[1.Local]: Questions, answers from our readers
Reader comments – ahh, yes, the juicy goodness following a meaty post. [1.Local] ducks past the swinging doors to see what readers have been chatting about in the back room over the past week.The comments section is usually a cacophony of voices seeking to agree or disagree with the main post, discredit previous commentors or make some pointless point ("first" -- /facepalm). This week, readers pulled together in a more truly interactive relationship, offering up questions, tips, insights and well thought-out suggestions and ideas. Take a trip through the pickings this week on ways to make professions more interesting, more Star Trek Easter eggs, getting real about DPS, copyright issues, snappier headlines ... and even a post devoted exclusively to guild and player recruitment notices.
| Assessing the gear-crafting trades BWJ seized the opportunity to present his vision for more robust professions in World of Warcraft. "God, where to start?" he began. "Professions really got the short end of the stick, in Wrath, with the exception of Jewelcrafting. I have a lot of alts and I make stuff for them leveling up, but most of the time I just dump the mats on the AH now. In BC, you could make some great stuff -- the tailoring epics alone were worth making, and gathering the mats to sell to others making them. How much gold was made farming motes for them? "Now? I could(n't) care (less). I have a max-level Tailor, Enchanter and Leatherworker, am working on a Jeweler and am about to give up on Blacksmithing yet again. Blacksmithing needs a complete overhaul. Period. Also, some of the stuff makes no sense. Leatherworkers make mail. But the two main leather-wearing classes, Rogues and Druids, can't wear it. Jewelcrafters make settings and and other items from metal -- those should be made by Blacksmiths. There is no shield-crafting specialty, even though multiple classes use them. "There also should be a woodworker. They would make paper, scrolls, polearms, wooden shields, bows and arrows. They could also make gun stocks, axe handles that boost axes and mats for other professions, like barrels for alchemists, who could craft barrels that distribute drinks to a raid or party. They could make chests for the bank slots. "Tailors should be able to make all kinds of stuff, on top of what they do already. Hello? Tabards? Leatherworkers should be able to make scabbards and sheaths (item enhancement), saddles and reins. Wineskins. They could also make vellum (paper made from animal skin). How about saddlebags, which are bags only accessible when mounted? "Blacksmiths should be able to make horseshoes, which could be speed boosts or resists to keep from being dismounted. "Engineering -- I won't even go there. All I have to say is one word: flashlight. Says it all, really. "Oh well. Maybe in the future, things will improve, but right now, I'm very meh about professions in Wrath." What changes in the crafting system would get you excited about professions? |
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| Star Trek references in the World of Warcraft I'm old enough to have watched Star Trek during its original run -- and I did. It's a little bit like having played World of Warcraft in beta and original release: you discover the delightful little idiosyncrasies even as they develop, and they become "yours," since there are no web sites yet for fans to share and dissect discoveries. Noratul shared this delightful little Star Trek Easter egg. "There's a quest in Bloodmyst where you are sent to find out what happened to a survey team that was sent to examine some Naga ruins on the coast. When you get there, they're all dead. What makes this a reference is the fact that all of the dead landing team were wearing red shirts." Yeah, I /chuckled. |
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| Uber epic DPS Here's a sincere question from a reader seeking advice from readers who have more to offer than flames and misplaced bravado: "Ok, DPS leets, tell me where I might be going wrong," asked failknight. "I play a DK running in all epics (mostly 213 stuff), and I rarely break 3k DPS in 25s. In 10s, I get like 2.6k. I'm using the basic Blood spec EJ recommended, running the rotation they recommend, but I just can't break 2.6k. "Obviously I'm doing something wrong, so save calling me a noob. If you were having this issue, where's the first place you'd look? The only thing I can think of is that I'm the clean-up guy for my raid -- when our tanks miss a mob (or worse still, dies), I'm the guy switching to Frost and blow my CDs to pick up the slack. I also don't really ever bother with AOE damage, because it seems like a waste. "I ask because there's another DK in my guild who blows me away on DPS charts with mostly worse gear (she has a BIS weapon, but everything else is worse). She's in UH spec, so I guess she's better suited to AOE damage? "Should I be doing 4k DPS like all the other magical DKs I hear about? Should I switch out of Blood, go UH and start spamming DnD? Is that a better service to my guild than single-target DPS and cleanup crew?" Should failknight chalk it up and respec so he can make a bigger splash with bigger numbers, or is he filling a valuable role for his guild? |
