WoW Rookie: Bank on it
New around here? WoW Rookie points WoW's newest players to the resources they need to get acclimated. Send us a note to suggest a WoW Rookie topic.Got stuff? You need a banker. Creating a dedicated character to do nothing but hang out in town, store goods and handle your finances may sound redundant at first. But time is money, friend -- and a banker can save you both.
The benefits:
Eliminate travel time. No more hearthing back to the city at the end of every session, and no more trudging back to your current base of operations when you're ready for some action. Trust us – when you hit the Outlands and have to travel from Shattrath City all the way back to the Old World to use an Auction House, you'll be glad to skip that whole process.
Put the entire Auction House at your fingertips. Anything item you need is instantly at your disposal when your banker is at the ready. Log in the banker, buy what you need, mail it to whichever character needs it. (Remember, mail between characters on the same account is now instant.) It's that quick and easy.
Spread out over increased storage space. As you level, the sheer amount of stuff you own expands exponentially. Equip your banker with spacious bags in as many bank slots as needed and unload everything that's not soulbound. Remember, you can always mail it back instantly!
Centralize trade materials. Your crafting characters can share common materials – enchanting components, leather, primals, ore, cloth, extra spices for cooking -- when you centralize storage on a banker.
Take advantage of mailbox "storage." Is the new zone you're fighting in chewing through your health or mana pots? Mail a bunch to your banker, and have the banker return the mail. The shipment will land back in your mailbox, safe for nearly one month. Now you can access your health pots wherever there's a mailbox.
Cut down on add-on memory. No need to load up Auctioneer on every character. Only your banker needs it.
Sound like a plan? Here are a few more points to mull over in your quest for financial freedom.
Play the Auction House. A banker is perfectly positioned to become a market force by buying and selling in the Auction House. Beyond the basics, what most players want is solid advice on what's worth selling on the AH, how much to charge and how to get the best buys. Check out our Insider Trader advice on playing the market.
Streamline with add-ons. Most bankers will want an Auction House tool such as Auctioneer; it can be complicated to set up and learn to use, but it's an invaluable tool in helping you target the best prices for buying and selling. If storage is your focus, you'll want an inventory mod that can tell you what items and materials you have on each and every one of your characters.
Consider a guild bank. If you're really a craftsaholic altaholic, you might even consider setting up your own guild and buying a guild bank tab. Don't laugh; we know players who've done it.
Treat with the enemy. If your server has a healthy cross-faction economy, you might consider positioning a banker at a neutral Auction House to take advantage of items that are hard to come by on one faction or the other.
Learn disenchanting. It's handy to be able to disenchant items with your banker, but you'll have to level and skill up to be able to handle the highest-level items.
Find home, sweet home. My banker loves Thunder Bluff because the Auction House, a convenient vendor, the mailbox and the bank are in a row quite close together. It's almost like strafing a production line. Experiment with different cities and find the one that keeps your running time to minimum and makes you feel at home.
Look the part. You're what? You're still wearing your underwear? Tsk, tsk. The expert who handles your family's finances deserves better than that. Outfit yourself in garb befitting your station.
Filed under: Tips, Features, WoW Rookie, Making money






Reader Comments (Page 3 of 3)
Odicus Mar 5th 2009 8:03AM
Got 4 lvl 6 gnomes standing in IF with their own yellow tabard with the coins at the front :) They have their own guild called "Freemasonry of Deathwing" with 2 tabs; one for TBC-items and one for WOTLK-items . One is for selling green items and is my main supplier for enchantingmats and potions. One is for gems , eternals and nodes. One is only for cloth to lvl tailoring on an alt and lvl first aid on alts. The last one is for various items like food, fish and other items wich I can use on a new char for example.
evankimori Mar 5th 2009 8:26AM
Why not just buy bigger bags and combine the 4 of em? Make it a whole lot easier to manage items. Then again: I've no need to hang onto a lot of a certain item. If it's gonna be used-it gets mailed to the needy alt to hold onto until the profession/skill reaches the necessary level to use it all. :)
evankimori Mar 5th 2009 8:23AM
My bank toon's been on my account since I stated playing 4 years ago. Sadly, I choose the wrong class for him since I already have a Hunter. I've already said that when I'm ready to play a Shaman (since all my other character slots are full) - I'm going to name my Shaman after my bank toon-Evanguard. (Guards the loot and money.)
