Ce site requiert JavaScript pour fonctionner.
Veuillez activer JavaScript dans votre navigateur.
Thème Classic
Thème Thottbot
Revue économique WoW de la semaine : mises à jour de la beta, étapes majeures, le temps c'est de l'argent, mascotte Wyrmie Langkins, jeu-concours
Wowhead
Publié
26/05/2018 à 10:29
par
Gumdrops
Revue économique WoW de la semaine
Bienvenue dans cette 41e édition de la revue économique WoW de la semaine ! Dans ce numéro, nous parlons des récents changements apportés à la beta de Battle for Azeroth, les étapes majeures en matière d'économie, la mascotte Wyrmie Langkins et le jeu-concours du mois !
Si vous consultez cette série pour la première fois, ou que vous voulez revoir nos éditions précédentes, vous pouvez
retrouver toutes ces-dernières ici sur cuckhead.com
.
Cet article sera pas ailleurs commenté
en direct sur ma chaîne Twitch
peu après sa publication, vous pouvez me rejoindre et me poser vos questions !
Regardez GumdropsTSM en direct sur www.twitch.tv
Je suis
Gumdrops
et je suis le modérateur en chef du
subreddit /r/woweconomy
et du
serveur Discord
qui va avec. Je suis également responsable du support et évangéliste utilisateur pour
TradeSkillMaster
, la suite de greffons pour l'hôtel des ventes de World of Warcraft. J'espère couvrir et présenter les sujets, discussions, contenus et guides les plus intéressants qui ont tourné au cours de la semaine passée dans la communauté économique. Certains que vous pourriez avoir manqué en tant qu'économiste vétéran, ou qui pourraient vous intéresser pour votre première fois en tant que nouveau ou aspirant "gobelin".
Le format ne sera pas celui d'un guide traditionnel, mais des liens vers plus de lecture avec mes commentaires et opinions. J'essaierai toujours d'extrapoler, indiquer comment penser et décider en tant qu'économiste, plutôt que de donner une liste d'instructions pas à pas. Comme on dit : « donne un poisson à un homme, tu le nourris pour un jour ; apprends lui à pêcher, il se nourrira toute sa vie ».
Deux mises à jour majeures sont sorties cette semaine dans la sous-version de la beta de Battle for Azeroth cette semaine.
Charmes pour mascotte polis
Blizzard
You'll notice in today's new Beta update that battle pet currency has changed. Here are the main changes:
Pet Charms will be named
Charme pour mascotte brillant
s. Shiny Pet Charms continue to be acquired by doing pre-BFA battle pet content.
A new currency has been added -- Polished Pet Charms. These are acquired by doing BFA content, such as Pet Battle World Quests.
Vendors that sell battle pet items that are always useful have had their wares changed to require new
Charme pour mascotte poli
s as currency. For example, the vendor Serr’ah in Dalaran now wants the new
Charme pour mascotte poli
s. Similar vendors who sell such items have had their costs adjusted as well.
Vendors that sell things like unique pets or toys that have always required
Charme pour mascotte brillant
s will still require
Charme pour mascotte brillant
s. For example, Giada Goldleash in Dalaran will still sell all of her pets and toys for Shiny Pet Charms.
The
Portail pour mascottes cassé
item, which was an achievement reward for completing 30 of the Pet Battle World Quests on the Broken Isles, will be added to a vendor with a
Charme pour mascotte poli
cost. This is to avoid players feeling obligated to farm previous expansion’s world quests. You can do current content to catch yourself up. This is coming in a future Beta build.
Ultimate Battle-Training Stones are going to have their cost increased from 45 to 60 Pet Charms.
What this means for you: always-useful items will eventually move to the new currency, so you don't feel obligated to do older content. If you still need pets from older content, they are purchasable with that content's charms.
Spend those charms!
There will not be a conversion, nor will you lose them.
