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Cheapest tradeskill to get to 250 ???

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  • #16
    I think how much a skill costs definitely includes how much of its products you can sell. Assuming you don't make anything once you get to 250 or as high as you want to get, then that's just selling what you make to skill up. A big part of incorporating what you sell into the cost to skill up is whether you have or take the trouble to make and keep clear some mules.

    Some people are allergic to them and will never make them. Or they refuse to burden their other characters with stuff from a different one. Or they don't want to ask people to help make transfers for them, so what starts on one character ends there.

    Then again, there are people who have multiple accounts, put stuff wherever they can, or even have mules specifically for baking, brewing, smithing, etc. If you can put whatever you make on mules and eventually work it on to a character you leave up at the bazaar when you're off at school or work or whatever, your cost to do anything will drop a lot, because you won't have to destroy as much inventory(if any) as you make product, and because you eventually will sell your product to cover your cost.

    I skilled up a few things before LOY gave us expanded bank space. Because of that, I've destroyed many fishrolls skilling up baking, and many patty melts. They each sell easily for 1pp in the bazaar; that's 20pp a stack down the drain countless times. I've destroyed lots of opal steins skilling up in pottery. I made so many hundreds that I thought I would never get rid of them. Every one of my toons on two accounts were stuffed with them, and so were about five characters on a friend's account he let me use temporarily. That was a staggering number of steins. So I destroyed hundreds more as I made them at a loss of a minimum of 20pp each for the cost of the opals themselves, even though I was able to sell all I made at a slow rate. They all would have sold at 20-35pp each on my server. Thousands of plat gone. I've been out of them for quite a while now. I even destroyed lots of acrylia and velium and even silk when I became overloaded while playing. (Now when I go to hunt in Velks, I can solo or duo a bot there, and bring two mules to hold all the silks/bricks/pieces. I'm not throwing away THAT much money again!)

    Anyway, being scrupulous about transferring stuff onto mules can take an amazing amount of time out of your day, but save you and eventually make you many thousands of plat while you skill up. It's usually worth the trouble unless you really don't care about money at all. And it's nice to see that stuff you have a big backlog of on character after character, like I did, eventually disappear while a few hundred plat here, a couple thousand plat there, piles up on your seller mules night after night even though you haven't done a thing to earn a dollar for a long, long time.

    Baking is indeed incredibly undercut as far as prices go, but even so, I made quite a bit of money selling halas meat pies and fish rolls and patty melts and misty thicket picnics -- enough to make back the cost of skilling up and eventually much more. This even though halas pies are down to 2 to 3pp sometimes and MTP to 7pp on my server. The nice thing is that virtually everything you make to skill up in baking(or CAN make if you take some of the more traditional paths -- once at the fish roll stage I did mostly them, patty melts, HMP, MTP with the occasional diversions) can be sold. You wind up making so **** many it's amazing though.

    Brewing can wind up costing a few K easily from doing liquidized snake, rat, and gator meats for Grobb Liquidized Meats, but with a reasonable amount of successes on the GLM you can eventually get it all back.

    Baking's cost comes in buying brownie meat(5pp each and up on my server) and mammoth meat. Brownie meat, if you have a tracker, can be fiercely competed for sometimes, but with luck you can get somewhere near a stack in an hour. You'll need more than that. It takes so long to get a reasonable supply of mammoth meat just from hunting and vendor diving(vendors are always picked clean of mammoth meat on my server) that you're well ahead of the game even if you pay 10pp each for them. Halas/everfrost on my server is completely overrun by high levels killing mammoths for meat. Add in the costs of buying items mostly for misty thicket picnics -- fennel and eucalyptus mint, woven mandrake for picnic baskets, foraged vegetables and foraged fruit from players if you don't have a huge backlog of them yourself(which you probably don't) -- and even a penny pincher can wind up spending over 5k on getting baking up. I did six hours without a skill up at level 201, for instance, on halas pies, which are well within that range. However, you'll make it all back and have a useful skill.

    Baking products seem to sell better than brewing ones, so overall, baking will pay for itself more. Besides Grobbs, which most people don't buy, there's nothing of much interest in brewing. In baking, fish rolls, patty melts, HMP, and MTP all sell readily.

    But unless you have plenty of mules and patience, you'll probably wind up destroying most of it before it sells unless you skill-up really intermittently. Which would be a loss of quite a few thousand plat.

    Sounds like you don't want to skill up slowly either, as you want the trophy for the CHA for charming, to help you play. So you're going to have quite a bit of inventory on your hands unless you want to throw money away, which it sounds like you don't.

