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Most every class has some kind of functionality that enhances the play of others in the group.

Ritual of Refreshment AKA Mage Table

For Mages, the two most obvious things are the Intellect buff and the fact that Mages can conjure water and food from a very low level. At level 70, a Mage can get a hold a couple of training tomes (by dungeon drop, Auction House purchase, or from a friend or supportive guild) that allow for the creation of the highest level (and most potent) of food and water currently available on the game, and once both tomes have been learned, the Mage can go back to their Mage Trainer and learn a spell called Ritual of Refreshment.

What Is Ritual of Refreshment? How Does It Work?

RoR is normally referred to as a “mage table” by other players in the game, because when created it looks like a floating TV tray with drinks and food displayed on it.

The mage table itself distributes Conjured Manna Biscuits which require level 65 but the main benefit is that the biscuits heal both 7500 health and 7200 mana over 30 seconds when consumed - taking up less inventory space and being much more effective than other food and drink combinations.

I’m Not A Mage, What Can I Do To Help?

To cast Ritual of Refreshment, a Mage needs two things:

  • Two Arcane Powder - costing 10s each
  • Two players in the raid or party to assist with the cast
Ritual of Refreshment AKA Mage Table

So, you could help in two ways - buy your neighborhood mage some Arcane Powder as a thank-you and social wheel greaser (like I as a Mage at times bring Sacred Candles or Ahnk things for those who bless or rez the party), and help bring the table into existence without being asked to help whenever you see a Mage (or a Warlock making the healthstone distributor) casting their channelled spell.

Helping either a Mage or a Warlock in this way involves you right-clicking their portal and standing still until the spell is finished casting - if you move while the spell is still channelling you’ll cancel it and if your timing is poor, you may activate the Mage or Warlock’s cooldown and be stuck without their services for another 2-5 minutes (long enough for the Battleground round to start).

How Many Biscuits Should I Take?

When I’m doing an instance run, I, as the Mage, tend to take about 200 biscuits right at the start. I also encourage people to drain the table if they so desire, because there’s 50 stacks of 20 biscuits in there - 1000 biscuits in total! I’d rather everyone fill up their inventory and have to throw biscuits away than have to make another table because everyone only took what they needed for themselves and then we had a couple of drop-outs and replacements asking me to make a new table.

In a battleground, I have no real recommendations. All I can really do is talk about how I see them being used in this scenario, and how I have adjusted my play style to allow my experience to continue to be joyful as the Maker of the Mage Table.

How Mage Tables Are Used In Battlegrounds

The spirit of the table is just like the spirit of the buffs before the battle begins - if you make things easier for your teammates, improve their stats a little bit, or give them something they can use in-battle to improve their survivability, then you as an individual are better off because your team is better off.

Thus, for most battlegrounds that I enter, I make a Mage Table outside of the general crowd and then make sure people are aware it’s there. I tend to take 2-3 stacks each round I create a table in, and I’d say that in 80% of the times that I make a table, there’s still charges left on it when we all leave the starting area and head into battle.

There are times, however, where I make a table and it’s obvious that someone there has a macro set up to suck the table dry because it’s there for a second, and then with the crowd around it so it’s hard to tell who did it, the table disappears before anyone else in the group gets a chance to get a stack. I guess for those poor sods who are in raids without a Mage who has taken the time to obtain the tomes and learn the ritual, this is one of the only ways for them to get free food and drink for their raid attempts. It’s just too bad they wouldn’t wait a minute for the REAL battleground people to get a stack or two, and then clean out what’s left…

I’ve seen a few times where players come into the battleground with the intention of /afk’ing out once they received a plethora of buffs and had taken a healthstone and a mess of stacks of biscuits, too - most are not vocal about what they’re doing… they come in and stick around long enough to get the goods, then they leave. But, there’s been at least one who pushed for buffs and pushed for a healthstone and pushed for a mage table… and then /afk’d out and was commented upon by a number of the buff contributors.

