Preparing for Wrath Day 2: The dying wallet
Off a question on professions we recently took in Ask A Beta Tester, it occurred to me that it would probably be helpful to provide players with a few ballpark figures on budgetary expectations for Northrend. Blizzard's been pretty frank about its desire to reduce ingame inflation, so it's reasonable to expect a number of compelling demands made on your e-wallet (especially if legions of grasping guild leaders worldwide get their wish and start taxing the living hell out of you). Bottom line? You're going to bleed gold out of your ears unless you exercise some financial restraint. But...whatever. Screaming over the ingame cost of everything keeps me from looking at my real-life stock portfolio. I need a drink.PROFESSIONS: Your first few minutes on the continent, no matter where you land, are going to be pretty expensive if you train up your tradeskills immediately. Polar22 in the AABT comments provided an extremely helpful link to WarcraftEcon confirming that each major and minor trade skill, with the exception of First Aid, will cost 35g to level to Grand Master. First Aid is more expensive at 50g. So, assuming you train your two major tradeskills in addition to Fishing, Cooking, and First Aid, count on being out 190g in addition to whatever it will cost you to train new recipes. WarcraftEcon estimates the total damage for an average player will clock in around 400-500g for these initial recipes and the Grand Master skill-up. That sounds broadly accurate from my experience in the beta, so plan on toting 500g along if you want all of your professions trained up immediately. The bleed begins!
TRANSPORTATION (FAIR ENOUGH): One of the first things you're likely to notice after a few days in Northrend is that flight paths are notably more expensive than their counterparts in Azeroth and Outland. It's not unusual to see flights cost 2-3g even for short distances, which frankly makes me wonder what percentage of that is being skimmed by the flight masters. Northrend is big, and you'll feel the loss of your flying mount pretty keenly in the early 70's. You should probably budget somewhere in the region of 50-100g for the first few weeks, depending on how much flying you actually do.

YEAH, YEAH, REPAIRS: Players' repair costs will vary wildly according to the quality of their gear and what spec they're playing (e.g. melee specs generally take a higher rate of durability damage than ranged specs). Whatever you're paying now at 70, don't expect it to get smaller.
WHAT DO YOU MEAN, SALES TAX?: Almost everyone is going to carry some food and drink with them (or, as a healing class, drink) for the inevitable downtime while leveling; you're not going to grind or quest as efficiently versus level 71-74 mobs as you do on Outland mobs you currently outgear. Budget 10-20g for this per day depending on your gear quality (i.e. the odds of you taking a lot of damage before you kill anything).
I THOUGHT WE WERE FRIENDS: Yep, your class trainer's going to soak you too. This obviously isn't something you need to be concerned about immediately stepping into Northrend, but your leveling will go faster as you pick up more quests and get more familiar with the quest hubs and dungeons. I can say without hesitation that the quests you'll be doing in order to reach your next level will pay for training up your class skills without any issues, so I wouldn't bother setting aside any Outland funds for this.
WHY ARE THEY CHARGING 20K GOLD FOR A MOUNT THAT RUNS LIKE A BUNNY RABBIT?: If you're BRK or you've just really got your heart set on a Traveler's Tundra Mammoth, you're going to need a whopping 20,000 gold as soon as you reach Dalaran. Or -- as its purchase price is affected by your reputation with the Kirin Tor -- if you can restrain yourself until you get exalted, you can knock 4,000 gold off the purchase price. Bear in mind that getting exalted for most people is going to be something that happens well into 80 (you can only earn dungeon rep wearing a faction's tabard in level 80 dungeons). However -- assuming you actually use the vendors to empty your packs while you're out farming -- the mammoth will eventually pay for itself. How fast it does is going to depend on much you rely on farming as a source of income.
20,000 GOLD FOR A MOUNT? ARE YOU OUT OF YOUR %$(#&% MIND?: The Armored Brown Bear is being sold by the same vendors selling the Traveler's Tundra Mammoth, but fortunately he's a lot cheaper and will only put you out 600g at neutral with the Kirin Tor. Interestingly, he's also the subject of his own achievement. So if you never got lucky with an Amani War Bear, you may want to pick this guy up.

WHY THE HELL DOES ALL OF THIS CRAP COST SO MUCH: You will want to make sure you have 1,000g promptly at level 77 to purchase Cold Weather Flying. Trust me, 1,000g is a bargain given the repair costs you've previously shouldered from mindlessly throwing yourself off of various cliffs and then panicking while you spam your Swift Flight Form macro.
HOW DO THESE PEOPLE EVEN STAY IN BUSINESS: Oh, and about the fantastically expensive 8500g (at neutral) port-you-to-Dalaran rings, the Signet of the Kirin Tor and the Band of the Kirin Tor? Don't worry about these; you can't use them until you're 80 anyway. If you haven't already budgeted for them at 70, then a little prudence while leveling (e.g. keep up with your dailies) will probably cover this.
