is realistic for you. I'm personally fine having one of each profession, and then maybe some extras for profession CDs at some point, particularly given you can eventually max out your professions and tools, and I'm fine not being ridiculously good at everything right at the beginning of TWW. There is no right or wrong way here. Just because someone theorizes that they can have multiple highly specialized profession toons to hopefully make more gold earlier on, doesn't mean it's the way you should go.
I plan on running one of each profession in season 1. That's a lot to keep track of, especially given I've got plans on how I want to make gold with each- but mostly because in addition to my gold making schemes, I also usually provide consumables for my entire guild free of charge, and later on in S1/S2, begin to be their one-stop shop for craftingf gear and tools without commission.
I could add more toons for CDs or just for more varied early build possibilities, but I'd probably make the argument that early on, I make more money by focusing a couple specific markets on the AH, rather than all the possible markets. More to the point- for me, at least, I don't want to play 30+ toons. I want to play my main, and then do profession stuff on like 5 others, because I actually enjoy running raid and dungeons with my guildies. I have to have time for both those things, and my gold making activities. I also see logistical issues in my future if I extend beyond that, outside of maybe including some CD toons later on.
Personally, my time is incredibly limited. I plan on having one alt, a Kultiran Druid dual gatherer. What's your plans?
Cataclysm Classic Inscription Guide
Canadia TV
has put together a really useful guide and spreadsheet to calculate profits with Cata Inscription with milling and Glyphs.
I made a video on how to make gold with cataclysm inscription.
I made a
spreadsheet
that will tell you the exact profit from milling any herb in cataclysm classic ( or best average guess if you prefer ). It’s super easy to use! From there, you’ll get an in depth guide on how to maximize profit by choosing to sell pigments, inks or glyphs. Here are some of the main elements of the video:
How to mill herbs fast and efficiently
How to get glyph recipes
Which glyph to craft and not to craft
A tsm group with all the glyphs in Cata classic
The tsm group comes with an operation for fast and easy posting
Auctionator shopping lists for all herbs, pigments and inks in the game.
I really hope you enjoy the video. Would highly appreciate some feedback! Don’t forget to sub if you like this kind of video! ( some retail tww guides are coming )
For more goldmaking stuff,
check out my website
Even though sales have slowed down, glyphs can still be consistent sellers on some servers.
PVP Crafted Gear
Another niche of gold making often overlooked is the PVP crafted gear. There has been some interesting developments compared with what's available in Dragonflight. There is a summary in a recent Wowhead article
here.
The crafted gear recipes are bought with Honor and are tradeable on the AH. They require some form of Heraldry for each craft which will cost some Honor it would appear.
They may have changed their minds, but as of
the last blue post on the topic
, you don't need the honor yourself.
The “Starter” set of crafted PvP gear will remain BoE and the reagent used to craft it will drop in high quantities from victory boxes and is also tradeable. You will be able to purchase this reagent with honor as well, though at a slightly higher cost to Honor gear due to its tradability.
It sounds to me like this new reagent is just going to be TWW's equivalent to Rousing/Awakened Ire-- you get it from PvP, but it's tradeable. Buying it for honor sounds like it's just an honor dump after you've gotten everything, and that most of it will come from victory boxes (which means that PvPers will just sell it on the auction house like they already do with Ire).
The higher tier crafting upgrade stuff won't be tradable, but that sounds like it's the new version of adding trophies to spark gear to make it scale in PvP-- the only difference is that now, you're adding embellishments and ilvl upgrade stuff to the crafted PvP gear, instead of turning spark gear into PvP gear.
It will be interesting to see how the economy of this pans out whether there is a demand from PVPers to buy the crafted gear or simply find alternate routes for gearing through PVP itself or whether there is a niche for dedicated PVP crafters?
Further Reading
Most of this information was discussed and originally posted on the
/r/woweconomy
subreddit or in the accompanying
Discord Server
.
I hope you found this useful and If you have any suggestions or feedback, please do say so in the comments below..
Until next time, Happy Goldmaking!
Samadan
Оформить Wowhead
Premium
2$
месяц
[Enjoy an ad-free experience, unlock premium features, & support the site!]
Показать 0 комментариев
Скрыть 0 комментариев
Зарегистрируйтесь, чтобы оставить комментарий
Комментарии на английском языке (29)
Написать комментарий
Вы не авторизованы. Пожалуйста,
авторизуйтесь
или
зарегистрируйтесь
, чтобы оставить комментарий.
Предыдущая новость
Следующая новость