What I Do When I No Longer Feel Like Sharing My Magely Skills

Generally, I’m good for making 5 or so tables (costing 1g in reagents in total) in 5 different PvP rounds, and then I feel like I’ve done my magely duty for the night, stocking enough PvP and PvE players, as well as filling my own inventory with 2-3 stacks per round. Now it’s time to let someone else make the tables, or just not have them made at all.

So, what do I do when I don’t feel like sharing?

I don’t go into the battleground until the majority of people have already entered, and the round is about to start in about 15 seconds, or has already started. The battleground-entry window that pops up when I’m assigned to a round stays there for 2 minutes before timing out, so I just time it to where I go in after a full minute, and by that time if there’s not already a table there, the people who are the most vocal about wanting a table have already stopped begging and I don’t have to pretend I didn’t see their plea’s.

Does It Help When Someone Asks For A Mage Table?

In short, no, it doesn’t.

I am a proud Mage, I like the fact that I put the cash and time into advancing to 70 in this class, and that I bought the two tomes that allow me to learn and use the Ritual of Refreshment to make the Mage Table for others to benefit from.

I like going into battlegrounds and firing up a table right away, I like announcing that there’s a “table up in back”. I like to fire up a table as soon as we zone into a Dungeon with a PUG or a guild team. I like to carry a whole bunch of extra biscuits so if someone needs some mid-field, I can share.

But… if someone asks me for a table - especially right at the start of a round or 2 seconds after having zoned into the battleground (which takes longer for those of us with a billion addons), I’m much less likely to fire up a table, even though I would have done it immediately had there not been the prodding.

Don’t Ask For A Table, Or Ask Politely

So, in closing, let’s just say that this whole Mage Table thing is a standard thing - if I have something that you want but cannot get for yourself except through me, then being polite about it is going to get you that object way quicker’n if you come across as feeling entitiled.

And if you somehow have it in your mind that I’m one of those Mages who expects payment for every vending service and begin to treat me the way you’d treat a Mage like that, realize that I have no reason to want to give you free services except to reward polite and respectful behavior. If you’re a jerk to me because you expect me to be a jerk, why would I bend over backwards to “prove” to you that I am not? What benefit is it to me?

I’ll make you a table when you ask if:

  • You’re polite about it
    • Saying “please” or its short form in the request
    • Including a smiley face

I’ll pretend I didn’t see your request for a table if:

  • You’re impolite about it
    • Your request comes across as a demand (because there’s no please, generally)
    • You’re highly insistent, repeating yourself 3-4x because the table didn’t start up the second you landed in the battleground
    • You make derogatory comments about the people behind the Mage characters (why do people think that I’m going to “prove myself a good Mage” to someone who behaves like an ass?)

The End. :)

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This entry was posted on Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008 at 9:30 am and is filed under Adventures In Battlegrounds. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

10 comments so far

 1 

Wowee.. What is up with mages? I read more cry/whine sessions from mages the “everyone bugs me for water/ports/food/buffs”. Honestly, as a lock, I’ll go down to my last shard making the soul portal for everyones healthstones. Shards don’t cost a thing, I know.. but I do have to stock them to do most of my wicked cool things. I can drain them from players in the bg, assuming its not some premade where my dps is necessary. I’m not the standard lock who carries 20 shards around, mostly cause I see no reason to take up all that potential loot places with shards till a bg starts. I didn’t look into the mage table requirement of dust until just yesterday, so that much is a new concept for me.

And I’m not picking Val, I’m just curious, what is up with mages? I have a 24 mage, and I’m half scared that I’ll become so bitter from the “prodding” that I’ll not want to lvl her. I mean, if you are next to a guy and you have some bread/water and they ask.. is it just bizarre to give him your extra? I have really never demanded anything of anyone in game, or even expected something for nothing.. I tip 1g for a int buff when I’m leveling a crafting prof.. I don’t think mages port without a gold anymore anyway, so thats not even questionable. So why is it mages feel that the gifts that they can bestow on others should be selective? I have a mage, as I said, and I have a priest.. I buff the crap out of everyone.. even npc’s I pass. I don’t ask for anything in return, and I know some things must be purchased to aquire said skills, but seriously that is more than made up for in the benefit the mage his/herself receives. I didn’t buff my healthstone so thatI could help others.. I did it cause I wanted to have more health.. I’m sure these things translate over into mage-ville. I need a bearing on this Val.. please help.

