Arcane Brilliance: Level 80 mage gearing roadmap, part 1

Welcome to another installment of Arcane Brilliance, the weekly mage column of choice for mages who hate warlocks, warlocks who secretly want to be mages, and everybody else who likes their mage discussion sprinkled lightly with random and inappropriate references to Lost, Flock of Seagulls, Lufia, and KFC's new "Double Down Sandwich," or as I like to call it, "population control." I mean, seriously? Who greenlit this? "I have an idea, guys. Let's offer a bacon and cheese sandwich where we remove the bun and replace it with two slabs of fried chicken! Ooh, and then, instead of offering drink sizes, let's work on a way to allow customers to hook themselves directly into our soda machines intravenously. They'll be mainlining Dr. Pepper! Because if there's anything America needs more than ever during these tough economic times, it's more ways for people to kill themselves via food!"
Lately, a lot of you have been asking for gearing advice for the new level 80 mage. It seems that a good number of people (myself included) have been making good use of this pre-Cataclysm lull to level their alts, and I'm proud to learn that many of you have chosen to level a mage as one of your alts. For many of you, the gearing landscape probably looks very alien when compared to the way it looked when you were gearing up your last character. New opportunities abound, with the promise of epic gear dangling around every bend. What path should you take?
Fear not, young magelings. This week, Arcane Brilliance has decided to draw you a roadmap. Now, a warning: Arcane Brilliance can't draw. Seriously, when Arcane Brilliance was 5, he drew a picture of a "horse" for his mother. As horse pictures go, it was apparently quite disturbing. Arcane Brilliance had to spend some time at a hospital for "special" children, and mom started drinking heavily. So, you're going to have to use your imaginations about the "map" part of the roadmap. It's mostly going to consist of words, something Arcane Brilliance can produce largely without upsetting medical professionals. Largely.
So you've hit level 80 with your mage. Your gear slots are likely filled with a random assortment of quest rewards, heirloom gear that suddenly doesn't look so good anymore, and stuff that dropped in normal Nexus ten levels ago. You'd like to start running some of the level 80 content, but your DPS still hasn't cracked a thousand. You're not geared enough for a trip to heroic Ramparts, let alone heroic Trial of the Champion. So what do you do? Where do you begin?
The lure of the random dungeon finder is strong. It is truly a wonderful thing, but before you jump into it, you need to be able to pull your weight. Nobody likes to hop into a random heroic and discover that he's in there with a mage who's wheezing out 800 DPS. Don't be that guy.
Luckily, you can begin improving your DPS right away. The first step is to begin replacing your current gear with as many item level 200ish blues and purples as possible. There are a few quick sources:
1. Profession loot
If you have access to money (and really, after leveling through Northrend, you should have a couple thousand gold just sitting in your bags even if this is your first character) you can immediately improve your gear a bit by simply perusing the auction house or finding somebody willing to craft what you want.
- Tailoring provides the most bang for your buck: you can usually pick up the Ebonweave Robe and Gloves, as well as the Deathchill Cloak for a few hundred gold.
- Engineers can make Visage Liquification Goggles, but you must actually be an engineer to use them.
- Jewelcrafters can make you a Titanium Spellshock Necklace or Ring, though they tend to be pricey, and if you happen to actually be a Jewelcrafter, you can also create yourself a nice trinket, the Figurine - Twilight Serpent.
- Alchemists can make themselves a Mercurial Alchemist's Stone, which is a pretty sweet starting trinket.
- If you're using a 1-handed weapon, Inscription makes a couple of nice off-hand frill items: Iron-bound Tome and Faces of Doom.
- Blacksmiths make a fine dagger, though this will definitely be expensive on most servers: Titansteel Spellblade.
2. Faction gear and BoE blues
I'm going to assume that after questing through Northrend, you haven't hit exalted with any of the major Wrath factions, but you do have some reputation with a few of them. It's reasonable to believe you may have access to a few relatively cheap gear upgrades upon hitting 80.
- Ebon Blade - Revered will net you Sterile Flesh-Handling Gloves.
- Wyrmrest Accord - Revered will allow you to purchase the Ancestral Sinew Wristguards.
- Kirin Tor - Revered will get you a very nice dagger: Flameheart Spell Scalpel.
- Grinding daily quests at the Argent Tournament can also net you some entry-level gear and even epics, should you save enough Champion's Seals. It's not the most effective way of getting gear these days, but if you've got the seals lying around, maybe a piece can fill a slot for you. For instance, 25 seals can net you this. Here's a list of the mage-worthy items available there: Tourney loot.
