Each Crafting Station has its own recipes. Because different recipes require specific crafting tables, you might need to check which one you require for a certain recipe. Then hover over the vial icon in the lower left corner of the window, as pictured below:.
A crafting slot is a possiblity to craft something. Each item crafted takes up one crafting slot. Once an item is created, a cooldown timer will be started on that crafting slot. When you start crafting in Wizard City, you will have one crafting slot. As you advance, you will be given additional crafting slots from the crafting quests. For each slot you receive there will be a new timer on your Character Page. If you craft something, the timer on the Character Page will show the cooldown time that you need to wait before that slot can be used again.
The cooldown time depends on the item you are crafting. While misthead has written all kinds of guides, the most popular by far are her "main quest line" guides. She does have all kinds of articles under her belt, from a grandmaster Myth PvP guide to research about which wand stitches are the most popular.
What about the recipes that are in Red? Can I still buy them and complete them? They are not part of the Crafting Quests but they are cool housing items. Your email address will not be published. What is Crafting? How do I become a Legendary Artisan? What kind of things can I craft? The recipe for this house is 60, gold, and you need to be a Master Artisan to buy it. You need to buy or trade for 10 blizzard treasure cards and buy 20 ghost fires to start with.
The ghost fires are sold by Balthazar Dragonthorn in the Atheneum, and you could find the blizzard cards in the Wizard City Library's treasure card shop. The recipe also requires you to craft several housing items, listed in the table below.
It looks like a rather daunting recipe, but if you think about it as a bunch of smaller components it doesn't look so bad. There are also a number of reagents that can't be found in the wild that you'll need. Besides the 20 ghost fires, you'll need:. So the total price of the things you absolutely have to buy comes up to around gold, give or take a few thousand.
You may end up having to craft the nature's wrath treasure cards because they seem to be kind of rare in the bazaar. I used my max-level life wizard for this, but you could ask a life friend to make some treasure cards and trade them to you if you don't have a life wizard.
You may be wondering how to make a lot of gold in Wizard There are several bosses that you can farm battle over and over to make a lot of gold quickly. One of my favorites is Shattertusk, the boar in Savarstaad Pass. I actually prefer farming him over Halfang on lower levels because he is much quicker to kill, and the amount of gold the drops sell for is only about less on average, so it is more efficient to fight Shattertusk unless you are strong enough to kill Halfang and his minion in one round.
More gold for less time is what you should aim for. She has a nice little lever next to her that makes her come back to life every time you kill her, so you don't have to leave the instance and come back. Her drops sell for about to gold, but she takes a bit longer to kill.
I'd farm her with friends so that the battle goes faster. If you have access to Wintertusk, Erling the Unready in Austrilund is good to farm because he drops the Wyrm's Curse Charm, which sells for gold, and some other expensive items.
And of course there's poor, beaten Halfang, who gets mugged every day by cash-hungry wizards. His drops seem to sell for gold each, at least, with the Cow's Pearl amulet being a relatively common drop that sells for around in the bazaar.
Me, about to mug Shattertusk for all he's worth, which is surprisingly a lot for a low level boss. The rest of the reagents needed for the house can be harvested through finding them on the ground, fighting monsters, or gardening.
In total, you will need to obtain:. I ended up buying most of the ectoplasms and bronze gears, because they only drop from monsters and I'd rather save time and not fight. Gardening every day helped out a little bit, I made a gigantic field of Dandelions, Fickle Pickles, Orange Dandelions, Frozen Fly Traps, and Helephant Ears to gain some of the reagents required for this recipe.
However, this took out all of my energy, so if you're planning to train pets at this time harvesting reagents or buying them will be better. You could also buy all of your reagents from the bazaar if you have a lot of gold on hand or if you really, really like farming bosses. Some reagents can now be bought in sets of for crowns in the Crown Shop. Finding them, however, may be easier on your wizard's wallet, and your own. It depends on whether you'd rather spend your time digging through the bazaar or running around finding reagents on the ground.
Either way, it's a grind, but if you choose to find them instead of buy them there are certain harvesting routes that will make it go faster. Maps of the routes are below. To get most of the rare reagents, I transmuted the common ones with the card crafting station. Usually, 15 common reagents make one rare, for example 15 cat tails will make 1 water lily.
Without the transmutes it would be very time-consuming to find the rare reagents, so they are pretty useful for speeding up your crafting project. This is my favorite place for cat tails and mist wood, because the reagents spawn back instantly. Only one will show up at a time, and when you get it it will reappear instantly in a different place.
So apparently I need a Grizzleheim crafting station to craft some items. Where can I buy one of these? You can't buy this one. The Grizzleheim station is an actual place. Go to the back of Northguard across the river, and into a door back there by some standing stones. Inside, you will find the GH crafting station.
By the way, once you get to Dragonspyre, there is another station like it, a physical place up in the Dragon's Roost area.
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