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 3 of 3)
Syme Aug 12th 2009 2:13PM
Ah, gray armor sets. My rogue has the complete Crochet set.
Gray and white gloves are also useful for certain glove enchantments, like skinning or fishing.
mark Aug 12th 2009 2:21PM
Also, I do not think anyone here has mentioned this yet.. Buy the biggest bags you can as early as possible. Now a days, you can pickup 10-12 and 16 slot bags somewhat cheap (as the big money goes into the large 18 slot bags). Even if you can only afford to buy 8 slot bags.. fill all of your bag slots, so you can go longer without having to stop and sell.
For thoes new players, if you mine or herb, there are special mining and herb bags you can buy that are much larger than standard bags, which allow you to put minning or herb only items.
If the objective is to earn money, get gathering professions. Raw materials sell for much more than their processed products. If you are a miner, and you have a stack of copper ore, check the AH price on copper ore vs copper bar. Sometimes you are going to be more profiitable by selling it as ore (because lazy people want to use the smelting to ding their mining lvling).
Hope this helps.
Jennifer Aug 12th 2009 2:26PM
Over all, a great article, but I would toss in a few extra tidbits.
1. I don't kow if the default Blizzard UI does this, but I know that there are a lot of addons that will tell you how much an item will vendor for. This is useful because you'd be surprised which items will sell for a silver piece when others only go for a few copper.
2. Something else to keep in mind, though is ITEMS THAT STACK. If I'm trying to decide between throwing out a grey pair of shoulder pads that sell for 6c and an old wolf's tooth that sells for 3c, I might just throw out the shoulder pads, if I know that I'm going be hunting wolves for a bit longer. Just something to keep in mind.
JKWood Aug 12th 2009 3:40PM
Blizzard's default UI now shows vendor prices on all items, and it even calculates the cost of the current stack for you.
Melvyl Aug 12th 2009 2:42PM
I was passing through Darkshore on a Priest Alt who was wearing Heirloom shoulders the other day. I had a Night Elf Hunter ask me where I had gotten them. I explained what Heirlooms were and that they were Bind on Account and what that meant.
He then asked me if I would sell them to him.
Boydboyd Aug 12th 2009 2:44PM
Win.
Egrep Aug 17th 2009 2:09PM
I use this macro to sell all of the grey items in my inventory. Unlike an addon, it's guaranteed to not use any CPU when you're not using it. And this one's been working for me since vanilla.
Note: Make sure to ONLY use this when the vendor window is open. Otherwise it will try to equip/use the grey items in your inventory.
Note 2: You may have to play with the line endings once you've pasted it in WoW. As in, remove them and replace them with spaces.
/script for bag = 0,4,1 do for slot = 1, GetContainerNumSlots(bag), 1 do local name = GetContainerItemLink(bag,slot); if name and string.find(name,"ff9d9d9d") then DEFAULT_CHAT_FRAME:AddMessage("Selling "..name); UseContainerItem(bag,slot) end; end; end
Dreadskull Aug 12th 2009 4:36PM
Was I the only one thinking of a 300 quote that could be twisted for this article's title?
"Leave the corpses nothing! And sell to vendors, EVERYTHING!
Apeche Aug 12th 2009 5:03PM
On my alts I love instances, but its kind of hard to just pop back into town to clear some bag space. The only thing I can say is keep up with selling your crap. Running out of junk to destroy to make room for the drops sucks.
artifex Aug 12th 2009 5:25PM
People wonder why 20-slot bags cost so much more than 16-slot bags, etc.
This is why! Yes, they seem overly expensive until you've gotta dump stacks of expensive mats in a dungeon.
If I make friends with a newbie&lowbie I almost always try to load him or her up with netherweave bags at the least; as an 80 the cloth mats are just sitting around on my bank alt, so it only costs me thread. But it sure helps them out.
deluded spider Aug 12th 2009 5:26PM
Whenever people call me a "loot-whore" for looting every single thing in dungeons, I just ask them how much gold they have, and it's always less than I do.
I've used AutoProfitX and SellJunk. AutoProfit doesn't seem to work for me anymore, so I use the latter. They both function exactly the same way, button's even in the same place. I recommend whichever one will work right for you.
Also, ALWAYS have a gathering profession on at least one character, and make sure they have big bags to carry all that stuff in. (I'm also a Tailor.) When there's no ore to get, I fill my bags with greys. My Lock has always had more money than she can spend, even supplying gold to all 8 of my alts.
