Friday
25Dec2009

Secret Santa guest post - Holiday Extravaganza!

Hi!  Brajana from Mend Pet here, bringing a gift for Anea and also for you!  We've taken part in the Blog Azeroth Kris Kringle (or Secret Santa), and we've all been given a chance to write a blog post for someone else.  Hope you enjoy mine!

Winter Veil is here! And you know what that means? Time to get one step closer to your Violet Proto-Drake! But some have forgotten... that's not all the holiday events are good for. While there are some achievements you can certainly get if you're not 80, there are also plenty of great things to help you out in your quest to max level!

Let's start with Winter Veil, since that's the holiday we're in right now! There are a lot of things for leveling characters to take advantage of here.  The first thing that comes to mind is Small Eggs. When you're leveling, you're bound to run into some Tallstriders or Swoops, and they've got a great chance of dropping some eggs. Now normally, these aren't very much use... but they're required to make the Gingerbread Cookies for Greatfather Winter, and some people just can't be bothered to farm them. The holidays are the perfect time for a bit of overpriced egg selling!

If you complete the Treats for Greatfather Winter questline (which is quite simple, provided you can get your hands on some of those Small Eggs), you'll be rewarded with a package containing some low level tradeskill materials (Copper Bars, Linen Bolts, Mageroyal, or Light Leather) that you might want to use to level your skills.  If you complete the Stolen Winter Veil Treats questline you can also receive a tradeskill pattern, which you could use if you're an Engineer, Leatherworker or Tailor. Be careful, you'll want to be at least mid-30s and find a group to kill The Greench!

The next holiday of the year is Love Is In The Air, the Valentine's Day equivalent.  By talking to any NPC in town (once an hour), you can receive gifts and pledges of adoration. These might contain many good things, but the Box of Chocolates is especially nice... some free buff food for any level! A spell power increase of 35 at level 10 will give you quite the advantage.  Also, completing a Gift Collection will give you a buff: +30 Agility/Intellect/Stamina depending on the city.

The Lunar Festival will be coming up at the end of February in 2010. If you don't mind doing a bit of running around, you can get a serious amount of experience and reputation as well as a +250 health buff by traveling to each Elder. Thre are also some Engineering and Tailoring recipes you can purchase for only 5 Coins of Ancestry each. While you might not be high enough level to fight the holiday boss, Omen, if you just stand nearby when he is summoned you'll get a +10% to all stats buff!

In April we will enter into Noblegarden, full of bunnies and candy. This is a great opportunity to get some experience. Each day you can complete the Great Egg Hunt daily which will reward significant experience and gold rewards.

During Children's Week, complete the Orgrimmar/Stormwind orphan (and Shattrath and Dalaran depending on your level) quests for experience, gold and your faction's reputation, as well as a cute little non-combat pet.

Once again there are some easy experience dailies during the Midsummer Fire Festival, and you can use the Burning Blossoms rewarded to you to buy buff food from the holiday vendors.

The Harvest Festival isn't a big holiday, but it's great for people who are questing.  In from of the major cities, you'll find tables and tables of free food!  Fill your bags and you won't have to visit the food vendor in a while!  You can also get great experience (in every sense of the word) and reputation by completing the quest to honour a fallen hero.

While Brewfest is a great event to take part in, with lots of fun things to do... there isn't much that will help out people who are leveling.  However, at 6:15 AM and PM, the Tapping of the Keg event happens, and if you are there to witness you'll receive a 2 hour +10% experience buff!

More dailies in Hallow's End, including Trick or Treating once an hour or protecting the village from the Headless Horseman once a day which awards you goodies like free health and mana regen food or candies.  The biggest help during this holiday, however, is traveling to the inns around the world and visiting all the candy buckets.  These will reward you with candy, reputation and experience!

