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A Bit Fed Up…

December 4th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Gaming, General, wow

I haven’t been playing WoW much this week. I think I’m at one of my “burned out on WoW” stages. I’m just not motivated to do anything with any of my characters so I’m taking a little break from it. It just seems bizarre that I’m kinda fed up with it seeing as Wrath has only been out a few weeks… I was expecting it to kickstart my interest in it again…

I have plenty of other stuff to do at the moment, I’m finding myself experimenting with Inform as I’m planning my Sci-Fi epic “The Divide” as well as playing through some “classic” Interactive Fiction to inspire me.

I can see me blogging a bit about that over this next week.

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A Few Good Questing Addons

November 27th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Gaming, wow

With everyone clambering to reach level 80 I thought it’d be a good time to mention a few questing addons.

Lightheaded - WoWInterface
Quest text just not explanatory enough? Lightheaded incorporates comments parsed directly from Wowhead into a panel beside the questlog, generally giving you coordinates and useful information regarding objective locations and the like. 

QuestGuru - WoWUI
QuestGuru is a replacement quest log featuring a double paned log (quests on one side, description on the other) which highlights important sections of quest text such as NPCs and locations.

It also has panels that remember which quests you abandon and complete along with a replacement quest tracker. It also has a quest progress announcer.

Along with all these features it is highly customisable and can work with Lightheaded as well. 

QuestHelper - WoWInterface - Curse
This addon has become one of the most well known due to it’s ease of use and design. Questhelper basically displays quest objectives on the world map with the quickest path to reach them, the nearest objective is always shown as a Cartographer or TomTom waypoint arrow. It also has it’s own replacement tracker.

Carbonite Quest - WoWInterface - Curse
This does pretty much the same task as QuestHelper, except it has it’s own map display that works like google maps. I personally prefer Carbonite just because it feels less resource-hungry to me. I devoted a previous addon corner to this addon here complete with video.

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Wrath Progress…

November 19th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Gaming, wow

I've Toured the Fjord

Since Wrath’s launch last Thursday both Joanne and I have been levelling our mains to 80, currently they (Krugash and Angelikuh) are level 74 and questing in the Dragonblight. We entered Northrend via Borean Tundra, completing all the quests there before moving onto Howling Fjord.

Both start zones have been quite fun, both have had their share of unique and interesting quests. They also both have gorgeous visuals with suitably cold feeling vistas.

Picturesque Howling Fjord

After finishing the two start zones we’ve moved onto the Dragonblight, the first totally snowy and icy zone in Northrend. We’ve done the quests from the first quest hub, a hospitable place called Venomspite where we both dinged level 74 and promptly toddled off to Dalaran (which has recently flown from Alterac Mountains to it’s new home floating menacingly above the Crystalsong Forest) to buy a rather cute bear mount with evil, glowy eyes…

Dalaran Fountain on Bears

Next we have to finish the quests in Dragonblight and then move on to the slightly warmer climes of Grizzly Hills.

From there it’s onto Zul’Drak and Sholazar Basin where we’ll hopefully ding 80 leaving The Storm Peaks and Icecrown free to earn money from quests.

So far Wrath of the Lich King has been a totally pleasurable experience, the quests have been fun and the areas have been a joy to navigate. In fact, I can’t actually at this point think of anything negative to say about it!

It’s been really enjoyable playing through the expansion with everything being fresh, with no-one (barring those who were in the beta) really knowing all that much.

Oh, and I have an addon post in the works for the weekend… hopefully I can get back on track with posts…

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Facing the Lich King’s Wrath

November 12th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Gaming, wow

Well, the day is almost upon us where Arthas Menethil, arrogant prince and father murderer decides that now, after a few years sat on an icy throne (I bet he has evil piles) that we are worthy of annihilation.

Yup, Wrath of the Lich King launches at Midnight tonight, most places won’t be lucky enough to have midnight opening launches near them though leaving us lesser mortals the opportunity to pick up the game when shops open in the morning.