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| Blizzard legal censures Shakes and Fidget Are popular comics like Shakes and Fidget too similar to WoW's original content for copyright comfort? "Well, as you know, copyright law in particular has a lot of grey zones where the exact subject matter is debatable," mused nobbie. "Whenever this is case, the unwritten 'sleeping dog' rule applies. Talk too loud (read: be too greedy), and the dog wakes up. I think that in the case of S&F, the current employer Computec Media AG is the one to blame here, and not the artist(s). "When S&F started after WoW was launched in 2005, it began as fan-made, non-commercial WoW comic. They have been first promoted through several German WoW fan sites and finally internationally, too. The two main characters of the comic, Shakes and Fidget, are in fact actual WoW characters which are or have been played by the authors on the realms. The comic depicts a lot of WoW settings, stuff and characters like Ragnaros, Illidan and so forth, so this IS clearly a WoW comic. "Two years ago, during the launch of TBC -- when WoW's enormous success became obvious -- a new Computec-owned competitor appeared on the German gaming market. They had bought BLASC, a popular WoW database with lots of daily visitors (read: profitable mouse-clicks) and built a new community site called Buffed.de with the usual mainstream WoW stuff around it. The database remains till today the main source of mouse-clicks which they sell to advertisers. Buffed has an online portal and a print magazine. "In typical venture capitalist fashion, Computec then bought what they could to expand their newly established, profitable online portal, and among them were S&F. S&F were already very popular at this time across the whole WoW community, and each new episode brought lots of mouse clicks from old and new fans. Of course, Buffed and Computec saw the monetary potential of the WoW comic and hired S&F (for a good salary, methinks) under the condition that Computec gets the exclusive distribution rights. "The contract was signed, and then Computec attorneys sent out letters to all (German) competitors such as inWoW.de, WorldofWar.de and so forth, that all S&F material has to be taken offline because Computec is now the exclusive owner and distributor. "Then came the point, I think, where the line was crossed. The exclusive contract between Computec and S&F was signed quite a while ago (over one year, I believe), but during that time S&F had advanced from a simple online magazine gimmick (on Buffed.de) to one of the company's 'crown jewels' in terms of marketing. Now you can find them in all Computec-owned print magazines, ads for Buffed gaming PCs, cups, T-shirts, mouse pads and all other kinds of fan articles. You have, for example, T-shirts with S&F 'Hail to the King, Baby' prints on them (with a clear visual reference to Arthas/the Lich King), and so forth. "So ask yourself the following: If you were Blizzard and see this happen, wouldn't you too send your attorneys and have them slap the wrists of the 'Ratte' (as Mike Schramm has put it correctly, with 'we smell a rat')? I think this is just what they did so far -- no more, no less. No multi-million dollar lawsuit, nothing. "Before we judge about Blizzard or Activision's behavior here -- yes, big bad company -- we have to take a close look at the whole context of the deal, which is the bone of contention. I'm with Blizzard on this one, as the copyright infringement and exploit is evident in this case, considering the wide commercial use of Blizzard brands and ideas by the aforementioned companies." Do nobbie's observations change your opinion on the matter? |
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| Stealth detection items nerfed "I tried to make a 'stealth nerf' pun in the headline, but it just wasn't coming to me," admitted post author Eliah Hecht. Readers stepped up to the plate after the fact to offer up some possibilities for this post on the recent stealth nerf to stealth detection. "Should've named it 'Never saw this nerf coming' or something to that effect," suggested skychilde012389. "What about 'Stealth detection stealth nerf detected'?" asked Sharlyntria. "Or 'Stealthy stealth detection nerf detected,'" added Malkavos. peagle had what may have been the best idea yet (if our web site had been able to make sense of it): "Shouldn't have had a title for the article at all." A stealthy headline, indeed. |
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| Now recruiting "I've been reading the comments from some of our recent posts and realized that there is quite a bit of mismatch between players and guilds," observed WI's Amanda Dean. "There are casual players in hardcore guilds that find themselves being passed over in content. There are hardcore players in casual guilds that don't get to move on to things they want. Some players need a higher level of maturity." If you suspect you're guilded in the wrong spot, here's your shot to connect with fellow WoW Insiders right here in [1.Local]. Check out the six pages of guild and player recruitment notices posted on this thread. |
Filed under: Rogue, Bosses, Raiding, Features, Blizzard, Guilds, How-tos, Tricks, Tips, Analysis / Opinion, [1.Local]






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Booyaka May 17th 2009 3:25PM
kudos to you, my friend
Valdorin May 17th 2009 3:34PM
To the DK question.
