Quest, grinding
2007-09-08 08:20:26
·
answer #1
·
answered by ? 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
fastest?
getting a quest, and turning it in as soon as you can = the fastest way to level. Once you're done with the ones you can do in an area, go to another similarly leveled area...
this will require gametime, plain and simple. It took me 6 days to "rest" for a full bar at level 33... I KNOW I could have gone through that level a LOT faster playing, as opposed to resting...
like others, I'm not sure what you're looking for... if you want to post a screen shot when you type /played and it show that you made it to 70 in 15 days of playtime.... that's TOTALLY different than if you bought wow today, and it takes you 15 calendar days to get to 70.
if less actual PLAYED time on a toon is what you're looking for, wait until your toon has a FULL bar of rested time before you play it, and stay on long enough to get/complete quest until your rested time goes away, and log off. repeat
if less days on the calendar playing a toon is what you're looking for, it's all about being online, all the time, playing/questing simple as that
good luck
2007-09-08 03:59:27
·
answer #2
·
answered by Dan B 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
In Blizzard''s World of Warcraft, one aspect of creating a Tauren character involves making a decision among four classes; actually, since Hunters have yet to be implemented in the current beta, the available alternatives come down to Warrior, Shaman and Druid. The last of these was introduced in mid-April, in a build that required starting new avatars within the Horde faction, which also includes Orcs, Trolls and Undead. Playing a Druid is only possible for Tauren and Night Elves. The latter was locked out at the time, as were Humans, Dwarves and Gnomes, the other three races that make up the Alliance, and thus my Tauren Druid was born. Although I''ve played at least one character of every race and class, albeit certainly not every possible combination, this is the one that has seen the most playing time to date.
http://www.gametradeking.com
http://www.gametradeking.com/sell.asp
http://www.gametradeking.com/video.asp
http://www.gametradeking.com/news.asp
http://www.gametradeking.com/cdkey.asp
2007-09-05 18:11:51
·
answer #3
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
3⤋
Depends on your goal.
Grinding and questing at the same time will yield better result, if you know the quests. For example, the quest to kill some defias in Westfall can be combined with getting the locker, killing beasts for quest stew, etc. Basically you grind but also get quest rewards items and exp.
I find instances as the best place to level up, though. Especially coupled with lots of related quests. Instances themselves are grinding spots, but they reward much better items most of the time. Another example in Westfall is to get the defias headband quest, VanCleef (?) head, the gnome thing from Stormwind quest, the dwarf's from Stormwind's quest (not in the instance, but close enough) etc etc. The exp rewards are massive, plus you get lotsa blue gear. Not to mention the blue drops from the instance itself are pretty good. The follow-up quests after that are easy and yield nice exp. All in all, enough level and equips for you to move on to another area to grind some more, this time with better equipments.
Just grinding can be tedious.
... but your question seems odd, like you want to level fast but don't want to invest a lot of time on it. For that I suggest share account with someone you trust, and let that person level you up while you do something else and vice versa. I apologize if I'm wrong.
2007-09-05 17:04:46
·
answer #4
·
answered by clearwine 2
·
0⤊
1⤋
There are only 2 ways to do it.
1. Get a great leveling guide like
Joana's one for Horde or
Brian Kopp for Alliance.
2. Some kind of botting program - which will prolly get you're account banned.
Read This
Warcraft Scams Revealed http://www.winningwarcraft.com
2007-09-09 01:57:24
·
answer #5
·
answered by ph00 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
Questing is where the real exp is at.
Try to stack your quests whenever possible so that you can do more than one at a time. If you need to hunt X in a area, and aquire something from monster Y in the same area; take both quests so you can do them both at the same time.
This is espetially tru of instances, which can have 5 or more quests that you can aquire before you go into it. Get them all before a run to maximize your time/experience ratio.
2007-09-06 03:53:52
·
answer #6
·
answered by Thomas S 7
·
2⤊
0⤋
If you mean in terms of actual days, questing, grinding, and getting to the outlands as soon as possible is your best bet.
If you mean in terms of game-play time, grinding while rested is probably your best bet, better yet if you can pair it with a grinding quest. As soon as you hit out of rested, go to an inn. Log, relog, repeat.
2007-09-05 09:56:08
·
answer #7
·
answered by Bob 2
·
1⤊
0⤋
Here's a general guide about where to go with leveling:
http://wowvault.ign.com/View.php?view=guides.Detail&id=66
Basically, you farm constantly with some time for quests.
If you want fastest in terms of least time played, make sure you log off in a city from time to time to get a full blue bar (double XP). Otherwise, play nonstop for hours on end.
2007-09-05 08:53:51
·
answer #8
·
answered by bob135 4
·
0⤊
1⤋
Well, depending on levels, grinding can be much faster but it's better to combine questing and grinding in moderation.
2007-09-05 08:54:11
·
answer #9
·
answered by Kalphbeir 2
·
0⤊
1⤋
Questing. Don't grind, it is dead slow.
2007-09-05 08:52:05
·
answer #10
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