Le consensus au sein de la communauté est de suivre ce conseil et de dépenser ses charmes sur les pierres de combat d'entraînement maintenant de façon à améliorer les mascottes obtenues au début de Battle for Azeroth.
Retour des recettes de Zul'Gurub
Comme nous l'avons rapporté ici sur cuckhead.com, nous verrons le retour de certaines recettes précédemment retirées du jeu et qui n'étaient plus obtenables.
Les recettes de l'ancienne Zul'Gurub perdues dans les stupéfiants évènements de Cataclysm semblent faire leur retour à Battle for Azeroth. Des versions beta récentes ont vu l'ajout de trois nouveaux PNJ sur les quais de Zuldazar :
Rin'wosho le Marchand
,
Maywiki
et
Exzhal
. Ces PNJ étaient tous trois présents sur l'île Yojamba, près des côtes de la vallée de Strangleronce et sont maintenant sur les quais de Zuldazar, dans la zone commerciale de Yojamba.
Le retour de ces PNJ et leurs dialogues relatifs aux Parangons de Puissance pourraient indiquer une nouvelle méthode d'obtenir de la réputation auprès de la faction actuellement retirée du jeu
Tribu Zandalar
, permettant de nouveau aux joueurs d'obtenir
Héros de la tribu Zandalar
et une autre réputation pouvant aider à acquérir
100 réputations exaltées
et le titre .
Actuellement, dans la beta, les PNJ ne sont pas hostiles aux joueurs de l'Alliance, il est donc possible pour les joueurs des deux factions d'acquérir de nouveau de la réputation et des anciennes recettes de leur part.
Recettes de retour
Rin'wosho le Marchand
vend toutes les recettes qui étaient disponibles jusqu'à Cataclysm avec
Tribu Zandalar
, plus
Recette : Potion de vive action
.
Recipe
Profession
Prérequis
Formule : Huile de mana brillante
Enchantement
Amical
Patron : Bottes en vignesang
Couture
Amical
Patron : Brassards en peau de chauve-souris primordiale
Travail du cuir
Amical
Plans : Gantelets d'âmesang
Forge
Amical
Plans : Epaulières de ténébrâme
Forge
Amical
Recette : Potion de sommeil sans rêve supérieure
Alchimie
Amical
Schéma : Lentille en vignesang
Ingénierie
Amical
Formule : Huile de sorcier brillante
Enchantement
Honoré
Patron : Jambières en vignesang
Couture
Honoré
Patron : Epaulières du tigre-sang
Travail du cuir
Honoré
Patron : Gants en peau de chauve-souris primordiale
Travail du cuir
Honoré
Plans : Epaulières d'âmesang
Forge
Honoré
Plans : Jambières de ténébrâme
Forge
Honoré
Recette : Élixir de sang de Troll puissant
Alchimie
Honoré
Schéma : Lunettes en vignesang
Ingénierie
Honoré
Patron : Cuirasse du tigre-sang
Travail du cuir
Révéré
Patron : Gilet en vignesang
Couture
Révéré
Patron : Pourpoint en peau de chauve-souris primordiale
Travail du Cuir
Révéré
Plans : Cuirasse d'âmesang
Forge
Révéré
Plans : Cuirasse de ténébrâme
Forge
Révéré
Recette : Élixir magesang
Alchimie
Révéré
Je pense que c'est une formidable idée de la part des développeurs, j'apprécie toujours de voir de l'ancien contenu est réintégré d'une certaine façon. Que ce soit sous la forme d'une réputation ou d'une série de quêtes.
Sujet de discussion
Auprès de combien de factions avez vous une réputation exaltée ? Avez-vous obtenu ces recettes avant qu'elle soit retirées et si oui, avec-vous vendu un ou plusieurs des objets fabriqués à partir de ces recettes depuis que ces dernières ne sont plus obtenables ? Quels sont vos plans pour les mascottes dans Battle for Azeroth ?