Not kidding, I made over 90 gold the other day just selling a bunch of greys after doing Hodir dailies. That stuff adds up.
Krick Aug 12th 2009 6:13PM
I used to use an addon for wow called "SellValue" made by CapnBry...
http://capnbry.net/wow/
One of the lesser known features was that you could type /li to bring up a "list of items" that were currently in your bags and could be sold. The best part was that you could sort the list by price. It also had an option to show prices for stacks.
I used this mod all the time when I was farming and ran out of bag space. Just bring up the list and sort by price ascending to see what item(s) to toss.
It would have been even better if it could have hooked into auctioneer and shown auction prices as well.
Alas, it hasn't been updated since Sept 2007 and no longer works with WoW.
...
Krick
http://www.tankadin.com
uncaringbear Aug 12th 2009 7:26PM
I like to hold on to the high-value grey items that you can obtain in Northrend. Many of those are from the daily fishing quest, and can vendor for 15g to 100g. The reason I keep these, is that they are excellent gifts to give to friends or guildies, especially when they have done something nice for you for free, such as an enchant, glyph, etc. Quite often, they refuse to accept any gold from me, as a tip, so I'll follow up later by sending them one of my grey items in the mail as a token of appreciation. I've never had one returned!
xiani Aug 12th 2009 9:29PM
I'm not so sure about the 'keep & sell' everything advice any more, at least at the very start when bag space is ludicrously tight.
If it's your first & only character on a server, the amount of gold you get from random grey & white vendor trash is now utterly insignificant compared to what you can auction metal, herbs & skins for, at least at low levels. 1 stack of copper alone can easily get you 4g, which is way more that you make from every quest and random vendor trash drop all the way from level 1-20.
And the time spent running (so slowly...) back & forth between quest zones & vendors really adds up at low levels, especially as you need most of the space for the quest items. You're probably better off just questing, ignoring any junk and getting bigger bags and your mount as soon as possible, which makes life much easier.
You should still definitely get 2 gathering profs though, this is more true than ever, and mine/skin/pick everything you find!
Also, as a handy tip for completely new players, save all the linen cloth you find, and when you get to a city ask (nicely!) in trade channel for a tailor to make you some linen bags - they'd have to have a heart of stone to refuse, everyone remembers how awful the starting bag situation is.
styopa Aug 13th 2009 8:43AM
1) First thing on your list should be bigger bags, so you throw NOTHING away. Don't beg for gold in trade chat (because then my character would kill yours, if I could, faction or not). Ask if anyone has old bags that they don't need. I know I've got a few 10s and 12s lying around by the time I've gotten 16s from HFP, and I'm far more likely to give them away than hand you gold.
2) don't toss greys blindly - even if you ARE full, don't throw away big-gold greys like grey functional weapons - they typically sell for 1+ gold by the time you're in the 50+ zones.
3) get gathering - mining, herbing, skinning are your professions of choice (mining is probably the best, but is also the most obvious). Gather EVERYTHING you see, even if it's out of you're way. You'll be astonished when that stack of 20 peacebloom sells for 10g, lol.
4) every mailbox you're at, sell every gray item and send everything not a) soulbound, b) critically needed to your bank alt to put on the AH
5) get an AH/bank alt, use them heavily. Get the UI addon Auctioneer and let it scan the AH at least 1/month to update prices. Use it for batch-selling all the commodities quickly. Sell greens for CHEAP, or you'll waste precious $$ reposting them. I typically toss them up for 1g higher than the auto-selected min bid. Yes, you could probably get more but that involves reposting (taking time and money) or looking carefully (taking time).
6) every quest you do, if the gear is not a significant upgrade, take the plate, it sells for the most. If no plate, take the wand or otherwise highest dps item, they sell for the most.
Using these, and playing only about 8-12 hours a week (and NOT spending any particular time grinding gold - that's too boring for me), my lvl 73 cashcow alt has dual specced, bought flight back when it was 1k AND still has well over 3k gold.
Tirris Aug 16th 2009 5:29PM
Here you are wrong. Blue items are often not worth much at all. Take for example a level 77 blue. Chances are almost every player will have gotten something comparable to it from quests, and nobody at 80 wants 77 blues. Also, level 70 BoE things are useless if they are from BC. WotLK greens > a lot of BC things.