The last holiday of the year is Pilgrim's Bounty, which is mostly new this past year.  It's a great opportunity to level up your cooking!  For 1 silver, you can purchase a book of recipes containing recipes that require anywhere from level 1 cooking to level 280. The ingredients are all purchasable from the holiday vendors (except the Wild Turkey, which is easy enough to get). You can get to about 350 cooking just using these recipes exclusively! You might also want to pick up the Spirit of Sharing buff by passing all the foods at the table, which increases rep gain by 10% for an hour.

So go out, explore, and level, my friends!  And have a happy holiday which ever one you end up in!

Thank you, Brajana, for a great post about holidays - your holiday achievement guides are always helpful! 


Wednesday
23Dec2009

You threw off my groove!

I am still a pretty big fan of the dungeon finder, for all the reasons that I (and just about every other WoW blogger) have listed.  However, I'm starting to see the other side of the coin.

I quest when I level.  It's almost exclusively what I do - this whole "multiple dungeons a day" thing is only a recent happening with the dungeon finder.  I work my way through areas and do just about every quest I can see until it's time to move on to bigger, better, (prettier) areas.  There are certain zones that I will drop every quest I have in an old zone to run start - Stranglethorn Vale is one of these zones, Zangarmarsh and Nagrand two others.  I've been looking forward to Dragonblight so I can finally see what Wrathgate is all about and then Storm Peaks later. 

However... since I've been so busy with the dungeons, I've gained lots of experience in level but I find myself behind in quests.  I've not moved through them as I ought to have.  There's been hardly any quest progression!  I only just tonight got the three quests for the Nexus, even though I've run it at least 6 times already.  And those quest rewards would've been GREAT for me had I gotten them when I first started running the Nexus. 

It's not just about the quest rewards, either.  Even though I've been having fun (most of the time) in the PuGs, I've been feeling a little... uneasy, shall we say.  While I was writing yesterday's post about finding "the one" for my main, I started to feel worried, thinking that this was the start of an upheaval and change of mains.  But, I think I've pinpointed what the issue is.  I'm not questing as I am wont to do, so I don't feel the smooth progression through chains and zones that I usually do.  It's surprising how much I favor structure like that in my leveling.  I just need to get back into my questing groove.

I did hit 73 early this morning in a Nexus PuG that probably has been my favorite thus far.  Our bear tank lagged out so we were going to wait for another tank, but I stepped up and offered to tank to save time so we only had to wait a few seconds for a DPS to port in.  The group was quick and efficient, I was moving at a nice pace, tanking well and having fun.  I jumped off a platform and totally missed the landing and died from falling too fast - and the group laughed at it.  That was a nice bit of comic relief - jokes were made.  I just had a great time on that run <3

Tuesday
22Dec2009

Oh, Tam? He gave me the syphilis.

Some of you are staring at the screen not knowing quite what to think after a statement like that, so I'll clarify:

It’s basically a blog-content gift exchange (and it really needs a catchier title), and here’s how it works. If you’d like to play, leave me a comment and in return I’ll give you a subject, or ask you a question … and then you go away and blog about it. It doesn’t have to be a whole blog post, this is meant to be low pressure gift-exchange, but, you know, a comment or a paragraph, or a corner of a post (or a full post, if you want to really indulge me, or feel inspired). And if I suggest something crap or boring in which you have no interest, you can look at it as the equivalent of a pair of novelty socks, say “thank you very much, Tam” and throw it away entirely, and I’ll pretend not to notice and make a mental note not to get you novelty socks next year.

(For the record, in the less-selfish version it worked the other way around: I invited questions / subjects from you, and then I went away and blogged about them. But I decided to go with the version that provided the most interest for me. I am a bad bad person)

And then, if you feel like it, you can throw it open on your own blog, inviting people to comment if they’re will to blog on a subject of your choosing (and I promise I’ll come and do the same, thus offering blogging gifts of my own, instead of just demanding blog gifts frome verybody else) … and thus the blog-content gift exchange programme will spread … like a disease … the nice sort of disease … kind of like syphilis in the 17th century, when it was viewed as evidence you had Done Sex Properly. I think I just failed singularly to sell this plan.