Notre première étape est celle du gobelin de confiance et habitué de la revue /u/Mochaboys, qui a
partagé un graphique détaillé relatant son chemin vers les 7 millions d'or en liquide
.
This is about a 9 month stretch of activity. I started with a single level 60 priest and with 25k seed money from a generous goblin on my server I eventually parlayed that into 6 characters and 7 million liquid - and all on a low pop server (Runetotem-Uther). I got caught in that trap of, "ok I made my first million, now what?" to which the answer was "easy go make another!"...so 1 million became 2 million, and 2 became 4 and around that point I started to serious consider finishing the run to gold cap.
Revenue Sources
Here's a quick rundown of my revenue sources, then we'll go an annotated run of my climb to 7 million.
6 Maxed Order Halls all running speed builds primarily focused on rep tokens, gold, and pet charms currently. I make enough from DE'ing bracers and world quests that I can fuel help feed OHRs to all my characters. All my characters have an 8th champion maxxed specifically for bringing in extra OHR. This collection nets me roughly 35k-40k per week of mostly passive income per toon.
3 Jewelcrafters...primary sources are crowns and saber eyes, argus gems and cuts aren't worth the money right now unless you can farm them efficiently yourself. I have 3 Jewelcrafters so when Pandemonite WQs come up that's an easy 10k in my pocket
3 Enchanters (though I wish I had more). These feed me a steady supply of bloods, chaos crystals, and leylight shards, plus the neck and ring enchants have been and continue to be steady sellers even this late into the expac
1 LW who's primarily focused on producing Warhide Bindings so I can do the leylight shuffle (I can triple my investment on my server with these). But he's also really handy for drums and bardings which I use more and more.
1 Tailor primarily for hexweave bags (I missed this gravy train and actually had 3 tailors at one point, but bag prices on my server couldn't support that many tailors so I swapped them to jewelcrafters). But her other jobs include the silkweave bracer to leylight shard shuffle and the odd bit of tailoring.
1 Alchemist...it's rare that flask prices are profitable so having an alchemist is more to save money for raid mats (I love throwing down a spirit cauldron for a raid), but I also make great money selling infernal alchemist and astral alchemist trinkets.
Food - focuses are on nightborne delicacies and azshari salads, but everything sells eventually, I just don't care to keep everything stocked. Cooking has been the most surprisingly consistent revenue generator of all my other sources
Maxxed fishing - I don't fish much but when I do it's just to feed my personal supply of lavish suramar feasts, but fishing especially with a rank 3 artifact is incredibly lucrative especially for things like highmountain salmon, and black barracudas.
Transmog and BoEs. These are a no brainer - if you see a good price on the AH, buy it and spend months waiting for it to sell but they do eventually sell. I don't actively farm any of these.
Timeline
Click for full size image
1. & 2. -
Starting with 25k, I worked on flipping mats and selling farmed materials of my own, primarily herbalism supplies. The dip from 1-2 was when I blew 50% of my bankroll on a 180k supply of starlight rose which I then turned around and sold for 600k so that was nice but that kept me cash poor for quite some time.
3. -
I finally discovered TSM. ;D started picking up transmogs and 101 BoEs but didn't really know what I was doing, from 3-4 I made most of my money at this stage selling of all things, food.
4. -
This was right around the Grumpus holiday event, and I sunk nearly everything i had into medallions and mounts (I've since turned all those around for double the profit)
5. -
I started dipping my toes into Antorus BoEs and expanding my collection of pretty much everything. Around this time, I spun up a second character and used my Legion boosts to shoot her to 110.
6. -
Dropped about a million plus to stock up Antorus BoEs all of which were sold at huge profits, also bought out a bot or boxer dump of 300k in starlight rose.
7. -
This drop was more Antorus BoE investments but at a slower rate than earlier
8. -
Hit my record at this point as money was starting to roll in faster than I could reinvest it. It was this point that I realized I needed to scale up my operation and look for more passive streams of income at which point I bought enough tokens to boost 4 characters. I spent a couple months running them all through the Argus quest line to max out their order halls, but I had a surprisingly good time just playing in them general.
