2012年10月12日星期五

Leveling A Druid

Druids rule in the World of Warcraft. That basically it in a nutshell. Start a Druid and you can be Tank, Healer, and Damage (DPS) with one character and you fill all those roles at least as well as any single class character. Heck, you be better because you can switch back and forth as necessary. That Rogue may by a bit ahead of you in damage done, but she can be an emergency tank or healer.

In PvP, well played Druids can be very hard to kill. They hit as hard as anyone and ambush better than Rogues. Combine that with heals and the ability to escape all entaglements, by shapeshifting, and they become the ultimate PvP machines. Close to that, anyway.

These days, in the Cataclysm expansion, leveling a Druid is easy. The in-game quest helper shows you where to go and it helps with the "what to do part." It not a real leveling guide, but it a lot better than what you had to do when WoW began. Add in PvP and the dungeons and you can be 85 in minutes. Er, um. a few days. Either way it faster than ever before.

Now that that out of the way, here some info on leveling your Druid as quickly as possible. Stick with the feral cat spec for now as It will serve you very well while questing, your damage in the dungeons will be just fine, and you eat enough people in PvP to stay happy.

As a feral wow gold Druid your primary abilities, gained at elvel 10, are:

Mangle - this is your primary attack. It does damage and adds a bleed (continuing damage) to your target.

Aggression is a passive ability that increases your attack power by a nice amount.

Vengence is for bears only. wow gear It increases your attack power as you take damage, which is terrific for tanks.

Feral Instinct is hated wow items by Rogues since with it you are at least as sneaky as they are.

Mastery is trained at level 80. wow gold For you it adds damage to your claws, as a cat, and soaks damage, as a bear.

If you stay in Cat form as you level you will do enough damage, and have more than enough survival ability, that you will level quickly.

The basic rule for picking your talents as you level is to grab all the talents that add damage to your attacks. Certian talents are more specialized and others do no damage but are generally useful, such as the Feral Swiftness talent, which increases your speed by 30% and adds a small increase to your dodge chance.

Thick Hide increases armor, but Bears will have a lot more use for it than you cats do. Skip talents like that one. Natural Reaction is a nice talent for bears in that it will help with their tanking. You kitties have no use for it. If you just don do much healing and you don group, then talents like Nurturing Instinct have little value. If you do heal and you do group then it a valuable talent for the significant increase in healing that it provides.

What about gear and stats? Gear pretty easy. For weapons you want the highest DPS stat possible, then go for Agility and Stamina. If you stack any stat then go for agility, especially as you get higher level. It easily your best stat. Don worry about the other primary stats as you level, they useless. Hit and crit have value, though. I recommend skipping enchants and gems as you level out of them quickly and they expensive for the value they provide.

Potions of healing are very nice to have while leveling your Druid. Stick them on you action bar. You get an instant heal without having to leave cat form. You can also obtain potions, scrolls, and foods that will buff stats. These are all useful and will help you level that much faster, either by increasing damage or lessening downtime.

Always carry the biggest bags you can afford, so that you don often have to go back to town to sell stuff. If youi dungeon leveling then those bags can fill up quickly. Speaking of towns, always log out in an Inn to get the benefit of the "rest XP" when you return.
More articles come from the:http://www.wow-gear.com/gems

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