Then the exciting prospect of levelling to level 80 through completely new areas doing completely new quests awaits… after installing and upgrading our accounts anyway…

I’m REALLY excited about WotLK, should be great fun… :)

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My Current UI (Nov 08)

November 3rd, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Gaming, wow

I’m currently using a whole bunch of addons, I thought it might be interesting to show a screenshot and say a little about each addon that makes up my user interface. Here goes…


Click the picture to enlarge…

I’ve annotated the screenshot but here are the full details, including what can’t be seen visibly:

Ackis Recipe List (hidden) - Shows me which profession recipes I’m missing and where to get them from.
Ampere (hidden) - Allows me to turn addons on and off easily without having to log out and back in again.
Atlas and AtlasLoot (hidden) - Displays instance maps with boss locations and shows you what loot can drop with drop rates.
AutoBar (shown) - A bar which which gives quick access to quest items, food, drink, buffs and various class related stuff. It automatically updates to display relevant items. Saves cluttering up your regular bars with stuff.
BetterBlizzOptions (hidden) - Makes the new Blizzard options panel resizable and wider by default.
Buffalo (shown) - Lets you move and skin the default buff/debuff display.
ButtonFacade (hidden) - Lets you skin other addons, this is the addon causing all my bar and buffs to share their look.
Capping (hidden) - Displays various timer bars in PvP and lets you announce them to chat.
Carbonite Quest (shown) - Displays a rather funky google-maps like… map and using it’s own tracker lets you visibly see where and how far away quest objectives are. Covered in an earlier Addon Corner video.
Chatter (shown) - Various chat window improvements including timestamps, class-coloured names, invite links and many, many more.
Clique (hidden) - Enables me to “click-cast”, making casting healing spells as simple as pointing at a unit frame and clicking.
Combuctor (hidden) - A unique all-in-one bag addon that has various tabs to help ease tracking down various items in your inventory, also lets you look at the bags and bank of your other characters too.
CraftList2 (hidden) - Lets people whisper any of my characters with !craft text and get a whisper back with anything any of my alts can make. Useful to cut down on “can you make” queries.
EavesDrop (hidden) - Compact combat log replacement that is simple and easy to follow.
Examiner (hidden) - Easy to use inspection addon, lets you quickly and easily inspect someone of either faction to view their gear and see stats.
FishermansFriend (hidden) - Allows simple double-click casting as well as automatically using lures and lowering unnecessary sounds.
Fortress (shown) - Data Broker display, currently showing all the following:

  • Top Row: TheTravellersReference, Broker_Factions, Broker_PvP, Attrition, picoDPS, Broker_Group, Bagsy
  • Bottom Row: picoFPS, TopScoreFu, ToFu, picoFriends, picoGuild, Broker_AntiSocial, AllPlayed, Junkie, Haggler, MrPlow and MakeRocketGoNow
Gathermate with GatherHUD and Routes (hidden) - Gathermate records and displays “gathering” profession nodes, GatherHUD displays those nodes in a really cool way to aid navigation and Routes enables you to create routes (which GatherHUD can overlay) which minimise the amount of travel needed to reach all the nodes in a zone.
Feed-O-Matic (hidden) - Provides an easy way of feeding your pet (as a hunter).
ItemRack (hidden) - Create gear sets and change between them quickly and easily. I prefer ItemRack to Outfitter but both do the same kind of thing.
LightHeaded (hidden) - View Wowhead comments on quests in your questlog, makes levelling MUCH quicker…
Linkerator (hidden) - Display item links of items you have seen just by starting to type it.
LinkWrangler (hidden) - Lets you have multiple item link windows open at once for easy comparisons.
Livestock (hidden) - Lets you set either a keybind or an action bar button to get on a random mount or pull out a random non-combat pet.
Macaroon (shown) - Replacement for Blizzards default action bars, utilises macros and is very easy to customise.
MBB (Minimap Button Bag) (hidden) - Grabs all those nasty minimap buttons and sticks them inside it’s own button to keep things tidy.
oGlow (hidden) - Shows shiny borders around gear in bags and on your character sheet so you can see uncommon, rare and epic items easier.
Omen (hidden) - Everyone’s favourite threat meter. Shows everyone’s threat so you know who to shout at when doing instances, since patch 3.0.2 it gets it’s information direct from the client. Essential addon!
Opie (hidden) - Cool ring-based addon for easy access to essential spells. Covered in an earlier Addon Corner video.
Pawn (hidden) - Gives gear values based on weightings you give various stats and displays this value on tooltips to aid comparisons.
Postal (hidden) - Improves the mailbox interface tenfold, gives quick access to friends/guildies along with numerous shortcuts for dealing with mail.
QuestGuru (hidden) - Replacement quest log with dual-pane and highlights important places and names in quest text. Also records what quests you complete.
SellFish (hidden) - Displays item costs on tooltips, automatically adjusts it’s known prices whenever you visit vendors.
SexyMap (shown) - Makes the default minimap sexy, has configurable borders and is very customisable, by default it hides map buttons until hovering over it. Very cool!!!
Skillet (hidden) - Replacement tradeskill windows, very configurable and hard to imagine using the default again after using it.
Talented (hidden) - Replacement talent window, shows all three trees at once and allows you to save various specs for easy switching.
TipTac (hidden) - Replacement tooltip, looks nicer than the default and is very customisable.
TomTom (hidden) - shows co-ordinate based waypoint arrows and markers on the mini-map, useful in conjunction with LightHeaded.
WIM (hidden) - Makes whispering people as easy as using an instant messenger.
XPerl (shown) - Replacement unit frames with a lot of bells and whistles, see who party members are targetting, who has heals on them and lots of other useful things. 

