Monday, July 07, 2008

July 07, 2008
7
Professions, while to a new player it may seem a rather trivial choice, professions are a large part of the game. in regards to raid optimization and cash flow. A 25 man raid filled with Leatherworkers will produce a giant quantity more DPS than a raid with just blacksmiths and tailors for example. Also, a player with mining and engineering will have a much easier time getting cash than a player with blacksmithing and tailoring. Some of you may wonder, why? Well, let's decide where your leading factor lies on choosing a profession. If you plan to raid, obviously you should aim for optimal performance, and use alternate characters to fund your raiding character. If you're playing the game for fun, pvp, or just casual monster bashing you'll probably care less about how much you'd benefit a group and want as much money with the least amount of effort. Boosting your raid value Leatherworking Leatherworking is currently the lead profession in regards to boosting raid performance. For two very simple reasons.
  • Drums of Battle
  • Drums of Restoration However, when WotLK is released the drums will cause a debuff on all affected players equal to the cooldown of the drums. This will render repeat effects useless. Meaning, instead of stacking four people per party with LW right now, you'll only want to use one person per party to have LW when WotLK is released. Blizzard's reasons behind this are fairly obvious, current endgame guilds are noticing more and more the benefits of using drums, and almost every single player will end up as a leatherworker if this is not changed in the expansion. Blizzard has added a large number of pattern drops in the sunwell, for tailors, engineers, blacksmiths, and more. But, since people want / need to be leatherworker to boost their raid's DPS almost nobody wants those patterns and both blizzard as well as the players see this as an unwanted situation. However, they can't implement this "fix" straight away lest they cause a general uproar from the thousands of players who only recently maxed out their leatherworking skill. So, it will be changed in WotLK. There will be new drums in WotLK as I posted earlier. And they will be powerful, but compared to what the profession can do for your raid right now, it'll be less of a requirement for all new raid members. Enchanting Enchanting is a good second for just about any class. 2x+4 to all stats to a rogue, warrior, druid or melee shamans will likely give them a noticeable boost in their DPS. Of course you may think professions such as blacksmithing or leatherworking (if you aren't already one) would give you awesome weapons or armor... Well, sorry to say but ring enchants can be used at any and all level of your game career. Weapons such as the 3 blacksmith tiers provide will only last you so long, and can be thrown away after that. On top of that, most crafted armor has equivalent versions available in one or another dungeon, even sunwell. Hunters are semi-questionable as they don't really gain any benefit from strength. Still it will be hard to find a viable alternative to gaining +8 agi, +8 int, +8 stamina and +8 spirit by any other means. For healers, and caster DPS there are healing and spell damage enchants. 2x12 spell damage, or 2x20 healing bonus. If you are a heavy potion user, you will want to seriously consider looking at alchemy however. Jewelcrafting Jewelcrafting gives you two things, a trinket, and gems of slightly higher quality than most epic gems. Gems which give : 24 AP, 18 stam, 12 spell crit, 12 hit rating, 14 spell damage, 26 healing, 12 spirit, 12 crit rating or 12 defence rating. Basically each gem can give you +2 extra stats in a single gem slot, the gems however are unique so you're only able to use each gem once in your armor. Most classes won't be able to find more than 3 gems which would actually benefit them. Sunwell drops some patterns such as Hard Khorium Choker, however there is a fairly equal drop from brutallus called Clutch of Demise. The hard khorium choker is about a 7.36 DPS increase over the Clutch of demise. Enchanting both rings with +4 stats gives about a 10.89 DPS increase however. Swapping out two Glinting Pyrestones for a 24 and a 12 hit rating gem (the 12 crit one sucks) for a rogue would give 4.19 DPS extra. You may have a hard time getting the sunwell pattern, but it's far from impossible. If you do you'd be looking at a DPS difference of : +7.36 from the neck, and +4.19 from the two gems, versus a +10.89 DPS from two rings enchanted. A total difference of +0,66 DPS as a Rogue jewelcrafter. Results may vary per class. PS : I used Rogue Raidcal for the calculations On overall I'd recommend taking enchanting instead though. 8 more stamina, some dodge extra, and a profession you can use and re-use at any time in TBC and again in WotLK seems like a lot more value for your gold. If the DPS difference was bigger than 2, it might be worth considering. Alchemy Alchemist stones and mad alchemist potions. Unless you're a healer you're not going to get much benefit out of the stones. 40% extra mana is a big boost and will translate to about 60 mp/5 if you're chain chugging potions. If you're looking for some cash then transmutations are a nice way to earn on the side. Blacksmithing With the arrival of the third and fourth arena season the tree "tier" weapon upgrades, as well as the early armorsmith plans are fairly redundant for any class. Sunwell has a few decent patterns for gloves or chest which some classes may be interested in, but for the most part this profession is indeed redundant for boosting your raid performance. Tailoring Frozen Shadowweave, Primal Mooncloth and Spellfire are the main movers in this profession at the lower levels. Mages, priests and warlocks will enjoy the craftable epics for a long time. Sunwell has a few decent chest piece patterns, as well as gloves. Much like blacksmithing and leatherworking however, there's nothing that doesn't have (fairly) equal items dropping from the same instance. My als is a Mooncloth tailor, even though he's a warlock. Good for making bags :) Engineering Engineering nowadays is mostly for making cash by farming primals, some trinkets and cables have the occasional use but otherwise it mostly falls short of expectations. It's a fun profession though. The sunwell head pieces are fairly good, the rogue headpiece is decent, but barely (if at all) better than what Illidan is able to provide you with. If your guild doesn't actively raid Black Temple you may wish to considder it. The pattern currently will cost you over 10k though. Also, Kil'Jaeden will drop a better head piece for pretty much all classes. Inscription Unknown details at the time of writing this. Some incriptions will provide your spells and abilities with slightly reduced cast time, more damage or other modifiers. The inscriptions require crushed herbs / inks and will be available in WotLK. Part deux There's a second part, indeed. Called Money making professions. But it's coming at a later date ;) Stay tuned.
  • 7 comments:

