Insider Trader: Most popular crafter gear on the Armory

At the same time, you need to make sure they actually sell. Like the Big Deal said in the Priceline commercial, "Is it wise to allow a perishable item to spoil?" Titansteel and most other reagents aren't perishable, of course, but they sure as heck don't make you money chilling out in your bank. You want those puppies to move.
WoWPopular is a neat site that scans the Armory and pulls down data about the most popular gear, specs, and enchants sitting on extant characters. The Crafter's Tome got together with WoWPopular to put together a list of the popular crafted gear items on the Armory. We can use this information to guess how you should use your reagents to stock the Auction House, minimizing the number of reagents that go to waste by collecting dust.
As you would probably expect, a lot of our best guesses about the most popular classes goes a long way towards showing us what the best selling items probably are. Since everyone and their 5-year-old sister has a death knight, there's a lot of plate items on the most popular crafted gear list. When we're collecting money on the Auction House, an alt who's dressed in all crafting items spends money that's just as valid as any main's cash.
So, let's take a look behind the jump and talk about what the most popular crafter gear is for each profession.
Gems
The most popular gem on the Armory is the Runed Scarlet Ruby. (I'll pause a moment for all your dramatic gasps of shock.) It's almost three times as popular as any other gem cut, presumably because the +19 Spell Power gem is worthwhile to the largest cross-section of characters: any spell caster. (Strength gems only really work out for the three plate-wearing classes, for example, while the rest of the physical types tend to rock raw Attack Power.) A close second to the Runed Scarlet Ruby, according to WoWPopular itself, is the Runed Cardinal Ruby. The epic level pattern is probably slightly less popular because the epic gems are more difficult to come by. There will be proportionally more alts and dusty characters wearing the old blue-quality gem.
The next most popular gems are the Solid cuts of either the Sky Sapphire or the Majestic Zircon. The Sky Sapphire is actually much more popular, but I'm guessing it's for similar reasons as the Scarlet Ruby. It's cheap and easy to get compared to the only slightly better Majestic Zircon. This +Stamina gem probably ranks so high because every tank wants as much Stamina as possible . . . and so do many PvP players. The cross-section makes Stamina a very attractive gem stat. (I guess it'd only be completely useless to those players who never, ever die and are somehow nearly immortal. Note that I'm not advocating Stamina over your usual powergame stats, I'm just saying it's not total slop. Dead rogues do no damage.)
The third most popular gem is the Bold Scarlet Ruby. If you got the materials sitting around, expect its epic counterpart -- the Bold Cardinal Ruby -- to go for similar big bucks.While I pointed above that only three plate classes get the big benefit from Strength. But those three classes are immensely popular. So the sheer raw number of people playing death knights, warriors, and paladins drive the demand for these three gems up through the roof.
Blacksmithing
Blacksmiths get a little lucky in their crafted gear choices, since they get to make everyone's weapon. Healers, DPS, and tanks can all find some good stuff from the blacksmithing trade. Still, I bet you can guess the single most popular blacksmithing item still to this very day, right?
If you guessed the Titansteel Guardian, you win yourself a prize. It can service all the healing classes, as well as providing DPS items for all of their casting DPS specs. It goes both ways, you see. Other than that, the next two popular items for blacksmiths are the Tempered Titansteel Helm and the Spiked Titansteel Helm. I think these two items are so popular because of the relative difficulty of picking up a hat until you have sufficient Emblems of Frost, and folks want the quick headstart on gear. (Get what I did there?) The Spiked hat does have a lot of tasty hit rating, as well, which will make it serviceable to plate DPS classes for a very long time.
All of these items are still good for bootstrapping someone into a raid, and they're relatively quickly and easily made for the cost of their materials. That kind of longevity is going to keep these items relevant, even in the current Icecrown Citadel environment.
Leatherworking and TailoringLeatherworking and Tailoring both have the same benefit: they provide relevant enchants to even the very highest tier of gear, so they haven't dropped off in value at all. I already talked about these items a great deal a few weeks ago, and I don't want to rehash that territory. Check out What to sell, what to sell.
Inscription
In a radical change from normal operating procedure, there are a few very clear winners for most popular glyphs on the Armory. According to The Crafter's Tome, the four most popular glyphs on the Armory are Glyph of Unburdened Rebirth, Glyph of Raise Dead, Glyph of Horn of Winter, and Glyph of Levitate. So there we go. If you're a master of Inscription, you have a good target for the four most popular glyphs to list on the Auction House.
Engineering
Engineering only has so many saleable materials, two of which are the obvious Icecrown arrows and bullets. The Armor Plated Combat Shotgun is still amazingly popular on Armory characters, as is the Heartseeker Scope. While hunters don't seem to still be the default character class for new players or farming characters, they're still very popular. These crafted staples of hunter gear are still valuable to folks who aren't rocking raid gear.
Explanations for Popularity
The first and obvious example for why many of these items are still so popular has to do with the nature of alts and alting. While you want your secondary, tertiary, and even quaternary characters to be in viable, feasible gear, you're not going to go hilt-deep in trying to equip them with the very best items. And there are so many hours in the day!
So if you want a fresh-to-80 character to be viable without running a bunch of old instances and raids, crafted gear can still give you a quick jog up. If you list a Destroyer on the Auction House for 900 gold, for example, that's not a lot of cash to someone who just wants to get their brand new death knight viable as fast as possible.
Secondly, it's easy to forget that there are millions of players in WoW. This could be hard to believe for many of us, but there are people who don't like raids or instances. For those folks, these crafted items will be the best gear they'll see in Wrath. While it might be below an Icecrown raider's preferred iLevel, it's all still pretty awesome to someone who'll barely see the inside of 5-man isntances.
