New Bear Tank Druid resource page

Feral Bear Tank, Feral Cat Druid, LotRO, The Daily Druid, WoW, Wrath of the Lich King 1 Comment »

 

I’ve had a good response on my Feral Cat Resource page and have put together the beginning of a Bear Tank resource page. The contents can be found below. I’ll be updating it weekly with new links and information I find. Later this week I’ll tackle Moonkin and Resto resource pages as well.

Talent Builds

Gear Guides

Mechanics

Tanking advice

Wrath raiding strats for tanks

Feral Bear Tank Druid sites

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LotRO: Lore-master Quest Guide Movies

Guide, Lore-master, LotRO, Quests No Comments »

One German LotRO Lore-master has been putting out entertaining and informative movies for the class. The soundtrack he uses are great and he explains everything in English subtitles.

First, he shows how a level 12 Lore-master can solo elites:

Then, he tackles the frustrating level 15 Lore-master class quest. It shows you exactly what you have to do and how to do it. Bonus: great sound track.

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LotRO: Lore-master Non-combat Pet Guide

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I plan on writing up a page on Lore-master non-combat pets complete with pics and maps, but until then you can find a good starter guide at LotRO Vault.

Confirmed non-combat pets so far: hare, sparrow, turtle, dog, cat and fox. Two have yet to be found.

You can’t have a non-combat pet and a combat pet out at the same time. And you can rename your pet by targeting it and typing /pet rename (newpetname). More info in the linked article.

LotRO: Guide to Lore-master Amulets for new pet skins

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In the Book 11: Defenders of Eriador content patch, LotRO introduced a new cosmetic change to Lore-master pets. Using a new crafted Amulet, Lore-masters can change the appearance of their summoned combat pets.

For example, the normally black Raven pet can be summoned looking pure white or mottled brown. Every one of the Lore-masters four summonable combat pets now have different skins in addition to their default texture.

There is no other buff or change to the pet or its abilities. This is purely a cosmetic change for variety.

The Amulets need to be worn during the summoning process and are crafted by Jewellers. Their recipes drop randomly from creatures in Middle-earth. You’ll either have to farm mobs for the recipe drop or scan the Auction House for an already made Amulet.

I’m starting a separate page to collect information and will update it as I find more information. It’s the Lore-master Amulet Page and is linked to my Lore-master Info page.

LotRO: Lore-master Pets – The Raven Basics

Lore-master, Lore-master pets, LotRO No Comments »

I’ve recently created a Lore-master in Lord of the Rings Online and am having a hard time finding core information about the class all in one place. So as I’m collecting all the information I need, I’m also putting this information here for others to find. I’ve created a page with basic information here.

In this first article, I will cover the basics of the Lore-master’s first pet.

The Raven.

First attained at level 4, the summoned Raven is two levels lower than the Lore-master so be sure to resummon when you level up. When called, the Raven grants the group +15% Shadow damage mitigation which makes it useful in certain situations, mostly high level.

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LotRO: A funny thing happened on the way to Mordor

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I was a very big cheerleader for Lord of the Rings Online when it first launched. Since Druid was not an option, I went with Minstrel, the default healer in the game who had some dps capacity. I like healing. I like spell damage. Sounded like a good plan. But something happened when I finishing out my quests in The Shire in my mid-teens. I lost my motivation to continue.

This is not unusual for me. I play many different games and many alts on each. When one game gets too grindy or repetitive, I focus on one of the others for a few months. However, I talked my crazy World of Warcraft buddy Claus into trying a hunter in LotRO and he never looked back. As the level difference between us grew, I became even more desponded in catching up with him.

Then last night, I got on the Test server and got insta-leveled to 30 to check out the new Lore-master changes in the latest patch. For those of you new to LotRO, a Lore-master is a pet class (creatures of the forest) with some spell dps (lightning and fire), some necromantic type emergency healing (they give up health to heal others), and some very good crowd control (roots, stuns, mezzes, etc.) Versatile, but overall kind of blah.

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LotRO: Escort Goodness (Not That Kind!)

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More low level quest clean up in the Shire over the last two nights. It’s like a sickness, I can’t leave quests uncompleted. And, in LotRO, the quests are as much about reward as story. Each step of the way gives you another mini-chapter. Plus, running around the Shire at night is…magical.

Michel Delving At Night

The oft-reviled escort quest are the ones I’m enjoying the most. You see, with many encounters, you can control when you engage an enemy, how many, etc. But on an escort quest, your charge will blindly rush forward, forcing you to fight on the fly. No downtime to regen power or wait for that uber skill to finish cooling down. No hanging back and observing pathing to pull the mob solo away from its allies. It takes me way out of my comfort zone. and gets my adrenaline pumping. In other words, good times!

And, since this is LotRO, there are some intersting stories attached to your escort quests. My favorite starts with a spider nest in the hills of Bindbole Woods. A subquest is required to break through the wall of webs that blocks your way. Once inside, you discover a sentient tree that has been trapped by the spiders. With your help, it wants to escape. So the tree uproots itself and starts walking out.

Walking. A Tree. By Itself.

This is what I love about this game. I tried for a screenshot of this event. I hope it conveys the crazy way it ambles on the tips of its roots.

Walking tree on the move.

My little hobbit minstrel wasn’t even as big as one of the root/feet. But together we cut through the malevolent spiders out into safety. The reward for the quest? I don’t even remember and I don’t really care. The adventure itself was worth the effort. And that’s what quests should be about.