    By the way, the trophy can be very expensive. Losing corking devices and buying them can really zap you. I would suggest just buying the artisan's seal even though they are **** expensive. When going for my pottery trophy, at 200 JC, I mounted two diamonds successfully, then failed five black sapphires in a row. Gem cost plus two velium bars per gem was about 750pp x 5 = 3500pp down the drain in about 30 seconds. Now THAT's expensive!

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    • #17
      and even a penny pincher can wind up spending over 5k on getting baking up.
      Gem cost plus two velium bars per gem was about 750pp x 5 = 3500pp down the drain in about 30 seconds. Now THAT's expensive!
      Tailors and smiths have absolutely no pity for you. They will spend that to several times that per normal combine session.


      The cupcake is DONE! 1750!!! And 7 Trophies! And a fishing pole! That summons beer! Woo! And Tarteene, the enchanting gnomish tinkerer of the 247th bolt and one neato Tinkering Trophy

      Butcherblock Oak Bark Map, hosted by Kentarre!
      Reztarn's Guide to Finding Yew Leaves
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      • #18
        Originally posted by Reflan
        Gem cost plus two velium bars per gem was about 750pp x 5 = 3500pp down the drain in about 30 seconds. Now THAT's expensive!
        Haha. Like Chenier said. That's 11 sickle combines with no imbue costs, or the retail price of 5 gem studded chains.

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        • #19
          Tailors and smiths have absolutely no pity for you. They will spend that to several times that per normal combine session.
          /laughs

          That’s why tailoring and smithing are not on the list of cheapest trade skills to get to 250. I love these two skills and I plan to take them both as far as I can on my small bit of income. But many players, and certainly those playing lower level characters, just can’t afford them. So practicing trade skills like brewing and baking can be both fun and affordable.

          Now if someone wants to start a thread on which trade skills are the most expensive to take to 250, I’ll happily vote to put tailoring and smithing at the top of list. Though for the shaman in the audience, I wonder if alchemy is more or less expensive to raise to 200, its cap, than either tailoring or smithing is to 250.
          Pait Spiritwalker
          63rd Season Vah Shir Shaman
          The Seventh Hammer

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          • #20
            I agree brewing is cheaper. I have 280 wis and I GMed Baking a short while ago. Now I am working on Brewing. I will say this one thing. As a druid I would say Baking will be more usefull to you. I must have made 2000 Halas pies and sold them all in about three weeks. And the misty Thickit Picnics are still arounbd 15 pp each on my sevrer and I have sold 400 in the last 2 weeks. So if you want something that will be usefull money wise as well as trophy wise I would go for baking.
            Just my 2 cents
            Sethlic

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            • #21
              Originally posted by Chenier
              Bad Lilosh, bad! /spank

              I physcially perked up when reading that.
              ----------------------------------------------------------


              Anyway, the rest are correct. Brewing is the easiest.
              But CHA doesnt help druids charm. So it's a moot point.

              -Lilosh
              Venerable Noishpa Taltos , Planar Druid, Educated Halfling, and GM Baker.
              President and Founder of the Loudmouthed Sarcastic Halflings Society
              Also, Smalltim

              So take the fact of having a dirty mind as proof that you are world-savvy; it's not a flaw, it's an asset, if nothing else, it's a defense - Sanna

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              • #22
                If you are an enchanter (or have access to one who is very generous of time), then Jewelcraft is actually pretty cheap. if you use a geerlok and work closely with the trivial charts than you can nearly always make your plat back. The worst is the jump from one metal to another, as you are working for a short time above your trivial, but the rest of the way you should always be working on combines that are virtually trivial. The buyback rate for enchanted jewelry is enough to balance out the 5% failure rate (actually, most people report the failure rate at closer to 4.3%).

                Jewelcraft has added advantages over brewing if your goal is mostly the trophy. You 1) can do the gemsetting yourself, and 2) don't have to spend 5k on a corking device (plus another 5k on a corking device to use for later recipes).
                Quesci Jinete, 70 Wizard on Quellious, an Everquest server
                Officer of Wraith

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                • #23
                  But CHA doesnt help druids charm. So it's a moot point.
                  That's a fairly dismissive statement, there, buddy. I believe the fact of the matter is that SOE has never made a definitive statement about CHA and charming and so there are two camps of thought: those charmers (chanters and to a minor extent, necros and druids) who believe that CHA helps against resist, for longer charms, etc.* and those who think it does nothing.

