Insider Trader: Jewelcrafting in the first week of Cataclysm
Insider Trader is a column about professions by Basil "Euripides" Berntsen, who also writes Gold Capped about how to make money using the auction house. Email Basil your questions.
Jewelcrafting in Cataclysm remains one of the most interesting professions in the game, providing resources that everyone needs, as well as offering one of the most flexible (and thereby most appealing to min-maxers) personal performance perks of any profession. Let's take a tour around the profession window, starting with the core ability that everyone thinks of when they think jewelcrafting: gem cutting.
Gem cutting
Take just about any ore, prospect it, and you will get raw gems. Cut these raw gems, and you can add them to sockets in gear, which provide stats. The three prospectable ores in Cataclysm are Obsidium Ore, Elementium Ore, and Pyrite Ore.
Unlike in previous expansions, there is now only one meta gem, the Shadowspirit Diamond. Learning a cut takes four daily tokens, compared to three for the blue-quality cuts, and the the only way I know of to get meta gems is through an alchemist's transmute, again with no cooldown. The real cost is steep, though. Depending on which ore you prospect, you'll need between three and six stacks to make a single transmute, which yields two metas. Your opportunity cost is even higher, however. I can prospect ore day and night on my realm, and while I'll rarely sell a Carnelian, I can't keep Nightstone or Hessonite in stock. The lost profits from not selling these have to be considered but will change from realm to realm.
Procs
The green random enchant pieces you can make will sometimes actually end up blue. These blues are not all that rare, either. I've been seeing them every 10th craft or so. Making items with random stats on them is new, and proccing higher-quality versions of them is also a new mechanic.
Chimera's Eyes
Chimera's Eye is the new JC-only gem. You can buy them with a JC daily quest token, and the cuts also cost JC daily tokens (two, to be specific). There is often a decent market in selling these to other jewelcrafters who may not have the tokens to spare. At this stage, every time you get a daily token and spend it on a recipe of some sort, you have to consider it a loss until you've made back more than the cost of what you'd have made by selling Chimera's Eyes.
Another source of these is the Fire Prism, but it takes too many green gems and has a very low (about one in 10) chance to drop an eye for my tastes. I used prisms for leveling, but it's a fairly expensive point.
And of course, pre-raid gear
One of the rewards for getting to 525 skill is the ability to buy the patterns for some very nice preraid gear. Everyone is going to want these; they're iLvl 346 and well itemized. Unfortunately, the largest component of their cost is based on JC daily quests, so even before you consider the 75 volatiles, these won't come cheap.
Insider Trader takes you behind the scenes of the bustling subculture of professional craftsmen, examining the profitable, the tragically lacking and the methods behind the madness.
Jewelcrafting in Cataclysm remains one of the most interesting professions in the game, providing resources that everyone needs, as well as offering one of the most flexible (and thereby most appealing to min-maxers) personal performance perks of any profession. Let's take a tour around the profession window, starting with the core ability that everyone thinks of when they think jewelcrafting: gem cutting.
Gem cutting
Take just about any ore, prospect it, and you will get raw gems. Cut these raw gems, and you can add them to sockets in gear, which provide stats. The three prospectable ores in Cataclysm are Obsidium Ore, Elementium Ore, and Pyrite Ore.
- Prospecting Obsidium yields a higher volume of green-quality gems, with a very low chance for blue-quality gems. Looks like a stack of Obsidium will average somewhere in the realm of six green-quality gems per stack and a very small quantity of blue-quality gems.
- Elementium gives a lower yield of green-quality gems but a much higher rate of blue gems than Obsidian -- between four and five green-quality gems per stack, as well as an average of about one blue-quality gem per stack.
- Pyrite hasn't been prospected enough yet to know what the raw gem yield will look like; however, we're reasonably certain that there's a 100 percent chance that it will yield between one and three Volatile Earth for every prospect.
- Alicite can be put into a pendant.
- Carnelian can't be turned into a cheap green; however, it is used for Carnelian Spikes.
- Hessonite is in heavy demand because the crafted green it's used for while leveling goes green at 495.