I HAVE JUST ENOUGH MONEY LEFT FOR AN ASPIRIN: Oh, good. Let's say that you, like the author of this article, are an incredible cheapskate prone to raging epileptic fits over the cost of living. As your parents no doubt told you, there are things that you need, and then there are luxuries. I count professions, consumables, repairs, Cold Weather Flying, and a certain amount of flight path taxi service as necessities. Everything else can bite me. Under this sophisticated economic model, I come up with the following budget for Northrend at 70:
- Profession skill-ups and recipes: 500g
- Repairs: 50g
- Flight paths: 25-50g
- Consumables: 10-20g
- Cold Weather Flying: 1,000g
HIGH END: A bank of 1620-1650g will get you squared away on most necessities through 77 assuming your quest/daily money covers daily expenses and class skills past 70 (as it should).
ALL HOGS TO THE TROUGH, MILDRED: You want it all? A best-case scenario of exalted with the Kirin Tor will leave you paying 16,000 for a mammoth, 6,800 for a ring, and the aforesaid amounts for necessities, leaving you with a bill of 24,420 (assuming you otherwise break even on flight paths, class skills, repairs, and consumables at 70+). A worst-case scenario of neutral with the Kirin Tor will jack the total to 30,150.
In cases of extreme hardship, you can forego training up your professions and tackle them much later, but that's going to make work on profession-related achievements (most notably a head start on getting Dalaran Cooking Awards) or early access to good crafted gear/trinkets/gems a no-go. Use your best judgment, but with dailies and a certain amount of farming, it should be more than possible to put 600g in your bank between now and Wrath.
Are you ready for the challenges that await you in Northrend? WoW Insider has you covered with our 8-day guide to Preparing for Wrath. Also, check out our feature on AddOns new, old and outdated and Essential AddOns for Wrath written especially with the expansion in mind.Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, Economy, Expansions, Features, Humor, Making money, Wrath of the Lich King
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Reader Comments (Page 4 of 5)
JohnC Nov 11th 2008 12:15PM
i'm sorry to sound like i am ranting here, but do blizzard not give two fucks about us levling to 70 or only just hit 70s. I have been 70 for just over a week, and done a mad rush collecting some kara/za/honor gear so i'm not so "crap" but al of these are free. I bought my flying skill but i stil only have around 350g.
i'm fed up of all the smug gits "yes i've farmed for the last year non stop and now have the maximum amount of gold possible, i am giving it away to gold farmers for fun now!", well unlike you i havent had that long to farm/quest so aren't as rich.
what the hell am i meant to do when i get to northrend. end of the week i wont be able to afford repairs/flights anywhere, let alone flying skill that ive only had for one week only to find im not allowed to use it anymore!?!
why doesn't blizzard think about something for us that havent had the last 12months to get exalted with the shattered sun and gain bags of motes to sell.
im poor and unhappy:( ive finally reached my "goal" and now its all gone so qucikly and once again i'm miles behind everyone again:(
[sorry for rant:P but sometimes i do wonder if they forget that there are some people playing that are new to the game/cant afford to spend 2hours a day on the game farming]
bobbyd Nov 11th 2008 12:25PM
Don't worry about it. Keep collecting your motes in northrend (and possibly pick up another gahtering profession to powerlevel up before thursday as it's possible to do), and you'll be fine. Remember, there will be dailies in LK starting fairly early on.
Vocenoctum Nov 11th 2008 12:26PM
The division is funny sometimes, as they're pushing Recruit a Friend and then not adding low -level content.
Really though, you might be better off just not getting Wrath for a week. Do the SSO stuff to the max and you'll be Exalted in a week with maybe an hour/ hour & half a day.
My oldest 70 got there maybe 3 months ago, now I have 4. Across all PC's I have maybe 5k, so I should be okay for now.
Weevil Nov 11th 2008 12:26PM
If you go to Northrend and do something called "quests" they will give you gold.
Chamual Nov 11th 2008 5:59PM
"im poor and unhappy:( ive finally reached my "goal" and now its all gone so qucikly and once again i'm miles behind everyone again:("
Actually you are now exactly the same level as everyone. Sure you have a few less gold in the bank which will mean you can't get all of the nicities straight away but in terms of gear and progression you are now level with everyone. Sure they may of spend a whole year farming gear but you will be getting easy quest rewards straight after hitting 70 that will be equivilient of the stuff they ran raid after raid after raid after raid for.
Rob Nov 11th 2008 1:59PM
Totally agree, if you just absolutely need that gold and just hit 70 (I have two recent 70s, one last night, one two weeks ago), just don't install Wraith for a week. Heck I plan to do that anyway just to not experience the northend gank/lag fest. That way you'll be stuck at 70 and you can do your dailies.
