WoW Rookie: Save everything, sell everything

It's clean-up time around here. Now that the WoW Rookie Guide is up and running to shuttle you to precisely the information you've been wondering about, we're poking through our older pieces to bring them up to date. (If there are any WoW Rookies whose datedness you find especially galling, shoot me a link at lisa [at] wow [dot] com and I'll prioritize it for updating.) Sometimes during the updating process, I uncover little gems, like this excerpt from Elizabeth Harper's 2007 piece Money-making 101. Be sure to visit the entire article, by the way; it's an outstanding resource to make sure you arrive at your character's more costly milestones with gold in your pockets.
In the meantime, let's talk about what's worth selling and what's not. First of all: keep everything. Make buying or making big bags a priority; after all, you can't make money if you can't bring home loot to sell. If your bags get full, sure, go ahead and destroy grey items (items with their names listed in grey letters). (To destroy an item, left-click it, drag it to an open spot on your screen, and left-click again to drop it; reply "Yes" to the dialog box that pops up.)
The important thing to remember is that virtually everything you pick up has value to someone. (Just look at that hottie at the top of the article in his Crochet Shoulderpads. That's bucc.) Even certain grey items can be desirable to collectors. Let's look at the various quality levels of WoW items and what the levels generally mean to you as a seller.
- Grey – Poor Quality Often derisively referred to as vendor trash, grey items are boring, everyday objects with no special properties. Greys are of no particular use to players, though some enjoy collecting full sets of grey armor (which usually has a unique look). However, even a grey item will have a value to an NPC vendor. Pick up all the greys you have space for, just to resell them. They may not sell for much, but those bits of coin add up!
- White – Common Quality These items have no special properties, either, but they are used as components in trade skills or reagents for spells. These are certainly useful to other players and may sell reasonably well on the Auction House. (Even if they don't sell like hotcakes on the AH, they can still be sold to an NPC vendor for coin.)
- Green – Uncommon Quality These are uncommon items with magical properties. Green items and higher may generally be disenchanted by Enchanters. Greens often sell well on the Auction House, depending on their specific stats. (For example, something with Strength and Spirit won't sell as well as something with Strength and Agility, since the latter stat pairing is more useful to melee combat classes; most players will view the Spirit stat points on the first item as wasted itemization.)
- Blue – Rare Quality Blue items are superior, Rare items with magical properties. These are higher quality than green items and are always worth gold on the Auction House (although many blues are Bind on Pickup).
- Purple – Epic Quality Epics are exactly what they sound like: higher quality again than blues and certainly worth a good bit of gold at the Auction House. You may be lucky enough to find one of these on a random mob, but they're more usually obtained from high-level quests or instances.
- Orange – Legendary Quality Whoa, you've spotted a legendary item! These usually require long, complex quests involving endgame raiding to acquire.
- Gold – Heirloom Quality Heirloom items are Bind to Account items designed for experienced level 80 players to purchase for their lower level alts. Some heirloom items scale to the level of the person wearing them, providing stats equivalent to a Rare quality item.
Filed under: Items, Tips, Features, WoW Rookie, Making money






Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
Malkia Aug 13th 2009 12:07PM
Gothia, most "rookies" might not know enchanters. If you know one, by all means get them to disenchant stuff. Also some greens can vendor for 3-10 gold under level 60. Yes Disenchanting will make you more money, but at the stage where you're still learning how to play, simply vendoring everything will get you everything you need. Repairs Skills Mounts and reagents.
Kid Dexterity Aug 12th 2009 1:28PM
Not sure I completely agree with the "toss greys, then whites" etc. tip for when bag space is low. Consider items that stack vs. items that don't. A stack of greys may sell for more than a single white.
Ahoni Aug 12th 2009 2:00PM
and a grey weapon may sell for more than a stack of white items
Boydboyd Aug 12th 2009 2:00PM
I do not recall many gray items that stack.
Personally, tossing grays and whites isn't my idea of thriftiness. If you're trying to make cash, and your bags are full, then hustle to town and sell. No sense in wasting money when it only takes a few minutes to go sell.
And now that we get mounts at 20, don't give me crap about it being a long run or out of the way. :-)
Jonnie Law Aug 12th 2009 2:12PM
To append to that, Kid D, I find it is usually better to ditch a some whites or stacking grey for something like a grey 2-h mace or plate helm as they vendor for quite a bit, normally
Lightsource Aug 13th 2009 7:49AM
Well thanks to the new functionality blizzard has implemented you can automatically see which one is worth more.