An armoury link would be nice to check gems/enchants etc.
Also, unholy is certainly an easier spec to master IMO. Though I hear blood scales better with top end gear.
Dont neglect AOE, pestilence is your friend. Grab the glyph and start spreading those diseases
West May 17th 2009 4:13PM
i would be helpful to have linked an armory profile, or at least your talents and then described your rotation in detail. without that information, there is nothing helpful to offer.
try reading this spec page out to find some pointers for 3.1 specs:
http://www.skeletonjack.com/2009/04/14/death-knight-specs-for-31-release/
I run unholy right now for DPS and like it better than my pre 3.1 dw frost and blood dps builds.
Feyd May 17th 2009 5:43PM
im unholy spec, my aoe dps is about 4k, but my single target boss in naxx 25 is also 4k
feydrautha
alexstrasza
look me up if you care to see the spec and gear
Rob47 May 17th 2009 3:47PM
At the moment i'm using an aging imac (the last plastic generation) and i'm suffering some minor performance probs. Atm i can't afford a new rig but i was wondering if upgrading my RAM help the matter? is it worth me upgrading from 1gb to 3gb?
satria May 17th 2009 3:50PM
i really dont know much about computers but with my new pc which a friend made for me, one of the biggest upgrades was to put in more RAM an it made such a huge difference, though you may wanna check with people who really know what theyre talkin about to give you their insight first :P
Rob47 May 17th 2009 3:52PM
cheers for the help :)
com5 May 17th 2009 4:51PM
upgrading memory (or other hardware) on a mac isn't as easy as it seems, especially on the older models. i recommend that you do a google search on how to add more memory for your candy coated macbook and use the right tools for the job also.
jurm May 17th 2009 5:17PM
I'm by no means an expert, but I have been working with computers for quite some time. Also, I'm a PC guy who builds his own computers (haven't bought a prefab box in over a decade), but I do have some passing familiarity with macs.
Really, the answer to your question depends on the nature of the performance issues you're having.
If it's a latency issue, the RAM will not help; no hardware upgrades will (with the possible exception of the Killer NIC... and probably not even that).
If you're having frame stuttering issues, RAM *might* help. Do a little experiment; does it get worse when you run other programs (itunes, safari etc..)? If it gets worse, then the RAM will probably smooth things out. Conversely, if you're running these as well as WoW normally, then try shutting them off and seeing if things get better.
If the above doesn't seem to have a noticeable effect on your performance issues, then your bottleneck is either the processor or the video card. I wouldn't bother trying to upgrade your processor; especially on a mac. Upgrading the video card however, might be possible depending on your setup.
From what I've seen recently, 90% of the performance problems that people are having are due to running their display settings too high on sub-par video hardware. Video cards really are not that expensive (for instance, an ATi Radeon 4770 costs about as much as a RAM upgrade) and will provide an enormous boost in performance compared to onboard video. My bet is the video card is what's holding you back. (As a side rant, this is one of my continuing grudges against Apple; the stock video cards are usually 2 generations behind the competition).
TL;DR - RAM? maybe, but the video card is a more likely culprit.
jurm May 17th 2009 5:32PM
As an additional note concerning video cards; depending on your motherboard, it may not be worth upgrading. Depending on the age of the motherboard, it may have one of two types of slots for the video card; either an AGP, or a PCI-X.
AGP is functionally a dead standard; it's still around but nobody makes decent video cards for it anymore. If you have an AGP slot, you're better off saving up for a new system. The upgrade really isn't likely to be worthwhile.
If it's a PCI-X slot, then yeah, go ahead and upgrade. Personally, I prefer nvidia cards, but right now the Radeon 4770 is a great deal.
I use newegg.com for 90% of my computer parts purchases; highly recommend them.
Of course, all this really depends on your financial situation, your current hardware, the kinds of systems your friends are running (and how soon they plan on upgrading) etc... Please don't take what I'm saying as gospel; there are plenty of exceptions all around. I'm just trying to provide some guidelines.
Rob47 May 17th 2009 5:52PM
Yeh it does run noticeably worse when i did experiment and it only stutters when i'm in cities and it has to load numerous models of armor, weapons and mounts. Outside of them its better . I would upgrade my video card but since its an imac i have limited room and cracking it open would void my warranty. Cheers Jurm
And com5 there's a grill at the bottom of the unit i just unscrew it and swap out the RAM chip i'm not sure but i'd say its easier and quicker than a PC.