3. Dungeon Drops
Once you've made whatever immediate upgrades you choose to make, it's time to move on to gearing through drops. You'll be at the mercy of the random number generator, but by going on just a few runs through the level 80 normal dungeons, you should be able to snag enough item level 187 blues to safely start jumping into random heroics. They aren't going to be the greatest items ever, and will be swiftly replaced the moment you start entering heroic dungeons, but if your DPS still isn't up to par or your funds are limited, the level 80 nomral dungeons are going to be your best source of loot. Make sure, if possible, to grab the dungeon quests for these places before you go. Some of them are chains, but are worth your time because they guarantee you a nice item level 187 piece simply for completing the instance. In addition, if you queue for the random dungeon finder, you're also getting two emblems of triumph per day. More on those later.
I won't list all of the available drops here. Just head into a random dungeon, then queue normally for Halls of Stone, Utgarde Pinnacle, Halls of Lightning, and even--shudder--The Oculus. Get as many drops as you need, then move on.
4. Trial of the Champion
The goal in all of this gearing is simply to get your DPS up to a level that will allow you to contribute in random heroics. Oh, and also this place. Generally, if you can consistently put out something in the neighborhood of 1300-1500 DPS, you won't be considered dead weight. Granted, there's absolutely nothing stopping you from simply jumping into random heroics and normal ToC, or even the normal Icecrown 5-man instances immediately upon hitting 80. You can hop in there, and hopefully the rest of your group outgears the instance and can carry you through to the finish. They'll resent you, of course, and all you'll be doing is reaping the benefit of their efforts, but it's quite doable.
The tempation to do so is sizable, to be sure. Why waste time in these normal dungeons, or in buying gear I'll be replacing soon anyway, when I can just hit Forge of Souls and grab me some quick epics? I'm not telling you you're wrong, but you're wrong.
Do just a little of the work yourself. You may gear up a bit more slowly. But you won't be a dick.
Once you're in the 1300-1500 DPS range, you're at the very low end of the spectrum for usefulness in the first best place to go to grab epics quickly at 80: normal Trial of the Champion. Feel free to hop on in there and start rolling need on everything with spellpower on it.
The loot to watch for:
- Abyssal Rune
- Belt of the Churning Blaze
- Brilliant Hailstone Amulet
- Leggings of the Haggard Apprentice
- Bindings of the Wicked
- The Confessor's Binding
- Signet of Purity
- Handwraps of Surrendered Hope
- Mantle of Inconsolable Fear
5. Random heroics
Once you're ready to head into ToC, you're also ready to start farming random heroics. You'll want to do this at least once per day, so that you get your daily pair of Frost Emblems. Those will become very important in not too long. Random heroics offer several incentives:
- Emblems of Frost (twice daily)
- Emblems of Triumph (usually around 2-4 per run, depending on the number of bosses in the instance and how many of those bosses your group decides to actually bother with, plus two bonus emblems for finishing the instance)
- Blue item level 200 drops (every boss)
- Purple item level 200 drops (only the final boss of each instance)
- Woven Bracae Leggings - Halls of Lightning
- Wand of Ahn'kahet - Old Kingdom
- Skirt of the Old Kingdom - Old Kingdom
- Staff of Draconic Combat - Oculus
- Cuffs of Winged Levitation - Oculus
- Rod of the Fallen Monarch - Azjol-Nerub
- Sash of the Servant - Azjol-Nerub
- Azure Cloth Bindings - Violet Hold
- Band of Guile - Culling of Stratholme
- Annhylde's Ring - Utgarde Keep
- Gloves of Glistening Runes - Nexus
- Girdle of Bane - Utgarde Pinnacle
- Overlook Handguards - Drak'Tharon Keep
Next week, we'll assume you've spent a nice full day farming emblems and upgrading slots with gear drops. Come back for a discussion of what to begin spending those emblems on, and for a detour into the Icecrown 5-mans and beyond. Part 2, next week!
Filed under: Mage, Analysis / Opinion, (Mage) Arcane Brilliance






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
raav May 15th 2010 12:08PM
Cool read, just spent the better part of two weeks gearing my fresh mage, at 5200+ GS (i know sorry for the GS thing, but it's the benchmark nowadays) ready for icc10 now.
i just ran random dungeons all day long :D
Hoggersbud May 15th 2010 12:20PM
Don't be sorry for mentioning it, that's the sort of thing that the anti-GS crowd wants you to feel guilt about.
