Scattered Shots: Wrath of the Hunter

So with Wrath less than a week away, we got our work cut out for us, so to speak. Luckily, 3.0's early release has given us time to learn to handle our pets and respec to take advantage of new talents, but now the big push is upon, as 10 levels and a whole slew of new zones opens up for us. When you step off the boat or zeppelin in Borean Tundra or Howling Fjord, where will you go? What will you do?
Here's a few quick Hunter specific tips to getting started in the Wrath of the Lich King.
Ammunition
Unless you were one of the lucky ones who got your hands on Thori'dal, you're going to need ammunition before you can start wading in to the Vykrul, Nerubians, or whatever you go up against first. Luckily, there are general goods vendors in each starting village who will sell you basic store brought ammo. Unfortunately, the only new level of store brought ammo comes in at level 75, and is only equivalent to Karazhan's ammunition, so if you rely on these vendors alone, you're stuck with rather low damage level 65 Ammo.
Luckily, there is a better solution. In Dalaran, there is an ammunition vendor who sells all the special Outland faction ammunition, even the Honor Hold/Thrallmar and Cenarion Expedition varieties. He'll likely sell any faction-specific Northrend ammunition as well, when that shows up.
One more note about Ammunition: If you're not an engineer, you probably want to find one who owes you a few favors right now. The new crafted arrows and ammunition, available at level 72, are a leap above even the Timeless ammunition from Hyjal, and are currently the highest damage ammunition in game. You're going to need a lot of Saronite to keep yourself in Arrows, and a good amount of Cobalt to keep the Mammoth Cutter bullets coming as well.
New Pet Skins
By now, many of you have probably figured out your new pets of choice, assigned talent builds, and all that stuff, but if you're looking for a new fun pet skin, maybe you've been waiting for Northrend to tame your newest companion. Luckily, there's a few level 70 beasts right off the boat to whet your appetite for cool new tamable pet skins.
If you're a fan of the Jormungar worms, you'll want to head to the Northeast part of the Borean Tundra. To the west and southwest of the Temple City of En'Kilah, you'll find Tundra Crawlers, which are level 70, easily tamable, and much cooler looking that their old world cousins.
Rhinos are a whole family of pets that can be found only in Northrend, and if you've been salivating over them, you'll get your chance to grab one pretty early on. Both brown and gray skinned ones ranging in level from 68-70 roam about smack dab in the middle of the Borean Tundra.
In non-exotic new pet skins, Howling Fjord has two new bird skins, namely the Eagle and Hawk skins. While the Eagle and Hawk skins aren't new per se, having seen some use in Zul'Aman, they're now infinitely easier to grab in Northrend. The Duskwing Eagles are a nice brown bird skin, and those can be found in the mid to western parts of the zone, near the explorer's league camp.
The other pet skin worth looking out for will take an extra level to get, but it will be worth the wait. There is now a tamable bald eagle skin in World of Warcraft. The Fjord Hawk Matriarch will be on the cliffs in the southeast part of the Howling Fjord. At level 71, you'll need a level before you can find and tame her, but the wait should be worth. Seriously, then you'll just need to get yourself a motorcycle and convince Blizzard to implement leather jackets, and you'll be the coolest Hunter ever, I swear.
Talent Specs
If you haven't already changed into your leveling spec, you'll probably want to do so now. Even if you plan to take it easy and not rush to 80, you'll want to consider a build that gets you to 80 with all due haste. By now, hopefully you've seen BRK's overview of all the trees, as well as my suggestions for a solid Beastmastery build. Here's a few extra builds as well, in case you're still looking for one:
If you're a Beastmaster and you don't mind waiting a few extra levels for your exotic pet, you may want to consider a build something like this that takes Go For The Throat. Pets are pretty focus intensive these days, since every family has a family skill and a focus dump such as Bite. It's not as bad as it was now that most talented abilities no longer require focus, but focus is still a concern. Holding off an exotic pet until the mid-70s may be a fair trade if your pet always has the focus to cast both Growl and their damage or utility abilities. Besides, you'll be able to grab Beast Mastery by level 72 with this build.
A Marksman might want to focus on a build that looks more like this, and hopes to empower a basic rotation that consists of primarily getting a sting up and firing steady Shots weaved with Chimera Shots to keep the sting up, while other talents that boost general damage or compliment the rotation are added. Just be sure to keep on top of changing your tracking to compliment Improved Tracking.