January 22nd, 2008 at 11:44 am
 2 

Maybe it’s that at a fundamental level, I don’t like how some people seem to think Strangers are an extension of their own toon.

I love to make mage tables and buff people, I love to thank people for making soulwells and mage tables and for every buff.

What I don’t love is being accosted as soon as I zone into a battleground because I wasn’t the first one in to make a table.

It’s like the battleground chat line during PUGs that are not chatting productively - at some point I just ignore it and do what I’m there to do, and by that time I’ve already done 5 rounds today and have plenty of biscuits for my own use or for anyone who asks remotely politely.

I figure it all balances out between the folks that join the BG just to get biscuits and the occasional time that one goes into a BG and doesn’t get any.

If you really need it, spend a gold and buy a little, like I do when I’m on my Hunter. :)

January 22nd, 2008 at 12:56 pm
 3 

Oh, and BTW, in an instance I’ve started to pick up 200 biscuits from the first table after others have taken their selection, just so I don’t have to make another table if we have a drop-out or someone wasn’t paying attention when the first table was created.

Seems silly to waste reagents when the first table had enough to feed a raid and I have 20 open inventory slots for the run.

January 22nd, 2008 at 12:59 pm
 4 

Oh Val, please don’t think I’m knocking you. You had stated you’d been in several bg’s and had done “your fare share” over that time frame. Its just a general grumpiness mages seem to have about their abilities. I have always bought food in the past, but I do so much with cooking most of my stuff that’s edible are the typical reagents for the cooking dailies and I just hate using them for a 1k hp regen during a lull. I used to, and still do carry some of that skyguard juice that does both mana/hp too, but its lower in quality. I don’t mind tipping if I’m just running out into the world, but in a bg where we as a group should be working together.. someone SHOULD be putting out a table, and someone SHOULD be putting out a soulwell (these dorks that put out 4 all at the same quality should get smacked… hard).. typically I announce “imp stones (lvl2)” when doing the soulwell.. just so people know, that if they have lvl 2 imp stones, no sense in making a soulwell. Now since you can have 3 stones if they are all diff quality.. but I digress.. lock ignorance makes me angry.

I just don’t, and maybe never will, understand why mages seem so huffy. In forums its “always yelling ‘gimme water mage’, etc.. “… Now almost every class has an ability that is invaluable to all other groups. And some classes use those to help folks, and some prefer to just ignore and stay to themselves. I’m not refering to either group.. its the blanket whiners I don’t understand. I don’t give out stones… but if I was around a questing zone and a guy asked me for one, I’d give it. Now arguably the mage/priest buffs are the best in the game (food/water/int buff/fort buff/spirit buff) and my buffs are almost entirely useless(endless breath? detect invisible?.. c’mon)… So I’m sure you guys are harrassed a lot.. I do on occassion get nagged by folks for water/bread on my mage.. but my only complaint is it takes so long to make a stack (only 24 remember?).

I don’t know what I want really Val, so I’m stopping. I just read so much angry mage talk. “rabble rabble.. I don’t wanna give you water”.. I don’t get it. Maybe if/when my mage hits 70 I’ll understand.

January 22nd, 2008 at 2:07 pm
 5 

I have had, however, someone whisper me from Silvermoon asking for me to go there so I could port them to Orgrimmar.

My response is the same as when I get an out-of-the-blue “will you run me thru XYZ” request:

“Do I know you?”

I’m happy to help out friends and would never want to say something rude knowing that this person could very well be my friend under a different name who forgot to say it was them…

But if I don’t know you, I’ll do what is convenient for me for sure (”no, sorry” is my standard response to ridiculous requests)

Water is generally no problem, but I do wonder, internally, about those who ask complete strangers for something that is readily available if they’d just spend a couple of bucks. Why is some stranger’s cheapness all of a sudden resulting in me having to perform any type of task for them?