- Jasper is also used for leveling; however, there's also a JC daily quest that calls for it (even more when you proc an unwanted "perfect" gem).
- Nightstone is another one that's in really heavy demand for leveling, as it goes green at 505.
- Zephyrite can't be turned into a green, but there's a JC daily quest for it as well.
Unlike in previous expansions, there is now only one meta gem, the Shadowspirit Diamond. Learning a cut takes four daily tokens, compared to three for the blue-quality cuts, and the the only way I know of to get meta gems is through an alchemist's transmute, again with no cooldown. The real cost is steep, though. Depending on which ore you prospect, you'll need between three and six stacks to make a single transmute, which yields two metas. Your opportunity cost is even higher, however. I can prospect ore day and night on my realm, and while I'll rarely sell a Carnelian, I can't keep Nightstone or Hessonite in stock. The lost profits from not selling these have to be considered but will change from realm to realm.
Procs
The green random enchant pieces you can make will sometimes actually end up blue. These blues are not all that rare, either. I've been seeing them every 10th craft or so. Making items with random stats on them is new, and proccing higher-quality versions of them is also a new mechanic.
Chimera's Eyes
Chimera's Eye is the new JC-only gem. You can buy them with a JC daily quest token, and the cuts also cost JC daily tokens (two, to be specific). There is often a decent market in selling these to other jewelcrafters who may not have the tokens to spare. At this stage, every time you get a daily token and spend it on a recipe of some sort, you have to consider it a loss until you've made back more than the cost of what you'd have made by selling Chimera's Eyes.
Another source of these is the Fire Prism, but it takes too many green gems and has a very low (about one in 10) chance to drop an eye for my tastes. I used prisms for leveling, but it's a fairly expensive point.
And of course, pre-raid gear
One of the rewards for getting to 525 skill is the ability to buy the patterns for some very nice preraid gear. Everyone is going to want these; they're iLvl 346 and well itemized. Unfortunately, the largest component of their cost is based on JC daily quests, so even before you consider the 75 volatiles, these won't come cheap.
Filed under: Economy, Insider Trader (Professions), Cataclysm







Reader Comments (Page 3 of 3)
SpaceGoatPriest Dec 14th 2010 10:12AM
This is a bit of QQ, but besides using the JC only gems that is the only reason I seem to keep JC on my priest. I hated the Wrath model of the only way to get patterns is doing a *single* daily per day (or spend ludicrous amounts of gold on the titanium powder or broken necklace). It seems that same system is in place for Cataclysm, which saddens me. I loved the Wrath enchanting where I could trade shards for pats.
Anyways, is the JC gems still the "BIS" profession or could I dump it for something else I might use more (I like gathering professions :D). I seem to use enchanting 10 times more than JC (because I got lazy and never did the dailies, so I only had the pats I would use).
kalli Dec 23rd 2010 10:07AM
I have a question regarding JC and the upcoming raids. When the cata raids come online, should we expect a surge in demand for blue gems and therefore for the prices to skyrocket? I am an alchemist/JC with mining/herbing alt, so I can make a LOT of profit right now,but I dont wanna sell my gems now if they will become a lot more expensive in just a few weeks time.
Any thoughts would be very much appreciated. :)
madmkh Dec 30th 2010 8:38PM
Today I thought I was going to achieve 525 in jewelcrafting, but was disappointed because I forgot about the draenei racial thing (10 points), so apparantly I am only at 515.
But the thing that makes me really upset is that the only item I can now level up on, is the Fire Prism. Of course I could buy one of the, arguably, useless 546 recipes, which would take 4 days per item to level 1 point.
I can't level up on any of the blue gems now. I think that this is a mistake. I should be able to level up by making, say, 8 of them. This is what I experienced between 515 and 525.
This was not how it was in WotLK expansion. I got to 450 and got my achievement. Now I have to get to 535 instead of 525, in which case, might I add, what kind of racial bonus is this? It is not logical.
Honestly Blizzard I think this is wrong and bugged. Please investigate and I would really like to know what non draenei's experience between 515-525 in terms of what you can use to level up.
Thanks for your advice.