WoW Rookie: Quest wrangling 101
It's no coincidence (just in case you thought it was) that when you first log into the game, the first thing you see is an NPC in front of you with a golden exclamation point above their head. Quests are a fundamental part of this game, not just in terms of lore and story, but also in character advancement (and earning all of that gold and XP that you're going to be doing). A good part of the game (in fact, the major part of the game up to level 70) is just handling all the quests and tasks you've got to do. From FedEx to kill quests, and from huge multi-part quest chains to simple fetch quests, handling all of those tasks is extremely important from the moment you enter the world of Azeroth.So today on WoW Rookie, we're going to give you a few tips on how to handle this most important of missions: figuring out where, who, and what's up with all the missions you get in the game. Keeping track of what you're supposed to do is sometimes just as important as doing it, and so after the jump, we've compiled a few tips for getting your Azerothian to-dos done.
First things first, until you get to level 70, you always, always want to be doing quests. To paraphrase my favorite David Mamet movie, A, B, Q-- A always, B be, Q questing. Questing is for closers, if you will-- especially at the lower levels, it's the absolute quickest way to earn both experience and money. Later in game, there will be spots where grinding will earn you more money than questing, but starting out, you want to do as many quests as you find, because the early quests will give you everything you need-- money, XP, and even great gear. You can have a limit of 25 quests in your quest log, and whenever possible, you should have all 25 going. Whenever you show up to a new area, walk all over the main town, and look for those little exclamation points everywhere. Even if a quest is higher or lower than your level, take it-- you'll be able to watch it drop to your level as you work your way up, and if you're out and about when it's fallen down to yellow, you'll be all set to do it.
Once you've got all the quests you can carry, the next step is to group them up as much as possible. On your first time through the game, it might be a little hard to figure out where various quests take you (though that info is usually readily available on databases like Thottbot and Wowhead), but even if you don't want to spoil things by looking them up out of game, rereading the quest text will usually tell you exactly where you'll need to go. If a number of quests mention "going north" or a certain area on the map, group those together and do them all at once. Lots of early zones are pretty spread out (Duskwood, for instance, is notoriously bad, with the town at one end of the zone, and most of the quests at the other), so stacking quests is extremely necessary to save time and aggravation ("I just went to that stupid cave! And now I have to go back?!").
Same thing with group quests and dungeon quests-- wait on doing 5man quests until you've got a few of them in the same zone, and then do them all together with a group. Some quest chains will require you to go into dungeons multiple times, but for most dungeons, quests can be grouped up together, and done all at one time on one run through. Always group up like quests, and then knock them out one after another.
Fortunately, there are addons out there designed exactly to help you do this, which leads me to MonkeyQuest. Go-- download it, and install it right now, because even if you've never heard of it, MonkeyQuest is one of those addons that you may have never known existed, but can't live without after you've installed it. It not only will give you an always-open window to sort and view your quests at a click, but it'll also embed itself in tooltips, and nothing is more helpful than seeing a mob on screen and being told something you would have never known otherwise: that it's a quest target. MonkeyQuest will also do more great things like tell you the level numbers of a quest (so you don't have to decode those colors), and it will now even track party members, so groups can better track who's doing what quests. Can't recommend it enough for anyone questing on a regular basis, which should be everyone playing the game.Finally, the last questing tip for beginners has nothing to do with quests at all-- it has to do with all of that traveling time in between. Just like you should always be questing, you should always be earning, whenever possible. When traveling back and forth from your quest area to the turn-in, grab a few mobs on the way and take them down. There are tons of things to kill for experience in WoW, and if your goal is to level up, then you have to look at how fast you're constantly bringing in the XP-- any downtime will slow you down. After 40, when you get a mount, things can change, because it takes time to mount and unmount every time. But before 40, you should be fighting even when traveling-- demolish everything in your path, and all that XP will add up.