Hopefully seeing what I use will inspire you to check some of the addons out, I’m always looking for new addons and I’m always tweaking my UI…

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Addon Corner: Data Broker

November 3rd, 2008 | 1 Comment | Posted in Addon Corner, Gaming, wow

And now for something a little more complex, Data Broker isn’t a specific addon, but more a new way for addons to display information. Addons that utilise Data Broker (or LDB) expose their information but don’t actually display it, that job is done by a specific display addon.

Sound complicated? I guess it does, but it’s really not any different from using FuBar or Titan and their associated addons except for two important differences. The first being that for the addon programmer they no longer have to write code for all the possible “bar” addons and secondly it gives the end user (you and me) choice on how we want to display stuff.

Okay, okay, so how does this work you ask?

Basically it works much like FuBar or Titan does now, but instead of grabbing say FuBar and having to grab other FuBar mods, you now just pick a display and any Data Broker mods will work with it. This gives you choice and versatility.

First you need to grab something to display. LDB has been accepted by the community really quickly which means that pretty much anything you used to display on your old FuBar or Titan bars has been adapted to LDB. There is a category for Data Broker addons here at WoWInterface.

Second you need to choose a display addon. This is what makes Data Broker such a cool development, it gives you choice in how you want to display things.

Here are a few display mods:

ButtonBin - A simple tray-like display.
Carousel - A single block that enables you to rotate through your various Data Broker addons.
Fortress - Individual blocks that can be snapped together however you see fit. Can replicate a FuBar-style display easily.
MakeRocketGoNow - Focussed on displaying “launchers” for various addons. Generally used alongside a more traditional display.
StatBlockCore - Also uses individual blocks, similar to Fortress but with a slightly different design intent.

I personally use Fortress with blocks snapped horizontally to look a bit like FuBar/Titan, but you can snap the blocks together however you want. Prior to trying Fortress I used StatBlockCore which is very similar, I just prefer how Fortress looks and feels when snapping blocks together.

There are no doubt other displays than the ones mentioned above, these are just the more popular/visible ones. I suggest simply trying a few out and see how it goes.

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Addon Corner - Addon Basics

October 26th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Addon Corner, Gaming, wow

This time I thought I’d take a step back and actually start from the beginning and cover what an addon is, where you can get them and how they can help you!

So, first things first, what exactly IS an addon?

Well, World of Warcraft was designed so that players can create extensions that add or enhance World of Warcraft’s interface (the stuff you see onscreen). An addon is just that, an extension to the interface, generally to make something more accessible or easier to use.

Great, so what kind of things can addons do?

Addons have been created for a multitude of tasks, if you can see something onscreen then there have been addons to replace it with “better” versions. By better I really mean different, one person’s “better” is another person’s “worse”… 

Addons cannot “play” the game for you however, they can assist and aid you, but you must hit the buttons to move and cast. Pretty much anything else however is in an addons jurisdiction.

Okay great, so addons let you customise your interface, where do I get them from?

Well, this is the easy part, there are few websites that specialise in WoW addons. Both WoWInterface and Curse.com house the majority of addons available. Generally, if you’ve heard of an addon it will be available at one or both of those sites.

Cool, I’ve found an addon I want to use, what do I do with it now I’ve downloaded it?

Once you have the addon downloaded, it is just a case of “unzipping” it into your “World of Warcraft\Interface\Addons” folder.

Wait, what’s “unzipping”?