Thanks to The Crafter's Tome and WoWPopular for the data!
Filed under: Insider Trader (Professions)
Patch 5.4 patch notes
Virtual Realms feature revealed
The Proving Grounds are coming
The latest patch 5.4 news





Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
Scunosi Jan 29th 2010 4:58PM
Yeah, quite a few of the links are messed up. Some lead to the item and it's stats, others to the cast that creates the item, and others still to the recipe. Some consistency would be nice.
Bob Jan 29th 2010 2:27PM
Hrm... not sure if I agree too much with the inscription list. Since most of those that are listed are minor glyphs which tend to be an area where each class really has few choices that have any real usefulness. Therefore (as a dual-specced mage) I find myself putting the same minor glyphs in no matter what spec I choose, and consequently only ever needing to purchase the two sets. Once those have been purchased (looking specifically at levitate) for that character, no amount of respecs will ever make me need to buy one again. This may not be universally true, but judging by the fact that they all seem like very similar glyphs, I'm going to guess that it will hold.
Kylenne Jan 29th 2010 3:47PM
The glyph section alone shows how useless sites like the ones in the article generally are. The glyph market in particular varies wildly from server to server. On PvP realms, PvP-oriented glyphs are generally going to sell better than on PvE realms. If your realm has a ton of Paladin tanks, those glyphs are going to sell better than on a realm where Warrior tanks are the most popular. None of the glyphs stated in the article sell for a damn thing on my server.
Every realm is different, and even then every faction's economy is different. Certain mats will go for wildly different prices on either faction depending on ease of access for the faction, or things like faction-specific quests. As a very basic example, Wool tends to sell for two to three times as much Hordeside on most servers, simply because we don't have easy access to the best place to farm stupid quantities of it quickly (Stockades). Before 3.3 and the advent of Triumph badges from Heroics, Crusader Orbs went for extremely obscene amounts of money Horde side on my realm because Horde is vastly outnumbered by Alliance and comparatively few Hordeside guilds had ToC on farm early on (those that did were generally keeping the orbs for crafting purposes). On the crafting side, there's a lowbie Engineering gun that's a hot seller because it's required for a Horde quest in Ashenvale.
The best advice I ever got as a crafter trying to make money was to Know Your Market. Keep your auction add on data up to date and pay close attention to trends in the market, just like irl, and you'll be golden.
Bob Jan 29th 2010 5:10PM
True, the market on your server is the most important thing, but sites like these make a valuable contribution by pointing out broad trends which you may not readily recognize from your AH addon of choice's database. As always, your mileage may vary and you should do your own research too, but generally these give people a good idea of where to start looking.
I certainly don't take issue with the content of this piece in general. For the most part I found it useful. I merely wanted to point out one particular point of analysis that I felt could bear a bit more research.
Jon Do Jan 29th 2010 3:47PM
What is this "+19 Spell Power gem" the author speaks of?
Carson Jan 29th 2010 4:06PM
Is this supposed to be some sort of sarcastic "lolololol people still use non-epic gems??" comment? Or a serious question?
On the off chance that it's the latter, you will find that there is both a mouseover tooltip and a wowhead link on the gem in question in the article, so feel free to read up on it. It's very popular with players who aren't rich enough to drop hundreds of gold on gemming and enchanting every gear upgrade they get (and with the Dungeon Finder, that's a lot of upgrades even for fairly casual players).
Pfooti Jan 29th 2010 3:49PM
There's a difference between popular and profitable, though. Runed Scarlet Rubies, for example, are a pretty saturated market on my server. Yeah, you can make a nice profit if you sell your gem, but there's enough other JCers out there that I'm routinely undercut within an hour of listing my own gems. I've taken to primarily selling raw gems (while they sell for less, they are much more "liquid") and doing cuts for tips whenever I'm in dalaran. Not sure how the relative profit stacks up, but it's a lot simpler. Same deal with the titansteel helms - the listing price on these is such that you want to make sure you don't get undercut at all, or else you're likely going to eat a sizeable portion of your profits.
To be honest, my biggest money-makers are still potions of speed and wild magic, as well as dragonfin angelfish (raw and cooked).
Swingline Jan 29th 2010 4:09PM
While glyph of levitate may be very popular on the armory (I use it in any priest spec), it probably doesn't actually sell that often, since it doesn't get replaced. People like me who are constantly respeccing still (2 is not enough lol) are buying up all the major glyphs like power word: shield or shadow.
stonekiller Jan 29th 2010 4:52PM
I am surprised that Eternal Belt Buckles aren't listed, every class can use them, and they are cheap to make. I am making a fortune off buckles on Anvilmar.
swilcox0405 Jan 29th 2010 4:53PM
What is the bloodelf female wearing in the picture ?
Beruza Jan 29th 2010 4:56PM
i believe it's from a holiday event
swilcox0405 Jan 29th 2010 5:15PM
I gotta get one of those :) DROOL
Beruza Jan 29th 2010 5:33PM
Lovely Black Dress, from the Love is in the Air world event (coming next month)
http://www.wowhead.com/?item=22279#comments
swilcox0405 Jan 29th 2010 6:21PM
@Beruza , you are a gentleman and a scholar , ty sir !
Syngine Jan 30th 2010 10:49AM
I have a very hard time believing that Blacksmiths sell more Titansteel Guardians than Eternal Belt Buckles.
Luke Jan 31st 2010 1:09AM
Meh, Guardians don't sell at all on my server and Eternal Belt Buckles are so heavily undercut that it's impossible to make any money with them. The profit is maybe 1-5g.
artifex Jan 31st 2010 5:51PM
"Eternal Belt Buckles are so heavily undercut that it's impossible to make any money with them. The profit is maybe 1-5g."
So sell a *lot* of them.