Tuesday, July 04, 2006
Hours to full epic
I was playing pen and paper D&D yesterday evening, but everybody in my D&D group also plays World of Warcraft, and so we started WoW and showed off our characters. The best equipped among us played a couple of other characters first, and finally settled on a druid. He is "full epic", having mostly tier 1 epics or equivalent, with a few tier 2 epics thrown in. Looks very impressive, and of course the character has great stats. But while he was showing his character, one of the addons automatically displayed his /played time, and he had played that druid for over 73 days, or 1750 hours. That is more than one man-year of work on a job!
My priest only has three tier 1 epics, and two tailored epics, but I also only have 22 days played. And I'm not really sure if getting to full epic is worth the other 50 days. I'm not sure it would actually take 50 days, but between the raiding, the necessary farming to pay for potions and repair bills, and grinding faction or farming for resistance items I can imagine that it takes a lot of hours. My warrior has 40 days played, and only one tier 1 item, but it is him who is doing some of the farming for the priest. On the other side I can take a new character on a new server and get him to level 60 in less than 15 days of /played time, and that is without pushing it. My level 60 priest actually only took 13 days to 60, with a bit of twinking.
So I am wondering if going for "full epic" is really worth it. What is more fun, having one character fully equipped in epics, or having played 5 characters to level 60? As always I'm targeting maximum variety, not maximum power. At the moment I'm still doing a mixed approach, raiding on the weekends and leveling during the week, but I don't think I'll miss raiding terribly when I'll be out on holidays.
Comments:
<< Home
Newer› ‹Older
Maximum stats vs maximum variety - I guess its a matter of preference. Its a pity that the WOW endgame really only caters for the maximum stats players and the only way to get variety is to roll a lowbie alt. One thing puzzles me though Tobold - why did you roll a new priest. Why not go for something totally different? I really think you should play with one of the solo classes for a bit of variety. In fact I've said it before and I'll repeat it - I think you should give your hunter another try. Once you get Feign death at lvl 30 you'll never look back.
The problem is that I like playing in groups too much. And with the hunter I had a horrible time getting invited into any group. Hunters are suffering from a general presumption of incompetence.
Getting invited into a group as a priest is a snap. You get more tells with group invites than you could possibly accept.
Getting invited into a group as a priest is a snap. You get more tells with group invites than you could possibly accept.
Another question is whether full epic is worth it with the expansion on the (distant) horizon. Purples will presumably make levels 61-65 or so a breeze, but then if you're that sort of player you'll want to full epic again at 70.
I'm a bit of an alt specialist (3 level 60s at the moment), and with the priest of them I'm doing a bit of raiding, mainly to see that part of the content. However raiding really doesn't suit my temperament (too much hanging around) and I really don't have enough time in my days to do much of it anyway. I'd like my priest to get perhaps 3 epics (including the dungeon set 2 gloves), but I'm declaring my level 60 shaman "finished" once he's fully in decent blues (one ring and a relic needed), and my warrior I'm going to be gearing in stuff I can mainly buy/craft. Then it'll be concentrating on another alt (a mage), plus raiding with my priest when my guild needs him, until the expansion comes out.
I'm a bit of an alt specialist (3 level 60s at the moment), and with the priest of them I'm doing a bit of raiding, mainly to see that part of the content. However raiding really doesn't suit my temperament (too much hanging around) and I really don't have enough time in my days to do much of it anyway. I'd like my priest to get perhaps 3 epics (including the dungeon set 2 gloves), but I'm declaring my level 60 shaman "finished" once he's fully in decent blues (one ring and a relic needed), and my warrior I'm going to be gearing in stuff I can mainly buy/craft. Then it'll be concentrating on another alt (a mage), plus raiding with my priest when my guild needs him, until the expansion comes out.
I have three characters at 60 and frankly I have to agree with you about playing a priest to get groups. My rogue and warrior had a hard time finding groups and I never really got to raid with them. My paladin however who is a "priest lite" had no problem finding a raiding guild and I get invites all the time.
Post a Comment
<< Home