Be sorry for those people who go into a frothing rage at the mere existence of it.
Nodonn May 15th 2010 12:33PM
You need a way to convey the general level of your gear to us.
You could've added up all your item levels but that would've told us jack.
There's nothing wrong with gearscore.
aramis May 15th 2010 1:31PM
Raav - GS is a good tool when you use it properly, as you're doing now. You're simply getting a feel for where you're at in terms of gear, but are not dependent on it, and that's a good thing. Just be weary that your score does not reflect skill nor does it cater to your playstyle and spec. With this in mind, GS will be a good tool in your belt to GUIDE you in a good direction.
Hoggersbud - those of us who hate GS don't hate the addon itself, but rather PEOPLE who STRESS it's meaning as if to say we are sucky players if our GS isn't 5000+. It's those people (and there are a LOT of them...you know who they are: "LFG VOA 10/25 PST GS and Achievement"...) who happen to be ignorant in how to actually use the GS number that cause most of the rest of us to hate its existence. As I explained to Raav - it's a GREAT tool if you understand it's use and the the meaning behind the actual number.
Friday_Knight May 15th 2010 1:33PM
I don't fault people for using gearscore to convey a general level of where your gear is at. That's what the addon is used for. Getting a GENERAL idea of where someone's gear is at.
There are some problems when people adhere to strictly to it. Gearscore does not take all factors into account. What if I have a trinket that is lower ilevel than one I'm currently using but is much better for my class/spec? Overall my gear has gotten better, but my gearscore will drop because it doesn't account for things like that. It also doesn't account for some players being just plain terrible. Gearscore doesn't save your ass if you stand in the fire.
Some of the community are using gearscore correctly; to get a quick at-a-glance idea of where someone's gear is at. Too many are using it as a crutch thinking that everything they need to know about a player is right there in that color-coded 4 digit number.
Big Shoe May 15th 2010 3:06PM
As a raid leader, I agree that the Gearscore add-on is not evil in and of itself, but the huge number of people using it improperly make me wish it (and they) would just go away. Here's a sad but true example.
A few months ago, I was asked to come into an ICC 25 raid as melee DPS, and the raid leader asked to meet up in Dal so she could check my GS. I happened to be in my main spec tanking gear at the time, with a GS of around 5750 or so. She was impressed. I told her that she was looking at my tanking gear, and then switched to my DPS gear set, which I was still building. The GS on that set was around 5000 or so, but it was all iLevel 232 and up, more than good enough to DPS the run. I was horrified when she asked "Can you mix some tank pieces into that set so your GS is higher, or just DPS in your tanking gear? If you do that, we can take you." I refused, and told her as tactfully as possible that she should not be leading raids or blindly using GS as a guide. I still got into the run and everything went quite well, but that stands as an example of how NOT to use the GS add-on.
Snuzzle May 15th 2010 4:16PM
Except that telling me your GS is 5200 means nothing to me. I know vaguely that 5k + is "good" simply because of all the "LFM xyz raid need 5k+ GS" but other than that... nope. To the anti-GS crowd, or those who simply choose not to use it like me, you could just as easily said you have a purple monkey dishwasher GS.
Now, telling me you have mostly 232s, or half T9/ half T8.... that is something EVERYONE can understand. That's honestly my main beef with GS. People are spewing out these numbers or asking for mine and I don't know without installing a mod or going off to a website to plug myself in. It sucks.
Hoggersbud May 15th 2010 9:19PM
Aramis:
>Hoggersbud - those of us who hate GS don't hate the addon itself, but rather PEOPLE who STRESS it's meaning as if to say we are sucky players if our GS isn't 5000+. It's those people (and there are a LOT of them...you know who they are: "LFG VOA 10/25 PST GS and Achievement"...) who happen to be ignorant in how to actually use the GS number that cause most of the rest of us to hate its existence. As I explained to Raav - it's a GREAT tool if you understand it's use and the the meaning behind the actual number.<
Um, I was talking specifically about the people who hate GS to the point where somebody like Raav would feel obliged to disavow it. Yes, they do hate the existence of the addon, and yes, they do try to shame folks into not using it or mentioning it. Don't be fooled, they're not coming up with problems they want fixed, they aren't objecting to somebody's misuse of GS, they're just ranting against it without any acknowledgement of the value to be found in it.