Quest wrangling can be an art in and of itself-- the idea is to get the most done in the shortest amount of time, and while knowing where everything is already can help (most players, I'd say, are able to level alts to 70 much faster than the first time their mains went through, if only because they know where the monsters they need to kill are), so can organization and planning when it comes time to tackle and clear out that full quest log.
Filed under: Tips, Tricks, How-tos, Quests, Features, Leveling, WoW Rookie






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Bobbo Dec 17th 2007 8:06PM
I prefer beql to MonkeyQuest nowadays (esp. with it being Ace and all that), and, of course, you have to bring up LightHeaded for questing ease. It's outstanding.
Nixxen Dec 18th 2007 2:57AM
You should check out Questhelper. A new addon made after the release of 2.3 based on tomtom. It's still in early beta, but it is progressing nicely, and have a heaploads of quests in the database since it has been imported and stripped down from the lightheaded database.
I still use lightheaded and cartographer for the comments in quests and such. QuestHelper has some quests that it can't find (such as class quests). Either way it's a realy nice addon and worth a test atleast ;)
Electrocuted Dec 18th 2007 11:06AM
Seconded on what Nixxen said above there about Questhelper. I... Can't even describe. I am planning on dropping off lightheaded and doublewide, possibly tomtom as well. I just don't need them anymore. It automatically plots the shortest way to take care of your quest log based on where you're standing, what flightpaths you have and so on. It dynamically orders your current quest log. The only thing that it doesn't do is suggest grinding multiple different mobs at the same time, which you shouldn't really have to have it support anyway. Monkey quest or Beql should be able to tell you what other things you should be looking for if you stumble on them while doing other quests (for instance, nearby nagas for nagaclaws, or nearby hydras that will drop the scales for you for a different quest, but I don't really care.)
Easymode has commenced.
D. Tyler Dec 17th 2007 10:34PM
personally i use nQuestlog with Lightheaded (and tomtom)
Kraki Dec 18th 2007 4:59AM
i agree, nquestlog and lightheaded are awesome
matt Dec 17th 2007 9:37PM
I've been using LightHeaded+DoubleWide+TomTom, for full spoileriffic goodness.
1. Get lots of quests.
2. Open their WowHead info directly in the quest pane.
3. Click on the WowHead coords to have their waypoints set automatically in your map.
4. Open your map. Find a cluster of dots. Mouseover them to see vaguely what quest they're for.
5. Go to the cluster of dots and make with the clicking and killing.
6. Hearth back, gain 1 million levels.
I'll try out MonkeyQuest-- the mob mouseover thing sounds sweet.
Jasperwind Dec 17th 2007 11:40PM
I tried both MonkeyQuest and Lightheaded, but didn't like them. I use Extended Quest Log, Map Notes, and WHDB (which work together). It's very accurate and makes my questing very efficient.
Corigami Dec 18th 2007 3:13PM
Personally I really like Cartographer with Quest Objectives. It puts icons on the map and mini map depending on wether the objective is to kill, loot, or interact. Not to mention that Cartographer has tons of other features. such has node tracking, guildie postitions, etc. The only problem with Cart, is that your database starts blank (you can find filled databases on the net). Cart also broadcasts and communicates with others in guild who are running it, so you share info and your database can build quite quickly if you don't download a full one already....Makes questing super easy.
Krick Dec 18th 2007 10:43AM
bEQL is a rewrite of Extended Quest Log and similar to DoubleWide but with a TON more features. It's also still actively developed.
You can always get the latest version directly from the wowace site...
http://files.wowace.com/beql/
...or (even better) you can use the WoWAce updater tool to update all your ace addons in one shot...
http://www.wowace.com/wiki/WinAceUpdater
...
Krick
http://www.tankadin.com
Zuukal Dec 18th 2007 10:59AM
I use LightHeaded in conjunction with Cartographer.
I pile up a bunch of quests in my log,
Look up the coords with LightHeaded,
Plot them on the map,
and once I'm done ploting, look for what is close.
The notes are also available to my other characters, so when I go back through with alts, I don't have to spend the time, reploting. I need to start adding at what level you can get the quest at to the note, though.