Also from leveling 6 toons now, the way blizz does the leveling is if you do the quests and sell some vendor trash (not everything, but enough), you will generally have enough gold to train up new skills and for flying around. If you just a) have nice bags b) sell everthing that's grey c) sell greens/whites on AH, you will have tons of money. When people complain they dont have enough money, its because they generally don't sell stuff on AH, they don't get rid of their greys, and they don't use their professions to their benefit.
It doesn't matter how much gold you have at a certain point, but chances are you can go into Northend with nothing and be absolutely fine. You may need to focus a bit more on gathering/farming, but it should be fine. I would at least put gold into training gathering skills (so, 35g or 70g), everything else you can just stockpile until you get funding. If you dont have 35g and are level 70, do dailies first, then install wraith. In 3 quests you'll have your money back.
MDC Nov 11th 2008 12:35PM
"Blizzard's been pretty frank about its desire to reduce ingame inflation"
The entire article contradicts that statement.
Having the cost of living be a money sink somehow equates to reducing inflation? Hurf durf.
Runar Nov 11th 2008 12:44PM
It reduces inflation by shrinking the gold supply. When people have to spend more money on fp's, repairs, spells, profession training, 20k vanity mounts, etc, they won't have nearly as much disposable income to drive up the prices of AH items, etc.
MDC Nov 11th 2008 12:50PM
On the contrary, I think people will be so desperate (or greedy) that things will only go up in price at the AH.
Higher cost of living now makes people sell things for less money or not try and work the market to profit? (or at least do so to a lesser extent than they do now?)
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Kemikalkadet Nov 11th 2008 2:00PM
It doesn't matter how much people list their items for, if the buyers don't have the cash to buy it then they won't. Remember that the people that buy things on the AH are people that are also having to spend out large amounts of gold on flights/repairs etc in Northrend.
If there's less money in the economy, people will be spending less on overpriced auction items and more on the basics (repairs, travel and training.). Elementary economics.
Delphionic Nov 11th 2008 12:34PM
How much do quests give out then? I imagined they'd pay everything themselves.
IncubusHead Nov 11th 2008 12:49PM
Does anyone else think that having such useful items cost so much is going to fuel the gold farmer/seller trade? I think we'll see a surge in such activities like never before.
vazhkatsi Nov 11th 2008 1:21PM
well, for a "casual player" i find money is actually easier to make. I came into the game at the middle of the beginning of BC, around the release of patch 2.2, and as soon as I hit 70 I started to gear up in heroics and dungeons so that i could see as much raid content as possible, over the last few months i have raided 4-5 hours a day 3-4 days a week, not a lot, but enough so that the 200g for consumables every day +repairs that can go up to 100g a night if we're on a progression boss, it really cuts into any money I try to save for my epic mount. whereas on my casual pvp toon, i have nearly 2000 gold at 69, now i know more about the game and how to make money than I did when i first started, (for instance this time i didn't go eng/mining so i made 0 gold from selling mats) but still, a "casual" player generally won't spend as much money as a "hardcore" player.
Amaxe Nov 11th 2008 1:38PM
Impressive since the max is 2^31 or 214,748 gold, 36 silver, 48 copper.
Hazerduz Nov 11th 2008 1:46PM
SO very glad I got up to 3k on all 9 of my characters, gonna make life so much easier.
Bootsanator Nov 11th 2008 2:23PM
My guildies keep making comments like "oh yeah, the person in the guild with the most gold" b/c they know i have over 20k...Yeah, until I buy all of this stuff and go broke. Then I'll be as poor as I was when I bought my first epic LAND mount at lvl 70, b/c I couldn't afford it before then. Time to go back to making money off my profess....wait, I'm a tailor/enchanter. Time to sink more money into my money-sink professions! c'mon fishing!
Shkam Nov 11th 2008 2:32PM
Glad I spent the last few months farming the shiney golden discs.
Up to about 17.4k atm. Tundra mammoth here I come! (Though i'll be waiting till exalted, coz the discount will pay for epic flying on my new quasi-main warrior)
mk Nov 11th 2008 2:44PM
not everyone has gold coming out of their ass, I only have 22 gold on my main right now and no epic flyer.
They created this problem by making flying epics so expensive and then with the introduction of daily quests, now they are making the people with lives suffer.
Tumleren Nov 11th 2008 2:51PM
Im just gonna agree with a lot of people here, and say that i think this is BS from Blizzard. I got maybe 150g on my main, and havent got any high-lvl alts. I havent got an epic flying mount, and now they expect me to throw away 1,000 gold at something i just forgot how to do, when walking onto a new continent (yes I know the training is for the bird. w/e)?
Screw that. I'll be buying 5,000 g from a goldseller anyway, just to be able to fly in Outland, and maybe I'll be able to save up the rest of the cost for the training.
Smart move Blizzard, focus on the part of the players with an extreme amount of money (who won't even be affected by this), instead of thinking about us with less than 5k g
Doubtful Nov 11th 2008 3:30PM
Sounds like a gold sellers paradise. Just ask Nihilium what it takes to be first. You all want to be winners, don't you?