Every morning, clad very classy in his tuxedo and pimping shoes, grey loot rings and necklace, monocle at the ready, Baby Blizzard Bear and armed with his Skinning Knife and 10 Pound Mudfish to defend against any usurpers who would dare steal my cash; he trudges faithfully to the Org auction house to deal my auctions, retrieve sold/unsold items from the mail and do all my shopping for me without having to leave whatever area my 70's and 80's are busy questing/grinding/raiding. I practically never have reason to go back to Azeroth since he basically controls everything there for me.
He has his own guild which I formed with friends and we all have our own bank alts-each aptly named after our first WoW character with '-guard' after the name and 3 bank tabs for sharing items among one another. I've been working the market for about 3 years on my server and I'm on numerable F-lists because of the great deals and prices I offer for items. And because I'm a bit of a packrat - you name it; I probably have it to sell at a reasonable rate. And I stockpile as well so I can be the War Profiteer when the market goes all to hell on certain item. Can't login without someone whispering me begging that I have a stack of X-material cheaper than the AH. He has his own little reputation among my buyers with a macro to advertise anything I have for sale! Anonymous yet well known at the same time.
I keep him because it requires less muss and fuss to remember which toon has what item(s) and the need to logon to them and wait a bit longer. Reason? My player toons have a lot more addons to load than my banker so:
1) It takes longer to login to them. My bank takes seconds to login since he has default UI and simple banking-keeping addons. No having to load customized interface, quest addons, map addons etc.
2) Chances are my playable characters are in Lag-aran or some Northrend area where lag and slowdown is nearly manditory.
3) Org/Tb just loads fast. AH is at hand. Mailbox and gold at the ready. That plus all business goes on in Org really. There's RFC for a ghettohearth and always a mage on hand to port you wherever you need and nobody minds leaving Dalaran to come to Org to make a face-to-face pickup.
When I'm on my other toons? Mail everything in a fat package to my bank and forget about it until I logon to him to sort it all out and auction whatever-(which I love doing.
evankimori Mar 5th 2009 8:38AM
Dang thing cut my post up.
Yes, micromanaging
evankimori Mar 5th 2009 8:47AM
Dang thing cut my post up.
Yes, micromanaging. That plus you remain under the radar as a merciless seller, can troll Trade chat if you're a little bored plus come on: who wouldn't trust my bank character with his sexy clothing, monocle and grey bling? :D Best prices, cheap materials, awesome guild name. Hell, I've even had people send me written farming contracts requesting X amount of material in Y days which I've made a killing on in bid wars or even someone mailing me entire stocks of cloth/meat/greens etc and asking me to do the resale of it for them. I collect 20% on EVERY sale I earn plus the reimbursement fees from AH because some people just don't have the time to sit and DE and sell everything they get and watch the AH. I've had buyers send me gold to perform anonymous bid wars and cross-faction trading for them and I've even been paid in Doomwalker epics for giving a pair of [Gold Wedding Bands] from the Shatt Fishing Daily bags to a couple on our server of a lead raiding guild who got married just recently and who are 2 of my best customers.
Life as a banker is good. :D
Tirrimas Mar 5th 2009 9:28AM
A big plus (in my mind and experience) is that a bank alt can hold all your cash, reducing the temptation to buy crap off the AH when you're trying to save up for, say, Epic Flying or Dual-Specs. All that gold goes directly into the guild bank account, deliberately "difficult" to get to and spend. No, I don't share it with anyone so i don't have to worry about it disappearing.
Unfortunately, herbs, ore and cloth take up a huge amount of space, so it's nice to have the breathing room a guild bank offers. I use those things to level my alts.
Oddly enough, my bank alt has a pretty tight fist when it comes to letting the gold out of her grasp - it seems my mindset shifts a bit when I log into her.
Rabidlemming Mar 5th 2009 10:23AM
My wife and I both have banker/mule alts. They hold anything our mains don't need to carry around in the gbank. Ore, Herbs, Cloth, etc. I've also used one banker to hold my money and sometimes I'll use him to put up Auctions when he or any of my banks start to get too full. Now we are worse then most when it comes to being pack rats. I have 4 mules, my wife has 3. I have mine broken up between herbs/inscription/alch, ore/gems/engineering, cloth/tailoring, and a food/random stuff bank. Each of my toons have a guild bank. The amount of tabs vary, I have a 4 tab, two 3 tabs, and a 2 tab bank.
