Wednesday, January 27, 2010
ALTogether Undecided
After getting back into World of Warcraft sometime around last Thanksgiving and telling myself I was going to start fresh, level strong and hard, and make it to 80 -- I have failed. I rushed my druid to about level 65 and I practically died there. I got sick of casting wrath so whats the most sensible thing to do when you have a druid?! Respec!? No... I decided to roll a mage (I don't know why... I could have become a rogue without starting back at level 1). And the best news about that is when I hit 60 on my mage, I rerolled again and now have a level 13 dwarf hunter steadily battling her way to the Outland... who knows what I will choose next.
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
The Ironforge Airport
Have any of you ever been running around Ironforge possibly dueling and possibly have seen this early ghostland on the map? Well I know I did and I was extremely curious after I found out the tunnel to it was blocked (confirmed) with snow and there were no quests to be obtained there. Well, being the explorer I am, I found a way into it. It almost makes you almost think the Explorer achievement should be for things like this and not just silly continents.







The following is a small tutorial on how to get to the wonderful Ironforge Airport and how to find some eerie things on top of Ironforge. Things you will need are as follows:
- A mage or a level priest with slowfall or levitate
- Preferably a mount
To begin, run to the front of Ironforge as shown below and follow the trail also shown (straight forward from my character down below):


Hop the little safety rail in place and pop slowfall/levitate, mount back up, and jump to here:

Take a left once you land on the ridge and keep climbing up and up and up. Eventually if you keep trying to climb to the highest point, you will come across (the middle of IF on your map) an Ironforge banner with a lone guard protecting it:

Now from here, if you want, you may start popping slowfall, mounting (and then using it every time before its time is up, doesn't matter if you aren't mounted after the first jump) and you can jump slightly towards the left of the flag where it is clear no hills are and you can actually fly all the way to the wetlands like so:

But if you want to, you may drop from the IF banner towards the right and continue on working you way closer and closer to the Airstrip by judging your distance on the map. It will be clear you are near the right place when you come to a huge field of grey stone surrounded by snow. Pop slowfall on that and jump down. Congratulations! You are now in the airstrip. I didn't screenshot this portion because you should experience the abandoned helicopters, or the random pet trainer standing in the middle of a lake with two friends. Make sure to check out the tunnel blocked with snow, and the tower whose steps were raised by the devs so they cannot be manually jumped (hence the mount to jump it). And if you really want to, run to the way south of the airstrip and enjoy the instantly spawning trolls that come in waves (as soon as you kill one, another pops up). They also drop good loot, I got some greens (after only killing about 4 waves) and the trolls are only levels 3-7. I cannot help but figure that is why the GMs used to instantly kill you if you attacked the trolls. The feeling of being in an abandoned Dev playground is quite an eerie feeling.
Enjoy exploring! I'm going back for another look!
Tuesday, December 29, 2009
So it has been a while....
And Anwa (now renamed to Cëlle) has hit level 65 and is enjoying being a balance druid in the battlegrounds (she doesn't care the forums says balance druids are bad... cause she does pretty well). Just wanted to leave a quick update so people didn't think the blog was dead!
Saturday, December 5, 2009
Noob
I was recently browsing the World of Warcraft forums when I came across a post talking about everyones most "noob" moments when they first started playing the game. Here is a short compilation of some of my more "noob" moments:
- Not training healing spells cause my health bar already regenerated itself
- Getting lost (for two days) in Darkshore cause I didn't know about the map yet
- Buying strength gear for my priest at first cause I thought strength = carry more items
- Taking over a month to hit level 10 on a warlock
- Crying when I was 10 because the leper gnomes were killing me before I could leave
- Talking in GC asking for a portal to Booty Bay
- Telling everyone I was a twink when I had 4 green pieces
- Falling down the endless waterfall in Teldresil and trying to jump back down to my corpse
Well, thats all I have for now. Leave any comments of your noob moments (:
Monday, November 30, 2009
Leveling Through PvP - Great Fun?
Having hit level 13 the previous night before, I was anxious to get Anwa leveled up some more before I had to head back to school after Thanksgiving break. I logged back on to a seemingly deserted Darkshore. Feeling a little bit isolated, I called up the /who command to see who was in the area. Well... levels 10-20 it was just "Anwa Druid 13". Apart from the level 80 thats usually there sitting in front of the flight master, Anwa was seemingly deserted (which seems to be becoming the case in the night elf areas). Slightly depressed, Anwa struck out leveling diving to the depths to retrieve packages from sunken ships, she nearly cleared out the entire Highborn population (luckily a nearby quest target distracted her), she dismantled the nearby demon-worshiping-grells and she was about two bars from hitting 16. Heading over to the Blackwood Windtalkers and Pathfinders, Anwa began pulling targets away and bashing away at them (and occasionally spamming wrath when her small mana pool permitted it). Unfortunately, these new found enemies began to give her some grief not just because of their running away habits (which can be hard for a druid to end in feral form) but also because the Windtalkers had a habit of casting Gust of Wind (immobilizing and rendering a target useless) while running to get friends. None the less, she downed those beasts and got a nice dagger and leather drop for her efforts. By now she had hit 16 and received travel form -- and that can only mean one thing. Lets go try out Warsong Gultch.
After waiting for only about a minute, Anwa entered her first Warsong Gultch match. The alliance put up a valiant fight (/end sarcasm) and the horde walked away with a quick 3/3 victory. I have to admit, I felt more than a bit frustrated at the fact I was taking the time to heal hunters who fought with Aspect of the Cheetah on and rogues who instantly stealthed away leaving me to be mauled if we were out numbered. The pattern continued the rest of the night and by the time Anwa hit 18, she had won 1/16 Warsong Gultch matches (and the one win was thanks to Anwa herself capping the first Alliance flag 1 minute before the match was to end).
After finally giving up for the night, I began to think about what made the Alliance on my battlegroup so incompatible and what made the Horde such a constantly viable team. I could think of a plethora of reasons for the Alliance such as:
After waiting for only about a minute, Anwa entered her first Warsong Gultch match. The alliance put up a valiant fight (/end sarcasm) and the horde walked away with a quick 3/3 victory. I have to admit, I felt more than a bit frustrated at the fact I was taking the time to heal hunters who fought with Aspect of the Cheetah on and rogues who instantly stealthed away leaving me to be mauled if we were out numbered. The pattern continued the rest of the night and by the time Anwa hit 18, she had won 1/16 Warsong Gultch matches (and the one win was thanks to Anwa herself capping the first Alliance flag 1 minute before the match was to end).
After finally giving up for the night, I began to think about what made the Alliance on my battlegroup so incompatible and what made the Horde such a constantly viable team. I could think of a plethora of reasons for the Alliance such as:
- Horrible team work
- Nobody wants to listen
- People will stand by and watch you die
- People will purposely let you die when flag carrying so they can pick it up to try and cap
- They were literally willing to die for each other
- People actually went to get their own flag back
- They worked together and listened
- 9/10 of them were geared in full Heirloom gear (but thats another story)
Saturday, November 28, 2009
My First Steps in WoW
Coming off of the 2009 Thanksgiving Holiday and having a wonderful break from school with my family, I came home to check my computer to find a somewhat pleasant surprise. Blizzard was selling the original expansion for World of Warcraft for only $5.00 for the holiday weekend and that ignited the spark I had been feeling for a while to get back into World of Warcraft.
I am no stranger to World of Warcraft, by any means. I had an account two years ago when I was 11 where my highest character was a level 10 druid after a MONTH of play. The MMO scene was quite new to me and I failed to grasp the leveling concept my first time around. I revisited World of Warcraft about a year later when the BattleChest was given to me for Christmas so I started World of Warcraft once again this time getting a draenei priest to level 34 before quitting.... once again (you will quickly come to realize throughout my posts how much I loathe leveling). Because of my hatred of leveling, I created three twinks (a priest, a hunter, and a mage) which temporarily solved my infatuation with World of Warcraft however the novelty of drastically outgeared characters with drastically unfair capabilities eventually wore off and I quit once again. Some time later, the Wrath of the Lich King expansion came out and I began reading the Reflections from the Pond blog which inspired me to want to create, and level completely, a character that I felt could be called my own that I dedicated time to. Which brings us once again to Blizzard's Thanksgiving Day Account sale.
After debating with myself for some time, I eventually decided to purchase the $5.00 account key and after a brief downloading spell, the familiar (or not so familiar log in screen in this case... I once logged in through the Black Portal... now I was logging in across a bleak, cold, snowy landscape) log in screen came up and I entered my account information. I immediately selected Khadgar, my old home server where I met my first real online friend (I wonder what happened to her come to think of it), and was confronted with the blank character selection screen and the feeling of fresh, pristine, familiar memories came flooding back.
I began debating myself within my own head considering what faction, or class, or what race for that matter would become my identity for hopefully the rest of my gaming life. I eventually selected a night elf female druid after much research and comparing armors (yeah, I chose a female and I'm a guy... sue me for wanting graceful casting animations and movement over bulking muscular masculinity). I allowed my cursor to move to the name field and considered a list of ideas such as Circe (a witch with transformation powers) or names like Naturana however I eventually settled on Anwa - it simply felt right. A quick stint with the randomization button and I had the perfect look and the opening race cinematic began to play.
The camera from the cinematic panned down on my character in a seemingly deserted Teldrassil with only NPCs and nightsabers galore to keep me company (oddly the way I wanted my fresh start to World of Warcraft to begin). In a matter of time, Anwa had cleared the fields of beasts, defeated grells that threatened the locals, and stole eggs from the caves guarded so prudently by spiders. Off to Dolanaar she went and in a matter of hours she had saved Starbreeze Village, cleared the Oracle Glades of harpies, solved the sprout problem, and re-obtained the relics of awakening to retrieve some druids from the Emerald Dream (all by herself may I add). Along the way to explore Darnassus she picked up skinning and leatherworking and after fighting a few nightsabers, she had created a few not-so-attractive leather pieces. Before she knew it, she was level 10 and receiving her bear form (which to my surprise, was now a snowy white -- which I liked much more than the grey form years ago). Off to Darkshore she went swimming in the bay, fighting bears, locating water samples, and collecting mushrooms. By the end of the night she had hit level 13, received a few more leather pieces from her craft, and a nice mace drop from some random mobs. Heading back to Rut'theran Village, Anwa handed in one more quest at the dock and then headed back to the Auberdine where she rearranged her inventory, crafted a few more leather pieces, sat back to take a deep breath.
While the journey would be long, and the accomplishment abundant, everything seemed OK as Anwa left Azeroth for the day... watching the light shimmer on the sea at the Auberdine Boardwalk.
Pictures coming soon....
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