9. -
I discovered Enchanting and Jewelcrafting :D
10. -
This was 10 day stretch right around the time the mobile AH went offline. Even though I couldn't play, I kept reposting via the mobile AH and made about 1.4million just selling things like enchants, rep medallions, and the odd BoE
10. & 11. -
This most recent climb I've been on auto pilot...all OHs maxxed, food kept stocked, enchants and jewelcraft all kept stocked...this is where the importance of diversity comes into play...some days no enchants sell, some days no food sells, but having that many sale-able items across that many different markets - SOMETHING always sells.
And that's where I'm at today - sitting on about 7.3m liquid warchest ready for whatever profit opportunities BFA throws at us...
La seconde étape est celle de
/u/lipsi pour son superbe article, que je vous présente sans plus de commentaires
!
Hello everyone!
I always love reading these, so I decided to now make my own.
Who are you?
I'm a raider in a top 100 guild on a medium population EU realm.
As for how I learned to make gold: Most of my economic understanding I learned from trading in Eve Online. I got my feet wet there and went bonkers completely when I failed economics at university and subsequently had more free time than I could handle. I specialized in trading faction/deadspace items when they still had to be traded on contracts. For those who don't know wtf I'm talking about, it was like trading dozens of heroic and mythic raid BoEs at a time. A lot of ISK (ingame currency) was involved, and unlike market trading you had to lock up half of your capital in buy contracts ("WTB orders"). That was until 2012 or so, when they were finally moved on the open market. While before I didn't have to compete with bots, I now had to, and at that point I decided to call it quits.
I learned a lot there, but most importantly I learned to mess with people.
My trading principles
First off: I enjoy making gold. I know g/h is highest when working IRL. But there is no joy in buying gold.
Recognizing the value of things (and a bit on opportunity cost)
Every looted item has value. This is especially true for items that can't be sold, like Bloods. On this subreddit we can often read about goblins having idiots unwitting people craft items for them using blood, but not being paid for the blood. The same goes for raid BoEs. If you're just giving them to friends, you might as well give them the 200k gold they are worth (which nobody does). Of course for me that is once progression is over.
No risk.
No fun
.
I don't take risks. Let's have a word on TSM here -- this might offend some people: It's worthless to me. Regional values compared to my server are at best inaccurate and at worst wrong.
I don't dabble in weekly reset trading, neither do I bother with full resets. I see them going wrong all the time. But that might be because I'm the one to crash them for fun and profit.
Low auction count/high value items
This is where my medium pop realm comes into play. Prices are higher overall but sale rate slower in return. That being said, I'd rather end myself than trade on a high pop realm.
If the profit for an auction isn't at least 4 digits, I don't bother. I despise reposting dozens of stacks, even once a day. This doesn't happen on other realms, because margins are lower, but it's my thing here. On average I have less than 10 active auctions.
Simple things
This isn't much about economy, but I'll mention it. In the time I play, I try to make gold where possible, no matter what I do. That means my main characters have enchanting and I always try to do WQs that reward gold, OR or epics. I always loot for blood bags and BoEs, which gives vendor trash as a side. Looting adds up.
The good stuff
Sorry for the lack graphs, I'm writing mostly from memory.
Items that made bank
Bloods. Both types.
Obliterum
Order halls
Raid BoEs
Professions
The details:
Bloods.
Those are probably the largest source of gold I had in legion. 7.1 introduced the BoS vendor. While everyone scrambled to convert their useless bloods into gold, nobody realized for a while that there was a blood shoulder enchant. It took weeks for people to realize that the blood enchant was the go-to moneymaker and the gold made from that was ridiculous. Foxflowers and Fjarnskaggl sold for 80-120g on my server, meaning an average blood bag drop was 2500 gold. Mythic world tours for legendary farming also had a nice side of bloods.