Bri Aug 12th 2009 1:31PM
If you do have to destroy greys to make room, patch 3.2 added the vendor price to the tooltip. This will help you decide which greys to destroy or which to keep.
Vandersveldt Aug 12th 2009 1:43PM
Was wondering how long it would take someone to point this out...
Jafari Aug 12th 2009 1:31PM
Personally, I pretty much vendor any white items that drop off of mobs. The only white items I sell in the AH are from gathering (skins and herbs).
Just not worth losing the auction house deposit on the white drops, in my opinion.
Bronwyn Aug 12th 2009 1:39PM
You really have to take into account that it depends a lot on the white item. For example, the mini pet drops are white items. Flasks of Mojo are white items that sell very well as well. In my experience it's best to hang on to a white item and check out the AH first before vendoring.
Or get auctioneer and scan regularly so you can see the pricing of it right on the tooltip.
Jafari Aug 12th 2009 2:57PM
You're right, many white items do have value. What I was saying though, is that it is more the rule that white items are vendor trash than not. Auctioneer does help show the difference.
I only mention anything because when I was a new player, I tried to auction a bunch of stuff like murloc eyes and of course ended up just paying the auction house deposits. It just always seems misleading to me when (like in the article) people say that white items are *as a rule* good for auctioning, when most really just aren't.
Batleth Aug 12th 2009 1:31PM
One of things I've come to realize is that the more you stay from buying at the AH, the better off you'll be. On my first character, every time I would ding, I'd run to the AH and try to see if I could get any upgrades for my gear. This is a huge waste of money. On my second, I learned the lesson. While leveling, only SELL at the AH....try to buy nothing at all, unless its absolutely necessary!
Ahoni Aug 12th 2009 2:04PM
I agree with avoiding the auction house. Big waste of money for items that will be replaced in a few levels anyway. The only exception I make is for weapons for melee dps classes. Melee dps classes (rogue, warrior, enhance shammy, ret pally) rely too much on weapon DPS to be running around with old weapons. My guideline is if your weapon is 8-10 levels beneath your level, it is time to buy one. Other than that, stay away from the AH.
Jay Aug 12th 2009 1:32PM
I learned a while back that most Northrend grey weapons and armor sell for at least one gold. Heck, even a full stack of fur clothing scraps(?) will sell for close to one gold.
The 3.2 change that allows you to see the vendor price of an item without needing an addon is fantastic. There are addons that will automatically dump the lowest-value grey trash from your bags when they start getting full (I have never used them, so I can't recommend one in particular).
Croz Aug 12th 2009 1:37PM
I strongly recommend that anyone subscribing to this philosophy pick up the JunkSell addon. With a single click click at any vendor you can unload all those grey items and any other items you have tagged as useless.
Boydboyd Aug 12th 2009 2:02PM
Or, get the addon "Junk!" and you don't even have to click a button.
Show up to a vendor and it will automatically sell your junk. You can even make white items auto-sell by adding in a simple filter.
Condor Aug 12th 2009 1:38PM
Often gray armor and especially weapons will sell for a lot. There are a lot of addons out there that will tell you what things sell for.
Especially at low levels, there's a lot of "Crappy Animal Part"s like http://www.wowhead.com/?item=12223 that are white because they're used in one Cooking or Leatherworking recipe but vendor for 4c where a gray 2H Axe http://www.wowhead.com/?item=1512 might sell for 100x that.
If my bags are full I always try to hang on to the gray weapons and armor to vendor.
Bronwyn Aug 12th 2009 1:40PM
And for vendor pricing you don't even need an addon anymore- Blizzard's Default UI does that now.
Laynne Aug 12th 2009 1:59PM
I agree with pretty much everything said here. However, sometimes there's some cool grey items out there - like the Steamy Romance Novels (they're hilarious). And sometimes you can't guess a price from the item quality. You can get a porcelain bell from the Northrend fishing daily that's worth 100 gold. There's another grey item you can get that's 50 gold. But almost always greys are pretty worthless (relatively; a grey in Dragonblight will be worth a lot more than a grey in Elwynn Forest). It's nice that the vendor prices are added to the tooltips now, for those who don't have an auction house addon.
evanfardreamer Aug 12th 2009 2:07PM
Quick note about tossing stuff- go with dropping food first, as it is almost always less valuable than any gray you pick up. This is especially pronounced at lower levels.