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Wealth on Warcraft

Are you finding that you never have enough cash for skills, repairs and occasional new equipment buys on the Auction House?

This post is not for folks who have advanced past 60 - if you’re already past there, you’ve already realized these things and need more advanced Cash Generation strategies.

The Absolute Basics of making money in World of Warcraft at a low level include the following topics:

  • Vendor Trash
  • First Aid
  • Gathering Professions
  • Using the Auction House


Vendor Trash

This is your #1 way to earn money as a brand new player, and continues to be a reliable way to get cash for basic skills and repairs.

To make it easier to handle, consider adding a macro (link describes how to add an assist macro, this is the same thing) that sells all Grey items to a vendor at once:

/script for bag = 0,4,1 do for slot = 1, GetContainerNumSlots(bag), 1 do local name = GetContainerItemLink(bag,slot); if name and string.find(name,”ff9d9d9d”) then DEFAULT_CHAT_FRAME:AddMessage(”Selling “..name); UseContainerItem(bag,slot) end; end; end

The strategy is to pick up and sell every grey piece of “vendor trash” you can get from your forays, as the cash adds up (especially weapons, some of those grey weapons can sell for more than a gold each long before level 60).

If you’re trapped in a party (ie: dungeon) and fill up your inventory and can’t get to a vendor, get rid of grey armor first, keeping plate longer than mail or cloth. Keep all weapons as they sell better than armor. Consider picking up the WoWecon addon that tells you how much your grey item will vendor for so you can better decide what to toss and what to keep.

First Aid

Of course, we all know that training first aid from the linen, wool, silk and other cloths that you pick up as you adventure and kill humanoids… is free healing. That’s what bandages are - a quick heal when you’re beaten up.

But what folks don’t think about is that this free healing translates into lower general operating costs for your toon (especially if it’s pure DPS and cannot heal itself other than through potions and bandages and food and the likes) as she heads out into the world to take on quests and dungeons.

Free healing means one doesn’t need to purchase food, and one doesn’t need to rely on mobs dropping food.

Warriors and Rogues, especially, benefit from this, but even healing classes benefit on occasions where mana isn’t available for heals and they’re in a very vulnerable state from previous battles.

Gathering Professions

Professions are great, but until you’re higher level and until you have cash to buy materials, it’s best to stick with gathering professions instead of production ones.

Gathering professions include Herbalism, Mining and Skinning.

Since Herbalism and Mining use the same functionality to mark their presence on the minimap, it is recommended you take one of those and pick up Skinning as your second profession.

Fishing can also be considered a Gathering profession, especially since Oily Blackmouth, Deviate Fish and Firefin Snappers are used as ingredients in other popular recipes brewed by Alchemists and Cooks.

Using The Auction House

The Player Market will get you way more cash than the vendors ever will.

Sell everything that is Uncommon and up (green+) at the Auction House.

Figure out which Common (white) items sell by experimenting - those are Professions materials.

Sell all of your gathered ores/skins/herbs in the Auction House.

Summary

This article is meant to be a “starter” to help folks earn cash in Warcraft. From these habits, new ones will form, new opportunities will become apparent to those who keep their eyes open and look for them.

Cash on Warcraft is not difficult, especially if you’re a casual player who can’t play more than 5 hours a week. The fact that the game keeps going when you’re not there is one of the major reasons why cash is easy to obtain.

Good luck on your quest!

This entry was posted on Thursday, June 14th, 2007 at 8:09 am and is filed under Earning Cash, Guild Initiates, World of Warcraft. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

4 comments so far

 1 

Good advice and so very true about taking gathering professions first, then crafting later on. I wish I had done that with my main because he had gotten to 225 on alchemy around lvl. 27 then couldn’t go any further due to the level requirement. Plus, he wasn’t making any money. I’d say just wait until you’re 35 to do a crafting profession; or maybe even after 40 when you have a mount and can farm quicker and have money to spare for buying mats.