BoS being a good source of gold held true even throughout Tomb of Sargeras. Farming portals on the Broken Shore for lengendaries came with a 50 epics a day + the random bloods from DEing.
When a lot of people on this sub fueled their alts with blood missions, I fueled my wallet with blood missions. Each mission was worth ~4000 gold for months. But the WQ burnout got real and now I also use them to fuel my alts (170g per blood is just pretty bad).
For the uninitiated: Right now, crafted legendaries are the absolute bestest, #1 blood dump. The crafting cost for these, depending on the item, is ~10k gold. Selling the legendaries at 80-100k, we're talking about 1300g/BoS in may 2018. Always build the nether disruptor and stockpile the commissions, even if you're not going to craft them. You can craft multiple legendaries in a single reset through M+ whenever you feel like it.
Moving on, Primal Sargerite. Primals have also been a steady source of gold for me.
Turns out, Primals have a near 1:1 conversion to Obliterum
.. The crafting materials are next to worthless, but you get 2.2 Obliterum per shoulder.
Obliterum.
I have to confess. I was completely oblivious regarding to Obliterum. I only started trading them in the summer of last year. There was nothing secret about them. But for some reason, on my server, nobody dusted enchants. So all over the summer and into the winter I bought enchants, dusted them and resold them as Oblits. Soon I also left out the middle man and crafted and dusted myself (mostly the shards from DEing epics while playing).
Selling only in stacks of 10, I kept prices high and never aggressively undercut. Each sale was anywhere from 4000-10000 gold pure profit. But that's maybe 3 sales a day on average.
Obliterum still goes for ~1000 on my server, Primal Oblits flip flop between 1400-1800. Keeping in mind the recipe I mentioned earlier, I'm essentially selling a Primal for 700-900, all while Empyrium is at 120g/Primal.
Order halls
Not a lot to say here. I was lazy with them. I only had 2 running for the first half of Legion, adding a third this January, two more in february and two more are almost complete now, putting me at 7 order halls. My two mains ran the nethershard missions every now and then, plus most blood missions, and I do every primal sargerite and reputation mission on my 3 horde characters.
Another honorary mention is the
Tome de manipulation nathrezim
, which sadly has been nerfed long ago. It meant that two reputation token missions yielded a bonus emissary chest on your sub 110 alt, which 100% contains 600-1000 gold and resources. This item shall be a reminder to always keep an eye out for optimizing gold gains.
Raid BoEs
First off, looting them. It's just pure luck, honestly. When Nighthold opened, I looted a +15 ilvl (so mythic quality) cloth belt, which was best in slot for mages. Sold that for 500k. Every few weeks you'll loot one of these on heroic or mythic, translating to 150-400k gold.
Second, relisting. I remember, a week before ToS release I decided to relist most of my realm's BoE market, because the prices were all over. After I bought all the stuff, it hit me: The next tier wasn't going to be +15 Ilvl, it was going to be +30 ilvl. So there I sat with 2 million worth of end of tier heroic BoEs, soon to become LFR equivalents. Luckily, ToS got postponed, netting me
decent results for a few weeks of posting
.
Third: 101s. Just like Obliterum, these eluded me for a very long time (until I looted one of them), and I came to a market controlled by basically one person. Over time, I managed to snipe good deals here and there, but didn't really dare to touch leech items. Nobody does twinking on my realm. The market "controller" sat on these items for like a year now, he still has them now and probably just realized that TSM values are meaningless on our server.
As a final note. Try to make out which BoEs are good and which are bad. Mail in general is awful, both in price and sale rate. Certain stats can mean an item is BiS (like cloth gloves for shadow in ToS), so these can catch a good penny and sell fast.
Professions
Not a lot more to add here, since I already mentioned Obliterum dusting and legendaries. Gathering has been decent gold when flying was introduced. Crafting potions wasn't too bad. Enchanting is still the best profession. Well, disenchanting it should be called.