Tonight, Clauso and I are going to jump into the Epic Quest line. I’ll try to grab screenshots, but flipping into 1st person and hiding the UI to take the screenies, makes it hard to survive the encounter. Then again, Clauso’s not happy if we’re not flying by the seat of our pants.

LotRO: Tookland Solo Quests

LotRO 2 Comments »
Elbee – L13 Minstrel

It was launch day for LotRO and I didn’t quite make it to the level cap in Open Beta of L15, but I’m not going to race through this MMO. I want to explore and enjoy it. Even the delivery quests.

I’m eager to start the epic storyline, but I’m waiting til Friday for my buddy Clauso to log on. We mostly go our own way in this game, but we’re going to do the epic quest line together.

Until then I’m trying to clear out my backlog of quests I’ve started to out level. I’m neurotic about doing every quest I stumble across. Even the pie and post delivery ones (which I’m actually enjoying — its like a mini game.)

Last night, I didn’t have much time to play, maybe 30 mins, but was able to knock out 4 quests around Tookland that were all about to go grey. Not only was I able to cross these off my list, but I also got a good chunk of experience and progressed on a couple of deed lines as well as hit a few resource nodes. I love getting multiple things done at once.

A New Direction

EQ2, LotRO No Comments »

I first conceived of this blog as a way to express my view point of MMORPG’s after 8 years of nightly playing. And I still intend to do that. But I’m also going to use it as a personal log of my nightly adventures in various games.

First, an entry for Tuesday, April 24, 2007:

EQ2 L58 Fury – Silverfur: LFay Questing

Lord of the Rings Online ended Open Beta last night. There was a glitch with my pre-order code and I couldn’t log on. I headed over to World of Warcraft but didn’t feel motivated to quest grind with my feral druid or my new dps shaman alt. I decided knocking out a quest or two in Everquest 2 and going to bed early would be the best choice.

Playing an MMORPG for just a few mins. What was I thinking?

EQ2 has been on the back burner for a few months for me. Since WoW came out with the Burning Crusade Expansion in January, I had been playing nothing else. And just when I was burning out on WoW, the LotRO Open Beta came along and knocked me off my feet with its immersiveness. I had been logging on to EQ2 just a few mins a day to do a Tears Grifter instance to keep the experience rolling. Two more levels and I will hit L60. Then many new zones become available to me.

So I logged on with my Fury and headed over to Lesser Faydark to knock off what quests I could. I still had 4-5 group quests for that zone and figured I would have to write them off. But after spending an hour finishing the solo quests I had there, I joined a group and we were able to knock off 3 group quests I had in the Thexian camp.

It was a good night for experience (2 AAs gained and almost hit L59) and I was able to clear out a good chunk of the quests I had left for that zone.

I was going to wait til L60 to hit the new zones, but I could probably start at L59. Or I could clear out the rest of my Pillar of Flames quests as well. We’ll see if I feel like quest grinding or exploring next time I log on, but I think I already know the answer.

Who Says You Can Never Go Home Again?

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Open beta for Lord of the Rings Online: Shadows of Angmar began last week.

Combat is borrowed from EQ2, quests and crafting are straight out of WoW, classes fall into the standard archetypes. Is it worth playing? More than any other game out there. For two reasons:

#1
The narrative based gameplay is not something I thought I would see in an MMOG. LotR uses instancing to move a story forward. For example, (spoiler alert!)

…you can start as a Human in a small town outside of Bree with all the other newbie players. You do the typical”kill this”/”fetch that” quests. A pie seller wants you to collect some ingredients for her and check in on her husband, the town Jailor. Running around the zone filled with farms, a spider infested ruin and a fortress of brigand introduces you to some other quest npcs that you can help out.

Then around L6 you get put into a private instance of the entire outdoor zone. The town is on fire! The sweet pie selling quest giver helplessly watches her husband get brutally beaten by the soldier that betrayed the town to agents of the Nazgul! Only you can defeat the traitors, rescue a fallen ranger and face down the leader of the bad guys.

And when you succeed, you zone out of the instance back to the “normal” zone, only to find that the town is mostly burned down and will remain so. You realize the zone you were in for the first 6 levels was actually a “shared instanced” version and this one is the real one from here on out.

Many of the surviving townspeople are there to rebuild and they have all new quests for you that will help them do it. One of those quests is to bury three dead quest npcs you got to know rather well before the town burned down. That quest had some emotional impact.

The game gets you to care about the NPCs and then inflicts irrevocable consequences on them. You will never see them alive in the game again. Can you remember the last MMOG that managed that?

#2
I don’t know about the rest of you, but ‘The Hobbit’ was the first fantasy book I read. My uncle gave it to me when I was 11 and it opened my eyes to the fantasy genre. Every night over the past 8 years that I logged into Norrath or Azeroth I was really trying to recapture that feeling reading Tolkien’s books. And now I can play in that world directly.

In a weekend of playing LotR I had fought along side Gandalf, explored the Shire, helped a Ranger thwart a Nazgul rider, watched as an elven outpost fell to invaders with Elrond by my side and smoked pipeweed. I can’t even begin to imagine the adventure that lies ahead of me in this world, but I now know I’ve been waiting 26 years to start it since I read the words "In a hole in the ground there lived a hobbit…"

So if you read reviews about LotR that tell you its "nothing special" or "not innovative" because it borrows game mechanics from other popular MMOGs, ignore that. Every MMOG before it borrowed from its predecessor. The real value of this game is playing in the world that made you fall in love with the genre in the first place.