And you should pity them, not try to defend them.
Snuzzle:
>Now, telling me you have mostly 232s, or half T9/ half T8.... that is something EVERYONE can understand. That's honestly my main beef with GS. People are spewing out these numbers or asking for mine and I don't know without installing a mod or going off to a website to plug myself in. It sucks.<
Meh, I know plenty of people who have trouble understanding the concept of tier gear. Might as well be complaining that they use the metric system in Canada and you don't know whether 22 degrees is hot or cold...
Hoggersbud May 16th 2010 11:32AM
I wonder which anti-GS person is fuming enough to waste time marking down my posts here.
Not even willing to articulate an objection. Sad really.
Hoggersbud May 15th 2010 12:17PM
No mention of Honor Gear? Sure it's got Resilience on it, and excess stamina but it can be bought and it can fill a slot with something decent.
Chevela May 15th 2010 2:14PM
PvP gear is a waste of time if your goal is PvE end content, unless you happen to have a large stash of honor lying around. Best to grind your heroics and emblems first.
I have a mage I got to 5k gs in a week after ding, getting lucky with some dops and rolls, crafting a few higher end (ToC patterns). Gearing up is the next step of levling after level cap and I always have fun seeing how fast I can get geared up to a respectable point/as far as I can go without raiding the big stuff.
smack May 15th 2010 3:04PM
@ Chevela
Seriously?
Can you name a better caster cloak deal than http://www.wowhead.com/item=51332 because I sure cannot think of one. In fact, for caster dps'rs, i cant even think of a non-raid cloak that compares to this one...and that includes the (poorly itemized) frost emblem cloaks. 52k honor is a freaking steal but it gets even cheaper if you've been running instances as you can exchange your frost shards for wintergrasp commendations which convert to honor.
Look, I get the fact that, as a general rule PVE gear > PVP gear for pvp, but by no means should you hobble yourself (and your dps) by strictly adhering to such generalizations.
Monion May 15th 2010 3:06PM
Actually, Hoggersbud has a point. Depending on how many dungeons you ran leveling to 80, you may have a small stash of Stone Keeper's Shards, which can be converted directly into gear or into honor for gear. It won't be a ton, but it might be enough to get you a piece. Better than a kick in the pants, anyway.
smack May 15th 2010 3:07PM
LOL, meant to say: "as a general rule PVE gear > PVP gear for pve..."
Hoggersbud May 15th 2010 8:58PM
>PvP gear is a waste of time if your goal is PvE end content, unless you happen to have a large stash of honor lying around. Best to grind your heroics and emblems first.<
Um...if your ultimate goal is PvE end content, that's all well and good, but this post was clearly including stages before that. So that's a rather silly objection. Besides a large stash of honor? That's really easy to get. Especially if your faction is dominant in WG, but even if not, you can get a few BGs done and build up enough honor to fill a slot or two with no trouble.
Boobah May 15th 2010 10:22PM
And don't forget, Wintergrasp Commendations are Bind-on-Account; it's the one way to have one character buy another's bind-on-pickup gear. Get your main to do the Wintergrasp weeklies while you're leveling the alt, then convert the shards to commendations and mail 'em off.
It's also useful for twinking out your alts at low levels with gear from the battleground quartermasters.
Pocky May 15th 2010 12:17PM
Good info, particularly the lists of gear to look for. Much appreciated!
I'm just wondering if I'm doing something wrong though, because, at level 73, as a Fire mage, I'm putting out 1600-1800 dps in normal instances. Perhaps I should be throttling myself to only be doing the 800 you mention in your article? ;)
Burn, baby burn!
Boobah May 15th 2010 10:39PM
Heh. Even leveling hybrids can crack 1000 DPS at 70, much less a pure like a mage.
messiahxi May 17th 2010 10:10AM
Hell, I'm doing 1200-1500 single target dps on my 72 frost mage. Granted, that does depend on fireball and deep freeze procs, but those tend to flow pretty freely. I can't imagine that I'll doing less than 2k the moment I hit 80.
Roland May 15th 2010 12:18PM
Nice Warlock loot guide.
But it's kind of been done, no?
http://www.wow.com/2009/01/10/arcane-brilliance-gearing-your-mage-up-for-naxx/
http://www.wow.com/2009/12/19/arcane-brilliance-gearing-up-after-the-glorious-patch-3-3/