The numbers for JC never really added up for me. Like I said before, I hate posting lots of items.
Right now, crowns are pretty good RoI. I also am like one of two people on this realm with the Seat priest glyph, which I've been selling once or twice a week for 30k gold without competition.
Conclusion
Sorry I can't give hard numbers for everything. But that's about 20 million gold made in one and a half years. Excluded is gold from selling raids in the past 9 months that I've been in my guild (we have an exceptional team who manage this), which would add another ~6 million.It allows me to not only pay for my sub and my other blizzard purchases (including occasional gifts to friends), but also for stupidly expensive things like battle pets.
And of course the
Rênes de brutosaure de caravane puissant
.
I hope this whole post can be of insight for at least some people trying to make a living. No clue what kind of questions one could have, but I'm happy to answer questions.
TL;DR: Get gold. Duplicate.
Sujet de discussion
Quelle étape avez vous récemment atteint sur le point financier ? Qu'est-ce que vous visez ensuite ? Si vous n'êtes pas déjà dans le domaine de l'économie, prévoyez-vous de commencer à Battle for Azeroth ?
Dans un commentaire faisant suite à son étape majeure, /u/Mochaboys a souligné le temps qu'il a du investir dans les hauts faits listés ci-dessus.
/u/tstevo91 demande plus de détails
:
How do you manage your time? i.e. "today I will farm fishing materials for my food sales, tomorrow I will mine ore for my JC" etc? It sounds impossible to manage all of those characters and professions for me, I have 12 OrderHalls running but don't have much of an idea how else to get gold reliably. Fishing for black barracuda and turning it into food was decent for me in the past that's about all I've tried besides selling raw materials.
En ce qui me concerne, je pense qu'il est important d'avoir une routine, mais si vous ne vous concentrez pas principalement sur l'économie : vous devriez avoir des tâches que vous devez ou souhaitez accomplir pour vous aider à maintenir vos stratégies. Que ce soit tirer partie de vos fabrications à temps de recharge journalier, mettre des objets en vente à des heures précises de la journée ou juste vous assurer de toujours garder vos missions à jour, prendre des habitudes vous aidera à atteindre vos buts en matière de finances plus rapidement.
Nous seulement cela, mais comme on dit : « le temps, c'est de l'argent ». Vous devez être efficient avec votre temps. Ce n'est pas une bonne idée de dépenser votre temps disponible à faire quelque chose qui génèrera peu de profit. Il est injuste de s'attendre à ce que tout le monde fasse les choses efficientes et profitables à 100 %, ou ce ne serait plus le cas. /u/MochaBoys partage son point de vue :
I think the key here is understanding your limits and being honest with yourself about exactly how much time you want to spend on any given activity.
My answer to that question is - the least amount possible. I don't farm, though early on, even though I enjoyed farming for certain markets, I died a little on the inside when I calculated how much *time it would take to maintain that revenue stream.
This is why it's SO important for people to actually understand the opportunity costs of their decisions. Sure I could spend 4 hours farming
Rose lumétoile
and pull in 15k per hour, but wouldn't it be so much cooler if I spent 4 minutes scanning listings and picking up deals for flips or stocking up on cheap mats. It's certainly a different kind of farming, and the chart I posted is hopefully enough proof to support the idea that you can do nothing but work the AH to make obscene piles of gold.
But to answer your question - here's a typical week.
Tues - Thurs are my raid nights, I run my priest and warlock through Heroics, and then Garothi-Agg-Arg raids on both Normal and LFR for Pantheon trinkets. So the bulk of whatever time I'm online is spent raiding.
I don't play on the weekends except to scan the AH for cheap mats so I can stock up going into a selling week. I still make good sales on the weekend, but the week days are really my bread and butter.