Addon’s generally come compressed, generally known as zipped (due to one of the most popular compression utilities called PKZip). This saves space and makes transferring files easier. You have to uncompress, or unzip these files to get them in a usable state. If this sounds complicated, don’t panic, the process is exceptionally easy.

You may or may not have some form of utility installed to aid with this process, but either way the process is similar. Simply navigate to where you downloaded the addon and double-click the addon to open it.

Then click Extract all files and click Next, then click Browse… and make your way to your WoW addons folder, typically “My Computer\Local Disk (C:)\Program Files\World of Warcraft\Interface\Addons” then click OK then Next then Finish.

Okay, I’ve done that, now what?

That’s it, the addon should now be functioning ingame. Start up WoW and have a look!

Wow, it worked! Now what?

Well, the answer to this depends on what the addon you installed does. Some addons require a little bit of configuring, some work straight away without you doing anything.

Generally there are two things an addon might do that lets you set it up how you want. The first is it might create a button around the mini-map area that you can click to get to it’s options or perform some task (the tooltip will generally explain). Secondly, more recently it might add a configuration area to the games options panel, to get access to this simply press Esc (or click the Game Menu icon) and select Interface. Select the Addons tab on the top-left of this pane and you’ll see various options sections for any addons you have installed that utilise this area.

Unfortunately, not every addon is consistent in HOW you access it, but generally one of those two methods will suffice. If you cannot figure out how to use an addon or how to access it’s options, I recommend visiting the addon’s page on the site you downloaded it from as there should be some kind of instruction there.

Hopefully this post is helpful, if you think I have missed something or glossed over something, please mention it in the comments and I’ll add or alter the post accordingly.

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Busy…

October 19th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Gaming, wow

Sorry for the lack of posts since the patch hit, there is so much to do that I’ve not really had chance to stand back and write any blog entries. I have a few currently being drafted, and the addon posts will continue soon™ now that the dust is settling from the patch hitting.

Currently Angelikuh is working on various achievements, mostly the Hallow’s End and Exploration ones at the moment while Twigleaf is busy levelling her way through Outland to 70. She is currently level 64 and just headed into Zangarmarsh. Hopefully with that pace she should hit 70 before Blade’s Edge Mountains… I can dream…

I still have a whole bunch of stuff to do on these to prepare them for Wrath, like getting Angelikuh’s fishing and cooking skill to max. Twiggers has been REALLY slacking and her skinning/leatherworking hasn’t even really gotten off the ground as she was so focussed on levelling it got left behind.

These few weeks to Wrath are packed with things to do. Reputations to gain, skills to level, gold to earn…

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Essential 3.0.2 Compatible Addons

October 15th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Gaming, wow

So, as usual, with a new patch comes hundreds of broken addons as Blizzard update and change how the game works behind the scenes. Here are a selection of what I consider “Essential” addons that have been updated to work with Patch 3.0.2.

I’ll no doubt add to this over the days ahead.

Gear Organisation

The two most popular addons for organising gear have been updated with 3.0.2 support.

Outfitter - Version 4.3b6 (Beta) - (Curse) (WoWInterface)
ItemRack - Version 2.243 - (WoWInterface)

Map Enhancement

Carbonite Quest - Version 1.30+ - (Curse) (WoWInterface) (Addon Homepage)
Carbonite provides a pretty need Google Maps-like interface,  it also has it’s own quest log tracker with objectives linked to it’s map. Very nifty.

Cartographer - Version 2.1 - (Curse)
Perhaps the most used addon in existence, enables full maps (with optional fog to see where you haven’t been), guild and party member locations and a much more friendly map interface.

Atlas - Version 1.12.2 - (Curse) (WoWInterface)
Atlasloot Enhanced - Version 5.00.01 - (Curse) (WoWInterface)
Atlas provides detailed instance maps with bosses and points of interest marked. Atlasloot is a plugin for Atlas that extends Atlas to display what loot bosses drop. (Along with detailed loot tables for most areas of the game)

Chat Enhancement

Chatter - Version 79024-wotlk - (WoWInterface)
Provides useful “should-be-default” chat enhancement, like timestamps, player colourisation etc.

WIM - Version 3.0.1 beta - (Addon Homepage)

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Just a little note!

October 14th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Addon Corner, Asides, Gaming, Retro, wow

Just a little note to say that’ll I’ll have a post covering essential add-ons that work with patch 3.0.2 a little later on.

See you on the other side!

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