    Green Armadillo said...

    A few comments:

    I'm not sure from your post if you knew this or not, but there are upgraded alchemy trinkets with more specialized stats on them available via SSO reputation. For example, the DPS caster trinket offers a whopping 63 spell damage. (I think I would still stand by my decision to drop Alchemy for Tailoring in TBC if I had known the upgrades were coming, but I would have thought about it longer; goes to show that you never know what's in next patch.)

    Also, last time I checked the Wrath Wiki, they were saying something to the effect that some (or all?) LW armor enchants would be soulbound to the crafter. If this is true, does not change, and offers at least some best-in-slot enhancements, that plus drum flexibility might still leave LW in its current desired state.

    Anonymous said...

    Nice summary.. looking forward to part deux

    bbr said...

    Sort of doubt they would make the leg enchants BoP, not unless they add an alternative from rep vendors. Blizzard doesn't want to make LW a mandatory skill as it is now, everyone in a raid guild rolling the profession for the drums. So, it's a tough call.

    The SSO trinkets i'm aware of, rogues have better options (drakespine + shard of contempt), ranged casters assuming their primary goal is more damage also have many options. Mana regeneration is mainly an issue for the healers. Shadowpriests or a ret paladin will help a lot though, so even healers might consider other trinkets to be more viable.

    The only difference is where there are several trinkets around the SSC / TK level, there's not a great lot in BT and Hyjal. (Other than the tank trinket, but i might be missing some) Somebody has to make the potions though :)

    Anonymous said...

    I think your commentary on Engineering overlooks several things. A well rounded, high level Engineer brings several unique and highly useful items to the party. Repairbots are an invaluable help in the longer Raids, a Rogue with Goblin Jumper Cables XL has a good chance of saving a wipe. Mana Injectors are crack to spell casters. Can you say "Eternium Scope", or "Adamantite Shell Machine"?

    Exanimo said...

    What i've understood is that LW legarmor will still be be BOE bĂșt there will be some BOPs aswell with superior stats.

    @Russell: apart from the Repairbot all those things can be done by an alt outside of the raid. Sure a Rogue might jumpstart someone but a good raid will always have a Shaman with Ankh, Paladin DI someone or a rezzer soulstone... i haven't seen our Hunter with cables as our last hope yet.
    Even so, they won't increase a raids effectiveness during the fight.

    I recently mainswitched to my Shaman alt who has Engineering and i'm considering strongly to drop mining and learn him Leatherworking for the drums or Alchemy for the trinket. (can't get rid of that cool mount can i? ;) )

    bbr said...

    Couldn't have said it better.

    I do use my jumper cables at times, but that's more to speed up the rezzing process than it being an actual last resort thing.

    Scopes, Mana injectors, just like alchemist's potions or tailoring leg enchants, can all be made by alts.

    Anonymous said...

    nice and clean guide.

    but there is much more potential for hunters in alchemist stones, than you stated here, imo. you can use them with felmana pots, which is 4,8k mana every 2mins.