For Order Halls, I do 90% of my missions from the phone app, and I check for missions 3 times a day so figure 15 minutes there. I check in on the actual OH mission toons a handful of times through the week, or if I need to pop a Strange Ball of energy or heal up troops. By and large they're hands off and I don't play them unless I'm bored.
What's taken up a lot of time recently that I didn't anticipate were the enchanting shuffles. Processing 22,000 mats into bracers and then shards takes time, but thankfully using some CKS helps to ease the sting of that so you can work and craft/disenchant at the same time.
As for restocks, it's a low pop server so I don't have to restock multiple times a day like you would on a high pop server. I could go weeks between restocks, but if I'm low on a particular gem or enchants, I pop on my enchanter for 5 minutes and I'm back in business. Same thing for food though food moves 4x faster than any other consumable I have so those restock cooks are more like once every 3 or 4 days. I spend at least one or two scan sessions per day scanning for cheap mats and I buy so I can maintain enough to produce 2 weeks worth of sales for a given item, so in the case of saber gems, I keep on hand 20 pandemonites at any given time and if they drop below 2k any time, I scoop them up.
I want to reiterate though - the whole point of my particular setup was to specifically choose markets that required the least investment in time so I could actually play the game and not just work the AH day in and day out.
I'm sure I'd be at 20 million by now if all I did was work sniper and spend my days driving every seller out of every market, but like an early post opined - it was my "great rich slowly" method. It worked for me because I had a steady and consistent income of around 33k/day for the past 3 months for what I felt was not a lot of work.
Apart from the that, the only other thing I'd mentioned that should be obvious is to make TSM work for you to take all the decision making out of the posting and reposting process. I don't even bother to see what my stuff sells for anymore to scan for reset opportunities. I repost so often that I catch the high markets and the low markets and still turn a profit.
L'un des points les plus importants à retenir de cela d'après moi, est la dernière phrase. Tant que votre moyenne a la fin de la journée est positive, vous êtes sur le bon chemin. Peu importe si vous y perdez sur quelques objet ou quelques marchés, un prix peut tomber ici ou là qui ne devrait pas vous affecter au point d'enrayer vos profits. Comme je le dis toujours, la diversité est la clé, et si tout ce que vous faites vous est profitable
en moyenne
, alors tout va bien.
Vous finirez par arriver à un point où vous faites tellement de choses différentes que vous ne pouvez plus micro-gérer tout ce que vous mettez aux enchères. Utiliser TradeSkillMaster pour préparer vos prix de vente à l'avance en s'assurant que vous en tirerez un certain profit vous aidera à dépenser moins de temps dans la logistique de l'hôtel des ventes et vous placera sur un niveau d'efficience supplémentaire. À ce niveau, vous ne cherchez plus à maximiser et à traire la moindre petite pièce de cuivre de profit possible avec quelques objets à chaque fois, vous cherchez simplement à faire ce profit moyen sur le long terme. Un bon exemple est celui de ce magnat du commerce de mascottes,
Vahdis aka RethRethReth
, il n'attache aucune importance au niveau ou aux statistiques des mascottes car cela lui prend bien trop de temps.
Notre ami
Breg a également sorti une vidéo au sujet du « temps » cette semaine
et elle mérite d'être regardée :
Sujet de discussion
Combien de temps dédiez-vous à l'économie ? Préfèreriez-vous dépensez plus ou moins de temps dans l'économie ? Quelles sont vos autres activités principales en jeu ?
Une rapide
astuce du gobelin de confiance /u/Kurraga cette semaine
, la série de quêtes d'archéologie en cours donne en récompense la mascotte de combat échangeable
Wyrmie Langkins
. Ce sera la dernière fois que cette quête est active avant le lancement de Battle for Azeroth.
Crédit image :
iDepecheMode
Hey goblins. Quick tick for you let traders and collectors out there. The current archeology quest rewards the a tradable pet: Wyrmy Tunkins. The quest takes about 20 minutes to an hour depending on how lucky you get, and as a bonus you get a few crates for making progress on any archeology things you need to do (although with the way legion Archeology is not a whole lot).