(like that saying, “poor planning on your part does not constitute an emergency on my part”)

January 22nd, 2008 at 2:12 pm
 6 

Oh I totally understand, I know people who beg for water in towns. In TOWNS. You know where you can BUY water? Yeah I don’t get that.. Now I have bummed a few bottles of water/bread from a mage and tipped if I was say.. the far side of blades edge mountains? I don’t have an epic flying mount so the trip to town is kinda lengthy for me, and to me.. tipping is just the least I can do. People shouldn’t be cheap, but not everyone turns 70 and buys both normal and epic riding skill.. :)

January 22nd, 2008 at 3:12 pm
 7 

Oh no worries, I understand where you’re coming from in your inquiry, and I apologize if my response reminded of you of any of the excessive negativity that exists about the topic.

Some folks are stingy, and then other folks apply their stinginess on others, expecting stinginess, and then they get what they expected, in a complex cycle of creation. (edit: that’s what happens in battlegrounds I think)

I do believe in sharing the skills I have, for the most part, however.

The guy out in Blade’s Edge would be perfectly cool to me, and I rarely even accept a tip. The guy who bothers me because I happened to AFK near the Innkeeper in Terrokar for water when the vendor is right beside ALSO me got water (and offered no tip), but unfortunately just served to remind me to AFK on TOP of the Inn instead of inside of it in the future. Sad.

January 22nd, 2008 at 5:14 pm
Liquidburn
 8 

I don’t like the fact that everyone assumes a level 70 mage can make a table. What they fail to realize is that we have to train 2 extra conjure skills that we can only get from books.

I would that the same people who beg and spam for mage tables are the same ones who sell those books for 200 gold each on the AH (Shadowsong).

So for me to be able to make a table I have to spend 400 gold to get the books (or run instances where they may drop) then another 9 gold the get the ritual of refreshment skill and then spend 20 silver each time I cast it. It’s not really at the top of my need to do list to spend 400 odd gold just so you can get your stupid mana buscuits.

But if someone wanted to give me the books or the gold to buy them I would have no problem making the table each and every battleground.

January 26th, 2008 at 8:24 am
 9 

Yep, my books cost around 150g in total, but normally the Conjure Food tome is listed at 200+g on horde-side on my realm. It was cheaper on Alliance so I had a friend buy it up over there and sell it to me on the Neutral auction house to get it cheaper.

I do find myself thinking when I play my Hunter, however, that Mages who haven’t bought the books are being cheap, and when I run across a Mage who says the books are “too expensive” to be worth it, that Mage doesn’t make it onto my Friends list, either. This is not meant to be a personal slight, exactly, but more my way of filtering folks I want to spend more time around - those who have enough wealth in the game to buy things that make the team’s life easier are higher on my list than those who hold out due to expense.

But that being said, in battlegrounds I’m thankful for what I get and do not get upset at what is not given - it’s in instance groups that I get a heck of a lot more picky.

January 27th, 2008 at 11:04 am
BagOfBones
 10 

Liquidburn hit the nail on the head for me. I’m in the process of aquiring the tomes right now. I give out food and water every day, and always offer it after a duel. But these tomes are pricey. Bought my food tome for 300G last night and they were being sold upwards of 500G. That sucks, but knowing it’s coming from people who are begging for it gets under my skin. I like the finer things in the game, flying mounts, good buffs, and of course the table. But if I have to do a weeks worth of dailys to afford to buy the tomes for the table, then I’m not going to make a table in the middle of town for any joe schmoe. BGs, Raids, Guildies are the only ones unless I’m in a good mood or else they ask really nice and not (tble plzzzzz) as I’ve been asked alot already and don’t even have the table yet. I hate to get the whiney mage reputation, but there is a reason behind it, and it’s the ungrateful people who get you to come to them to throw a port up with the promise of a port then you get nothing as they fade away and “/p haha, sucker”

July 16th, 2008 at 10:43 am

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