June 16th, 2007 at 10:12 am
Galoheart
 2 

Hmm, interesting post, interesting topic. I’m way past 40 on my first toon my lovable Paladin. However reading your post and thinking back it was only almost exactly 5 months ago i actually discovered WoW by way of a friend i played another MMO with online. However starting WoW i had no idea how a person made money, but i was a fast learner. After i got a few WoW basics down i quickly started to figure out by my own boot straps how to make money and after i discovered something called the AH. Trading i understood on AH and started putting it to use once i understood how AH worked.

Making money at low level is not hard to do even if your new. It just take some time, but not hard. I learned since i can turn stuff into vendor i get money from my gray turning. Once i figured that other than my primary skills, i started literall killing every mob i say everywhere Was lots of XP but was a lot of trash to sell also. Often if you watch the type of trash you turn into vendor you realize some trash is more valuable then others. With that i started killing specific Mobs for trash to vendor for money, do it enough and you make gold. It helps to start a profession also early and work at it quickly to use it to your advantage to make money a gathering profession helps, people need the raw material.

However one of the most underated profession in all of WoW is Fishing. Blizzard put that free profession in there for some reason. Most people though are so lazy they rather beg for money when fishing is free, it cost you no repair cost, just some time. Catch fish, sell to AH, people need the fish, you need the money that simple. Easy way to make money and level up a skill at same time. If you fish enough you get plenty of free stuff you pull up you can sell on AH for more money from trunks and such. Easy money. Often you just need to use some sense in knowing how to make money or what to do.

One of the other easiest thing to do at a lower level to make money is to find caves. Caves have mobs. Caves are like mini dungeons. The mobs in cave drop stuff that can be valuable or on vendor pays value. Always good to go wacking away at stuff in caves at low level or anywhere inbetween. Money to me make hunting stuff in caves.

June 19th, 2007 at 5:37 am
Rizzo
 3 

The only thing worse than some player begging for money, is someone giving it to them!!! I can understand helping a guildie out that’s like 100g away from his flying mount and you’ve known them for months or something, even handing out free gear to a friend/guildie that can benefit, but just some low level punk following you around Orgrimmar going ‘can you spare 1g plz’ just floors me.

The guy at Big Red Boar has the right idea, although I think he’s a little extreme, but after the 20th ‘can I have…’ you feel that it just isn’t harsh enough! :)
http://bigredboar.blogspot.com/2007/06/alliance-macro.html
http://bigredboar.blogspot.com/2007/06/beggars-part-2.html

I have personally done the one where if I have some time to kill, I’ll open up trade, put 100g in there, say something about having ‘lag’ then go make myself something to eat/drink/shower/do some laundry/etc and see how long he’ll ‘hold on’… If they’re still hanging there, I’ll comment on how its much easier to get money from killing mobs and rewarding because after all it IS a game…. /sigh. If I feel there is some potential on the other end of the screen, I’ll link wowgrrl.com to them in hopes they can self-learn.

Being level 70 now, and having bought my first flying mount already, I’m saving up for my epic flying (5000g) because watching all those guys fly around on Netherdrakes is just too cool! :D Using common sense, I figure I make 500g a night just from a few hours of ‘playing/faction farming/helping others quest’ 2-3 nights a week (the other nights being dungeon crawls/gear getting) that I should have it in about 4 weeks time.

When I was level 60 I couldn’t believe that kind of objective to be achievable, but now its easily attained with the knowledge I have accumulated and common sense, and BC expansion. :) Outlands = money money money.

June 22nd, 2007 at 12:23 pm
Katy
 4 

Another addon that’s useful for managing gray items is GarbageFu (requires FuBar). It’s actually a pair of addons — one the display for FuBar, one a database of vendor prices for gray items. It easily allows you to drop the gray items worth the least if you run out of bag space, and keeps track of how much you’ve made by selling grays (and how much you’ve lost by dropping them).

Another AH tip — look for items with no deposit fee required; you can safely list them at a higher price because it doesn’t cost you anything to relist. Don’t be afraid of breaking stacks, either. Some items will have a listing fee if you sell a full stack, but no listing fee if you’re only selling one or two at a time.

July 4th, 2007 at 8:16 am

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