Tag Archive for xp

Should my Wow Character “Rest” When I’m Not Playing?

In World of Warcraft, a character “rests” when it spends time in a city or inn. If the character rests long enough, it begins to accumulate a bonus which doubles the amount of experience (XP) it earns per kill. You can tell if you’re rested by looking at your XP “meter” at the bottom of the screen. If it’s purple, you’re not rested. If it’s blue, you are. Just “how” rested you are is indicated by the presence of a small “tick-mark” or “slider” on top of the XP bar. If you don’t see that tick-mark, you’re rested at least until you complete the current level you’re working on. If you do see the tick-mark, you’re rested until your current XP reaches that mark, at which time you’ll cease being rested.

I’ve heard players ask if it’s better to log out in a place where you are resting or not. The answer generally comes back as “no, it’s not worth it” but that’s really NOT the correct answer. The correct answer is, “It depends on how frequently you play that character.” Let me explain.

Let’s say that you play WoW every single day without fail, for several hours per day, and always log off in a place where you’re gaining rest. Odds are that you won’t accumulate that much rest during the few hours per day that you’re not playing, so the benefit you get from being rested is probably minimal compared to the time it takes you to get from the place of rest to the place you enjoy questing or farming or PVPing. For a person who plays a single character on a very regular basis for long periods of time, resting is probably more trouble than it’s worth. So in that sense, the common answer is the correct one.

On the other hand, let’s imagine that you’re more like me. I play WoW a few times a week at most, with long breaks in between where my job and personal life prevent me from playing as much as I might like. Sometimes I travel for vacation or business, and I can’t play WoW for several days at a stretch. In those situations, if I log out in a city or inn, my character gains “rest” even though I am not playing. When I come back a few days later, the character may have accumulated enough rest so that it can complete an entire level earning double XP. Was it worth it for me to rest? You bet! It will take me half the time to gain my next level because I took a moment to log out in a place of rest. So, for me personally, it’s very worthwhile to rest my characters. Also, since I have more than one character, I always make sure to log the alternate characters out in a place of rest. That way they, too, accumulate entire levels worth of “rest”. So in this case, the common answer of “rest isn’t worth it” isn’t true. Because I am not in-game for long-ish periods of time, my characters accumulate enough rest that when I AM in the game I can level much faster than I would otherwise.

How do you know when you’re resting in WoW? Look at your character’s portrait in the upper left corner. If you can see your level number inside the little circle at the bottom left of the portrait, then you are NOT resting where you are. If you see “Zzz” instead of your level number inside that circle, then you ARE resting and accumulating “double XP” time. Generally speaking, you will “rest” inside of the major cities like Stormwind, Ironforge, and the like. You will also rest in certain inns and locations outside major cities, but you won’t know for sure unless you check your level indicator and note that it is filled with Z’s.

Is it better to Grind XP or Quest in WoW?

A question I often see asked in chat channels is whether it’s better to focus on completing quests or kill monsters if you are trying to gain levels and experience points (XP). In this case, the common answer is generally the right one, which is that questing will probably yield more XP than simple farming of mobs. However, that’s a rather simplistic answer to a more complicated question.

As with many of these kinds of recurring questions, the correct and complete answer is that it depends on several factors.

One of the most important factors to consider is the type of quests you’re working on and the level those quests are designed for. For instance, if you are a level 20 character working on a quest designed for level 10 characters, you might be wasting your time. The amount of XP you’re going to gain for completing that quest is going to be relatively low. If that quest involves killing lots of level 10-11 mobs, you’re not going to be getting any XP for those either. So unless the quest involves a reward you particularly want (like lots of gold) or you are just having fun with it, you’re probably wasting your time.

Similarly, even if the quest is of a level that provides sufficient reward, if it’s the sort of quest that has you going lots of traveling and very little fighting, it’s probably not the best use of your time.

To determine whether questing or farming (where by “farming” I mean just staying in an area killing all the monsters you can) is a better option for you, you can do a simple estimation in your head.

Estimate how long the quest will take to complete. Let’s say it’s one hour, and it’s a quest where there is little or no killing involved. After looking on sites like thottbot.com or allakhazam.com, you learn that this quest usually rewards 8000 XP when complete. That means you’re going to be earning around 8000 XP in an hour, or about 133 XP per minute.

Suppose that your alternative is to stay in an area and farm a particular kind of monster. If you’re getting 200 XP from each kill and you can kill one about every 30 seconds, you’re earning 400XP per minute. That means you’d earn 3x the XP farming that you would completing the quest. Thus, in that example, you’re better off farming.

But the numbers can work the other way, too. Suppose your quest has a reward of 5000XP and requires you to collect a number of items that drop off a certain mob. After killing a few, you estimate that 1 in 10 mobs drops the item, and you’re getting 150XP per mob. You can kill the mob about every 45 seconds, resulting in around 80 kills in an hour, for a total of 12,000 XP (150×80=12000). Thus, completing this quest would earn you around 17000XP in an hour, estimated. You’re better off in this case doing the quest since you will get XP from completing it, in addition to the XP from the mobs.

Fortunately, it’s not necessary to do all this math yourself. There is an add-on called Titan Panel which can be configured to display your current “XP per Hour” and “Time to Level”. Using this tool, you can gauge how quickly you’re REALLY earning XP and how quickly you can expect to reach your next level. I found that the Titan Panel interface started to annoy me after a while, but it did help me to get a sort of “gut feel” for whether I was better off doing one thing than another.

For me personally, I tend to alternate between questing and farming depending on my mood. If I want to scare up a bunch of money and XP, I tend to go farming mobs somewhere I feel relatively safe. If I’m more interested in traveling or seeing some places I haven’t seen before (or haven’t seen in a while) I’ll tend to quest. This openendedness is one of the nicer things about WoW.