                  *better mezzes/harmony included

                  So while you certainly may think it's a moot point (making the assumption you belong to the second camp), there are others who think CHA does do something and being that both camps only have in game testing to rely on, I wouldn't dismiss this person's desire to get a trophy for the 50 CHA.

                  *edit*
                  or were you just looking for another spanking? =)


                  The cupcake is DONE! 1750!!! And 7 Trophies! And a fishing pole! That summons beer! Woo! And Tarteene, the enchanting gnomish tinkerer of the 247th bolt and one neato Tinkering Trophy

                  Butcherblock Oak Bark Map, hosted by Kentarre!
                  Reztarn's Guide to Finding Yew Leaves
                  Frayed Knot - The Rathe

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                  • #24
                    Only slightly OT...

                    A huge giant sympathy hug to anyone who's MTP have ever sold for less than 100p. Yes, 100p. For one.

                    On Sullon, JumJum is only available from the Neutral-infested Rivervale or Evil-camped Shadowhaven. A 'Good' either has to know a neut or evil who will do their shopping for them, or make a 4 am trip to Rivervale on a Tuesday morning.... I count myself insanely lucky that I found JumJum, the Beer, and (i kid you not) fifty stacks of picnic baskets on a merchant. (I bought an equal amount of Beer from a merchant, and he's STILL not empty. I would love to know who kindly dumped so much on him.)

                    When I check the Bazaar, MTPs are, I kid you not, not under 190p. for ONE. I guess that's the one thing about being on the Insane Server... people are so concerned for their basic survival, that the tradeskill market hasn't been ruined in the normal ways.


                    Then again, I think I know the only Good chanter who bothered to go get the 49 Enchant Steel spell......


                    Anyway, back on topic. Except the question's been answered.

                    -- Tailoring - cheap? easy? prepare to die like the fool you are.

                    -- Smithing - see Tailoring.

                    -- Jewelrycraft - my roommate sunk 700p getting an equipped chanter to 48. Do the math. Possible, and good resell eventually, but painful in the meantime.

                    -- Fishing - I don't have the time to sit there and fish. With the freaking NERFAGE of the ButcherBlock Aqua Goblins, I have no occasion to be by water, waiting for something real to pop.

                    -- Pottery - Overlooked, in my opinion. That, and I've succeeded at making stuff that was 70+ pts above my skill. Resell would be slow but possible, but frankly, it's boring to me.

                    -- Baking - easy and fun in the low levels, but above 200, the choices are .... disheartening. Anaconda/Griffon Melts/Stir-frys and Cheesy Casseroles require Jaggypine vendor-mining or buying from xping players, or xp yourself in that LAGGED zone. Assuming they're not ALL RED to you. Holy cakes take one winter chocolate (read: brownie part) per combine attempt. Thank you, no. Large Slumberfish Pie requires heavy pie crock. See my rant on Disappearing Bread Tins. Lotus Pie offers CHA +9, but requires drops in Fungus Grove, a 50-60 lvl-mob zone. Halas 10 needs mammoth meat; again, I'm lucky that the evils in EF are there to pk the noobs, not get the mammoths. And MTPs... JumJum and subcombines. And final-combine-failures-with-no-skillups. /cry.

                    -- Brewing - looks like that's what's left. 122 in 5p? Mino Brews for the remaining 20 pts? I can do that. Altho, the gnomes on my server don't seem to tinker, either...

                    hm, maybe i should shut up. but yes, trophy aside, if you just want something other than '0' in your skillbox, brewing is fast and easy.

                    I still like baking, tho. ^_^
                    Mistress Tinkbang Tankboom - Ak'Anon, Tarew Marr
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                    • #25
                      Lol, yeah, but you can sell your wares you make in smithing or tailoring, or eventually sell what you can make with your skills obtained. You smiths and tailors ask for the pain -- you love it and crave it, and it's probably the whole reason you took up those tradeskills in the first place. If you weren't doing tailoring or smithing, you would probably be pouring grapefruit juice in your papercuts or something.

                      I'm talking about only ONE small part of the artisan's seal here -- mounting just ONE of the types of gems, not going for skill ups in the masochist skills or working to make something spectacular.

                      For me, the trophy is mostly money down the drain anyway. And 3500 in 30 seconds is some fast flushing! Perhaps if I were rich or having a trophy would suddenly make me able to make 10k and 30 and 40k items like tailors and smiths can...

                      Anyway, mounting gems can be expensive! Just as I said. And I'd still recommend buying a seal because of that, or at least getting a 250 jeweler to mount the gems. They're supposed to be trivial long before the 200 JC skill I have, but...it didn't seem to make one whit of difference.

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