BTW Tam - after putting "syphilis" in there, I don't think it needs a catchier title.  It's catching enough as it is  ;)

This has been a bit hit in the blogosphere and if you wanted to see exactly how far the disease spread you could hop on over to Tam's post to see all the trackbacks or just browse your favorite wowblogs - chances are, they've posted as well!

Tam's question was:

What makes a character “the one” for you, and why do you think you haven’t found it, what makes you stall in levelling and what makes you keep going?

Oh boy.  I know I've mentioned quite a few times here that I am a "one main" kinda girl and that I need to find "the one" before I can settle down.  I don't know if any of you took me seriously or even understood how literally I meant it.  I have long desired to be one of those people that can have a main and then a stable of alts that they pull out to play as the mood strikes and are happy to work on them a bit, then put them away. 

Even just recently there have been two instances of my searching for a main that some fellow bloggers have seen first-hand.  My RP experiment on Feathermoon with Arrens, Tartdarling, LoreliAoD, Aoirselvar and Kharendos, among other Stormwind University students.  I think I went through at least five or six iterations of my "RP character"/potential new main.  They were witness to all sorts of new names coming up in guild chat and me saying, "Hi, it's Anea!" 

Then there was the whole warrior to Death Knight transition that I remember only vaguely (thank goodness) but poor Naithin can tell you all about.  He was also witness to my decision making regarding my RP characters too.  You ought to drop him a sympathy card or something.  My guildleader Elleiras of Altadin also saw this transition, inviting three different characters to the guild - but her sanity is still intact.

But to get to the point of the whole thing, it's largely a feeling that dictates whether a character is a main or not.  And not to be cheesy, a feeling of contentment if not happiness with the character and what I'm doing with it.  I envision what the character would do at 80; I think about whether or not her professions "match" who/what she is; her race/class combo is very important; whether her name conveys things that are important about her class (or a nice juxtaposition of them); I could just go on and on.

If at any time of play something doesn't feel right - this could be anything from her hair not looking right, her name not sounding right, not liking class mechanics, her end game vision not matching up with what I want - she's gone.  If not deleted, then relegated to gathering dust on the login screen.  If I'm wavering around an "unsure" part of whether or not I like her, I'll not level her.  I'll log in and stare at her as if I discern somehow whether or not she's telling me she's "the one".  Another thing that stalls leveling is if I don't know what her professions will be - I can't pass level 5 without knowing professions and training them.  Can. Not. Do. It.

In a masochistic twist of things, sometimes if I feel unsure and am more on the side of, "I don't think this is going to work" I will play a character anyway in an attempt to force myself to like her because I am so tired of switching all the time.  It never works though.

But sometimes there is a click and things feel right and I have found my main.  Under normal circumstances I don't declare them early when I am playing or still in the "we'll see" phases because I am a superstitious person and I don't want to jinx it.  (Shut up.) It's actually been cursed multiple times - please see my Tauren warrior as an example.

When I look forward to logging in - when I'm still happy with the end game vision - when I am able to fight off the "ooh, this class would be fun as an alt!" thoughts - when it feels "right" when I am playing her - that is my main.

Friday
18Dec2009

And on the 18th day... she tanked

Yes, you read right, dear readers!  I finally got up the nerve to join the Random Dungeon Finder as a tank.  I was slightly disappointed that I wasn't thrown an invite in 10 seconds, but it was still pretty quick!

It ended up that I got a group that had already started Utgarde Keep - they were only three pulls in and this is what I see:

[RetPally]:  You better be a real tank Cel, or we're kicking you - I'm just telling you now
[RetPally]:  And you better be Frost
[HealSham]:  Fo' real
[Me]:  Oh shit

Since, y'know... this was my first instance as a tank ever, I'm sure I didn't fall into the "real tank" category.  However, I didn't tell them this and apparently being specced Frost was enough for them.  It turned out that they were the pushy group that was all, "Go go go NOW NOW NOW" and we had that boomkin that was always inching towards everything and "accidentally" pulling.  Because they wanted to blast through so quickly, Utgarde Keep was really a blur to me that time - my hands were shaking, I was mashing buttons blindly and when Lus came in from work, I wouldn't even look at him.  I (practically) snapped at him, "I can't talk to you right now.  I'm trying not to be horrible."  In my defense, it was the first boss fight and my first boss fight ever as a Real Tank™.