Most of them are relatively full, though I just cleared out most of them by selling stuff. My mine banker holds all my money, it keeps me from spending it just because I have it. One of them would be my DK, but I like him so he doesn't get burdened.
mibluvr13 Mar 5th 2009 10:45AM
Altaholic is a great addon, even if it falls pray to the usual addiction ending. (What am I addicted to? Altahol?) ANYWAY, I encourage people who don't have bank alts or even alts at all to get it. Being able to look through your bank from the middle of Dragonblight is nice and I've occasionally completely lost something in my bags that the search feature can find in a half a second.
Meep Mar 5th 2009 10:56AM
I have a guild bank for my bank alts, my hubby and I share it. So if we need something no need to log onto each others accounts, we just look in the guild bank. Of course all of our accounts with access have authenticators. Anyway, it works great. =^..^=
Hatfield Mar 5th 2009 11:45AM
I believe there is a very easy Auctioneer exploits that people use to trick the auto-suggest into a very low price which scams you out of gold because they then pounce on your buyout and resell at proper market value. Usually you will see something very valuable posted with no buyout and an extremely low starting price then you know someone is moving in on those items and trying to trick your Auctioneer into a lower price so keep aware of that.
Another positive is that you can retain some buyer/seller anonymity; if you want the Nessingwary 4000 and whisper the seller and he/she sees you're a hunter they will likely jack up the price. But if you have a Level 1 bank alt they will probably (correctly or incorrectly) think you are more savvy and give a fairer price.
Bank alts have changed the game for me in such a positive way that I can't believe I was so stubborn and resisted for so long. Especially in the 1-30 levels where you're footing it everywhere.
PeeWee Mar 5th 2009 12:42PM
Levelling a hunter?
Buy/craft a shipload of ammo and mail to an alt, and have them returned to you. Now you have thousands of rounds at the nearest mailbox and won't have to search for it.
This will be redundant if/when consumed ammo is removed.
yaja Mar 5th 2009 4:33PM
I could not live without a bank alt. I've gotten almost all my friends that play wow to make and use bank-alts (even the one that is very anti-alts).
Convience, Convience, Convience. there are MANY more mailboxes in the game than there are places to access your storage. so any mailbox essentially becomes a very easy place to clean out your bags of ore, herbs, eternals, boe items, frostweave, cooking mats, whatever. your bank can later sort the stuff out and send it to the appropriate character or keep it to resell.
now some tips that I've learned:
Put your bank character in either Exodar or Silvermoon. there are way less people, stuff loads faster, and in both those citys the AH is close to the bank.
manage your addons. your bank alt doesn't need Deadly Boss Mods, a damage meter, omen, etc. your raid toon probably doesn't need auctioneer. at the char select screen, go into the addons settings and "Configure addons for " on the top left. disable the ones you don't need for that character.
level 1 bank alts in their full tux gear is great, but you have to be level 10 or higher to get items restored by blizz. personally, my bank alt is level 10 rogue who wears a full set of Gypsy (with the green pieces being 'of the monkey'). there are a bunch of ~level 10 sets of matching gear that look really cool and I personally found it fun trying to get all the pieces I need for less than 10s ea.
Amaxe Mar 5th 2009 10:56PM
I have one (a hunter I got bored with at level 12). The main use I have is for auctions and holding money for a main when I have something major to save for (usuually, I set a budget for my main and everything over that goes to the bank alt so I don't spend it.
I have not had much use for it since I hit 80 though. My main is pretty lazy though with auctioning. Just sellling Dragon eyes and whatever blue gems look like they will sell
Marveen Mar 6th 2009 6:45AM
My first banker was created as a posting alt, back from the time when you couldn't post on the forums if you had a funny character in your name. She eventually became my banker and had a very nice red festival suit (before it became fashionable).
I deleted her (and my rogue) when I made my DK, and have since been rotating among my alts as bankers - I send them all kinds of crap I don't need to sell immediately, send greens to my enchanter, cloth to my tailor, and I log onto most of my chars once a week or so for a mammoth selling session.
My problem is that Murphy's Law seems to dictate that whoever is my current banker becomes the alt I level next - my retired priest was my first alt to get to 80, then my mage got activated, followed by my paladin and my warrior. My current banker is my first druid (lvl70) - so I am terrified I will find myself levelling her to 80 too! :o