Wrapping It Up
Of course, as we get through the last few days before the descent of Wrath, we should have plenty more advice for Hunters, on top of general advice for getting everything from your potion stash to your gear ready for the journey through Northrend. Be sure to stay tuned to us, and no matter how you plan to get to level 80, we'll help you get there.
Filed under: Hunter, Analysis / Opinion, Tips, Expansions, Leveling, Talents, Wrath of the Lich King, (Hunter) Scattered Shots






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
Kaizen Nov 6th 2008 11:07PM
scary looking worm
Blasterion Nov 6th 2008 11:12PM
I hope the ammo are cheap.... lol Timeless rips wallets
Dryssa Nov 7th 2008 5:52AM
It's 30s per stack of 200 (before reputation discounts.) Note that you can only purchase this new ammunition in Northrend zones, so you probably won't have much of a discount available for a while.
Triforceelf Nov 6th 2008 11:23PM
Are we going to need still suits to tame worms?
Schadenfreude Nov 6th 2008 11:24PM
Nope, just a thumper.
Triforceelf Nov 6th 2008 11:25PM
Damn! And here I went and gave it back to that stupid dwarf...
Eddy Nov 7th 2008 12:17PM
I'd like the ability to morph my hunter into the God-Emperor.
Schadenfreude Nov 6th 2008 11:23PM
It's not as important as it once was, but if you have the Underspore Frond and a pet that likes to eat fruit, you can keep feeding your pet the Underspore Pods through to level 80 since Underspore Pods are a level 100 food for some reason.
Emil Nov 7th 2008 3:25AM
Or you can just get the Mend Pet Glyph and never need to feed your pet again.
Zep Nov 6th 2008 11:26PM
Duuuune!!!!
Zeldaguard Nov 6th 2008 11:46PM
I am Sheeana...I CONTROL THE WORMS!
Wuldor Nov 6th 2008 11:59PM
I have to say, for the MM leveling build, if you like to solo I highly recommend 2/2 Rapid Recuperation. The mana regen after killing blows is well worth 2 talent points.
Mok Nov 7th 2008 4:53AM
Completely agree here. MM is a blast. I've seen so many builds without Recuperation and frankly it amazes me. I rarely have to jump into Viper for mana regen. Far better, IMHO, that putting points into steady shot.
G Nov 7th 2008 12:02AM
The spice must flow.
I have a gnome engineer alt (386/375 ftw) to make arrows for my hunter who just reached 70 and is nicely geared thanks to the Headless Horseman and many Scourge invaders. It's a decent amount of work to keep track of mats, arrow counts and bank space for the arrow makers, though, when it's not all on the same toon.
Genju Nov 7th 2008 12:13AM
First thing I'm doing, is taming one of those new wolves. Win
soulessone Nov 7th 2008 12:58AM
yeah i'm going for one of those too
Nick S Nov 7th 2008 12:13AM
I'm specced MM now, and without a seriously angry pet I pull aggro pretty easily. The solution? I got a Crab with the lovely Pin ability. Holds the enemy nicely in place for 4 seconds while I warm up my slow-starting MM rotation, then explode the mob with a Chim/Aimed combo. As an added bonus, Crabs are just all kinds of useful against melee classes in PvP, and since they're Tenacity pets they can rescue you from burst damage with Intervene and Roar of Sacrifice if something bad (like an enemy Paladin) happens.
Basically, Crabs are super awesome for questing, particularly if you're expecting a few mixups with unsavory Retadins and Rogues.
Radiophonic Nov 7th 2008 1:09AM
Interesting how nobody solo's Survival. I guess it's an acquired taste.
Nick S Nov 7th 2008 1:22AM
Before the Explosive Shot nerf, soloing as Survival was tremendously fun.
Now, though, it's eclipsed by MM in both single- and multi-target DPS, and by BM in survivability (and DPS).
Surv needs something to make it a more-fun solo spec again. I'd love to see Explosive Shot brought back to a place where it's exciting to cast.
Chain Trap Nov 7th 2008 4:56AM
I do. But then I'm a survivaholic.
Nick S' reply illustrates exactly why I don't play in Beta tests of games that I'm sure I'll want to play in live form (and actually turned down a beta key for wrath for exactly that reason). I love Explosive shot, in its current form, as I've never had anything else to compare it with.
Sure, Survival dps is slightly lacklustre at the moment (but I am still topping the damage meters in current 10-man content). And there's a _lot_ of room for improvement; but it's still big fun, and the ability to chain trap indefinitely is certainly a boon in instance teams as well as solo.