Dave May 17th 2009 3:55PM
"Why can leatherworkers make mail" is one of the STUPIDEST questions in WoW.
Hi: Hunters and Shamans.
MusedMoose May 17th 2009 6:05PM
I think what the poster meant is "why do leatherworkers make mail when rogues and druids can't use it?"
The original poster has clearly missed that LW continues to get leather patterns all the way up, along with the mail ones it gets. My hunter is leveling LW in Northrend, and making stuff for herself and for my rogue along the way.
Dave May 17th 2009 6:13PM
I know that's what he meant, and I think that's what's so absurd about it. Does nobody recognize that half the classes that start wearing leather use mail later on? Should they only level leatherworking until 40 and then switch to blacksmithing?
Dave May 17th 2009 3:56PM
If you are thinking of dropping blacksmithing you are absolutely retarded.
Currently, the best two-fer combo is Blacksmith and Jewelcrafting if you want to max out your stats. The extra BS sockets combined with JC unique gems gives the best performance benefit of any professions out there. Why anyone would EVER want to drop blacksmithing is beyond me, unless you don't raid at all, or your don't care about being as awesome as you can be. Right now, all the other professions don't have a scaling mechanism. You're going to be at +32 AP/ring for the rest of the expansion with enchanting, you're gonna get that LW bracer enchant that gives you +64 AP over the standard max bracer enchant, etc etc. BS sockets are open-ended and a guy with the 2 extra sockets will be able to put in two more epic gems that can have a higher value than that +64 AP, whenever epic gems come out. Right now yes you're stuck at two 32 AP gems, or the amazing versatility to use whatever you want. It'll only get better.
Plus it's versatile since you can pick whatever extra stats you want. The other professions only have one option for your charater. if you're melee/ranged dps, you have to take the +AP boosts even if your character would benefit more from being able to add more hit rating, crit, haste or whatever else.
Hands down, Blacksmithing is THE best profession for anyone raiding. Jewelcrafting is a close second and works out to be better for most people because it's also profitable. If I didn't have a lot of love for my helicopter I'd probably ditch engineering for it.
Dave May 17th 2009 4:00PM
Oh and I guess to answer the question, I'd like for more people to understand the benefits their professions offer, combined with all professions offering increasing benefits that scale with the difficulty of the content.
I'd like titansteel weapons to have an upgrade path in Ulduar. Oh well. (and continuing).
I'd like an ulduar drop leg armor series. I'd like an ulduar drop for the main useful component of everyone's professions even IF it were a personal-only upgrade. in fact, i'd prefer it that way. Let the emboss armor kits get more powerful, and let the pattern for it drop with a high drop rate off any of the keepers, that way you're probably going to get it if you're making any sort of progress at all.
Professions right now just don't scale, with the exceptions of Blacksmithing (indirectly), and it kinda sucks.
Klangkor May 17th 2009 4:55PM
I like the idea of mount bags. Especially cause when you are dual specced or have a lot of Offspec and in some cases alternate offspec armor your bag space is seriously hosed. We really need something to help us open up those bag spaces so we arent stuck with 12 slots of open space to hold all the crap that drops in a day to day grind or raid....
Badger May 17th 2009 11:29PM
Ah, the lovely Ms. Poisso rounds up the rodeo of weekly whines and witticisms once more. God bless that woman and her superhuman attention span.
I award Noratul mad geek cred for catching the "red shirts" reference. That grisly scene never even rang any bells in my memory, but now the homage seems obvious.
I don't really have the time to read the article on Blizzard's censure - i.e. cold medicine is kicking in - but since the discussion was about Blizzard-inspired titles profiting from their spiritual predecessor, did anyone comment on "Looking For Group," Ryan Sohmer's little side-project? He makes money hand-over-fist selling stuff from that comic. I wouldn't normally waste time bringing it up, but almost all of his readers seem to have forgotten the fact the entire thing started as a "World of Warcraft" fan-comic. (The words "Blood Elf Paladin" were even used to describe the protagonist in its inaugural issues.)
niels May 18th 2009 6:34AM
There is another star trek reverence, that i know off.
If you take the teleporter from Booty Bay to gnomeran, there is a goblin there, named away team.
Maybe there are more funny star trek thing, but i havent noticed them yet.