In fact, it went well enough that after the last boss I was invited to join their guild - to be leveled up and geared up so I was on par with everyone else.  I was extremely flattered by this and it boosted my confidence a lot and I took it as a sign that I hadn't fallen into the dreaded Fail Knight category.  They pushed the guild thing more... I demurred, thinking that by saying, "I'm probably not as experienced a tank as you're looking for" wasn't a lie of omission but I finally got the point across - a whole instance later.

I was invited after UK to go run the Nexus - although I did make it clear that I hadn't run it in a LONG time and hadn't ever tanked it.  "You'll be fine!" they assured me.  That instance went pretty smoothly too (despite the damn boomkin with a death wish) but my biggest screw up was porting out of the instance after Ormorok the Tree-Shaper thinking we were done.  It had been so long and I was still so wired that I had completely forgotten Keristrasza!  (Yes, I did feel the shame.)  However, no other blunders were made, tanking or otherwise.

The First Foray into Tanking:  Good!  I'm not paralyzed with fear like I was before I actually queued, but I'm still a little shaky in my tanking boots.  However, now that the first steps have been taken, I know I'll get better with practice.  I had the usual post-First fears that I voiced to Naithin and he gave me this advice:

Mashing buttons and making it look convincing is what tanking is all about!  Class changes merely how hard you need to mash and what it looks like on screen!

Thursday
17Dec2009

The WoW Year in Review

More than two weeks after Anexxia started the whole thing, I'm finally getting around to doing it, after Naithin tagged me.

Without further ado:

What did you do in World of Warcraft that you've never done before?

Played a Death Knight.  On a PvP server!  On a PvP server whose name doesn't somehow correlate to the race of the DK!  The sky is falling!

What was your favorite new place that you visited?

Northrend!  A whole new continent to explore!  As beautiful as all the areas were (most of them, anyway) I loved Storm Peaks the most - the landscape, the music, the quests... love it!

What would you like to have in 2010 that you lacked in 2009?

I would like to get a second character to 80 (I have four characters sitting at 70 right now!  Four!)  I'd like to tank - successfully.  And I want to get Loremaster, dammit!

What was your biggest achievement of the year?

(I feel so horrible that I envisioned the Achievement page in WoW when I initially thought of this question.)  And also that an achievement doesn't immediately come to mind!  It could be that I finally beat the Frogger boss on my own (really!  Without making Lus do it for me!)  Perhaps it could just be the humble achievement of reaching 80 on Anea. 

What was your biggest failure?

Altitis.  By far.  I just kept making alt after alt after alt, trying to find "the one" and I wasted months of time and effort with it.  I try not to think about what could have been done with all that time if invested in only one character, but that makes me want to cry a bit, so we won't think about it.

What did you get really, really, really excited about?

Besides little silly excitement about vanity pets here or there, I think the thing that's had me most excited all year in WoW was the LFG tool.  That thing is AWESOME.

What do you wish you'd done less of?

Alting :(  Or perhaps overthinking - if I could just clear my mind of all the worries and concerns that seem to be inherent when I'm finding a "new main" I may have been able to enjoy one before December!

What was your favorite WoW blog or podcast?

Even though I have several favorites, it seems like some have either stopped updating or just don't update hardly at all.  Perhaps few updates make for part of the allure of Letters to Azeroth - in addition to the writing itself, of course.  (I wonder if I can elicit another post from him - let's see!)

Tell us a valuable WoW lesson you learned in 2009.

"If at first you don't succeed, try and try again."  This is applicable in so many ways - from boss fights to class info to attempting to play a class that just never ever worked for you until you try a spec that no one else will endorse, or a class that you swore you'd never play.

 

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