Although we don’t have confirmation of gold missions yet, we have to assume a decent part of retention at the tail end of Legion is from Order Hall App keeping people in. I know its at least true with me and quite a few on this subreddit. It's essentially like those iOS games where you log in every X hours to get your prize except instead of speeding things up with micro-transactions, we pay a subscription.
That being said, I suspect they implement really low gold missions at launch and ramp it up with patches, like how Argus worked out.
Hello all as the title suggests, I wanted to know if anyone had any useful tips to optimizing a banker alt without any serious time/gold investment.
Just as an example, I used a lv1 human alt for ever now but recently I spent like 40 minutes leveling him to lv16 for enchanting and blink. As I didn't have an enchanter prior to this I've noticed a decent amount of increase profit from disenchanting things I get as I do other things on my other alts. Blink for the convenience of being able to blink from auctioneer to mailbox.
Hopefully someone finds my experience helpful and if anyone else has any tips for their banker alts I'd love to here them even if its just naming their favorite AH because its the least crowded or whatever.
i don't have room on my server to hold a character at level 1, so my 110 mage is my bank alt. Northrend Dalaran is my preferred AH (the clockwork gnome in the engineering shop + mailbox right outside + bank just a second away with master flying) and having my own port there makes everything super quick and painless. i even make a bit of beer money on occasion from people asking to be ported to Ashran. not a bad gig.
I see a lot of characters, fellow gold-Goblins, who have their own Guild and I've heard they utilize their Guild vault as additional storage. I guess my question is...what are you storing and not selling?
What's the allure?
I use it to store gold mainly, along with crafting materials and some items for future sales such as sky golems. I hate having random gold across a bunch of different toons, I prefer to keep it all in one location in case I need to make a big purchase (I've spent over 1.5 million in one shot on cooking materials, for example). Also, I mass craft feasts, so being able to craft 1500 of each necessary item at a time is very helpful, as I can store them in the bank and then move along to the next item, instead of consistently stop-starting the task
For most of these misconceptions I will be using my own experience as examples. While I’m certainly not the richest player in WoW I am living proof that a lot of the things I mention below are not universal truths.
Gold making is about farming
This is the most prevalent notion among players with no knowledge of the gold making side of the game. Obviously farming is a legitimate route to getting rich in WoW, there’s absolutely no denying that. It is not the only way however, and in my opinion absolutely NOT the best way. I make all my gold from the Auction house. Most of it is from flipping, but I also make a nice amount of gold from crafting professions.
Gold making requires Auction House camping
I have never ever camped my auctions. I don’t even follow my auctions to see how quickly I get undercut. And I still get plenty of sales. Obviously you can increase your sales by cancelling and reposting constantly, especially in high volume markets, but this is very firmly into “nice to have” territory. I get sales across all my markets even with just one repost a day. This includes cut-throat markets like glyphs and enchanting.
You should find a “good” realm for gold making
There are so many questions about realm choice on the woweconomy reddit it’s quite astounding. You can make gold on any size realm. The best strategies will differ, but at the end of the day all realms are unique. Just start testing out some of the markets you’ve read about here or on reddit on the realm you are currently on. Choosing a realm specifically for the economy makes little sense. My preference is for higher population realms for crafting markets as I don’t farm for materials. For flipping battle pets I like realms with a medium to low population as prices are better.
If you play the game for more than the AH I suggest choosing a realm that maximizes your enjoyment. Whether that is an RP realm, the one your friends are on, or where your old guild is it makes little difference in the end. You will meet competition on every realm.
You need to analyze your market before jumping in
Market analysis before you start out is heavily overrated. You learn a market by operating it. Spending time studying the enchanting market before jumping in makes zero sense. You can use TSM to guarantee that you will sell your items for more than your crafting cost.
Here’s how I would enter literally every crafting market:
- Buy materials below 100% dbmarket
- Craft the item
- List it with a generic auctioning operation and a minimum price of 120%crafting.
Do this every day for two weeks in a high volume market and you will notice which days the items sell fast. Which days materials are cheap. Which days they are expensive. This is not information that you can truly “learn” by just looking at prices on TUJ.
Cornering a market is how you get rich
Actually cornering a market requires a ridiculous amount of dedication. It also requires you to have some very deep coffers as you will have to buy out a lot of other players. It is also one of the easiest way to make a very expensive mistake if you try cornering an uncornerable market.
I don’t have the time to even attempt cornering a market, but I would not advise it unless you have a million gold at least. Even then I don’t think it is worth the hassle compared to getting a flipping operation started on a second realm.
Large undercuts are always bad
They are not. There are tons of legitimate reasons to use larger undercuts than 1 copper, including the fact that they can be incredibly annoying. I’ve already talked about this in a full length post, so head over there for a more detailed run down. If you want to cope with people “ruining” your market I suggest diversifying out. Enter some other markets as well. I honestly wouldn’t even notice someone heavily undercutting me outside of seeing some more “below min price” messages when doing a post scans. I much prefer entering a ton of different markets rather than trying to min-max one or two as the marginal gains are just not worth the massive increase in time commitment.
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