The pet is worth about 40k-50k on average most of the time, but while the quest is up you might find a bunch for cheap. Now is probably going to be the best time to pick it up because by the time the next one comes around people will be busy with BFA content so not as many are going to do the quest.
/u/GeneticsGuy confirme la valeur de la mascotte
:
HUGE PVP pet battler here... This is one of the best FOTM pets. So far, though unknown in BFA, it looks like it will continue to be a valuable and desired pet.
/u/Mochaboys apporte son aide, et confirme que vous pouvez obtenir la mascotte sur plusieurs personnages
:
hanks for this tip I didn't even know this was a thing but reading up on Wyrmy I realized it was probably a good idea to go and do the quest. Took me about 25 minutes with an archaelogy level of 50 (now it's at 120).
For those of you attempting the quest - pick up the quest Into the Fel Fire in Dalaran, go to Azsuna to talk to Brann then complete about 7 or so digsites to get the 10 fragments. Once you're done - go and hand in the 10 fragments to Brann and he'll do a quick run to spawn Wyrmy. Defeat Wyrmy, then go and collect the pet from Brann as the quest reward...
These are going for 120k on my server and it looks like you can do his on multiple alts as well, going to be a busy digging night for me :D
Sujet de discussion
Combien de trous avez vous creusé à Legion ? Avez-vous terminé toutes les quêtes d'archéologie ? Qu'attendez-vous de l'archéologie à Battle for Azeroth ?
C'est la dernière revue économique WoW de mai, ce qui signifie que l'heure du jeu-concours est arrivée ! Merci d'avoir participé aux jeux-concours précédents, et bonne chance pour celui de ce mois-ci !
Pour le jeu-concours de ce mois-ci, nous avons trois clés pour la beta de Battle for Azeroth à faire gagner, grâce à cuckhead.com.
Pour participer :
laissez un commentaire ci-dessous (au moins une ou deux phrases) en réponse à n'importe lequel des
sujets de discussion
de l'édition de cette semaine.
Récompense :
3 x clé beta Battle for Azeroth
Dates de participation :
maintenant jusqu'au samedi 2 juin à 2:59 AM ET / 08:59 CEST.
Les gagnants auront 14 jours pour répondre au courrier électronique qu'ils recevront pour réclamer leur prix, ou il sera considéré comme abandonné. Nous ne pourrons être tenus pour responsables de quelque problème de messagerie électronique que vous pourriez rencontrer. Si vous avez gagné et n'avez pas reçu de courriel, envoyez un message électronique à , dans les 14 jours suivant la date de fin du jeu-concours. Une participation valide est définie comme étant un commentaire apportant des réponses logiques et réfléchies aux questions posées (par exemple, « c'est cool », « ihgty », etc. ne sont pas valides).
Merci de consulter les avertissements légaux
ici
. Des questions, des commentaires ? Contactez .
La plupart de ces informations ont fait l'objet de discussions et ont d'abord été postée sur le
subreddit /r/woweconomy
ou le
serveur Discord
qui l'accompagne. Vous pouvez également me retrouver
en direct sur Twitch
tous les samedis à partir de midi ET / 18:00 CEST, où je réponds à des questions concernant l'économie et TradeSkillMaster, ou vous pouvez m'envoyer vos retours et avis sur Twitter à
@GumdropsEU
S'abonner à Wowhead
Premium
2 $US
Un mois
[Enjoy an ad-free experience, unlock premium features, & support the site!]
Afficher les 0 commentaires
Masquer les 0 commentaires
Connectez-vous pour laisser un commentaire
Commentaire Anglais (308)
1
1
Poster un commentaire
Vous n'êtes pas connecté(e). Veuillez vous
connecter
ou vous
inscrire
pour ajouter votre commentaire.
Message précédent
Message suivant