![]() Tarot cards turn yellow at 195, so use them toward the end. Royal Ink (if you have pigment for it) or Class GlyphsĢ0 Class Glyphs (change recipes every 5 points) or Arcane Tarot (if you have Royal Ink) Tarot cards turn yellow at 150, so use them toward the end. ![]() Subtract the number of points gained with Dawnstar Ink from the Lion’s Ink tallyġ5-20 Class Glyphs (change recipes every 5 points) or Strange Tarot (if you have Dawnstar Ink) Progression Chart Skill RangeĢ0-25 Ivory Ink (can get you to 25 if you make enough)ġ0-20 Scrolls (depending on how far you got with Ivory Ink)Ģ0-25 Armor Vellum or Scroll of Recall (use first)Ģ0 Class Glyphs (change recipes every 5 points) I’m including them in as alternates, use them when you can. Since the recipes can occasionally give skill points, in a sense they are free points. On the other hand, they are a bonus item and don’t require additional milling (ie: destroying) of herbs. Rare inks have a similar problem, since the rare pigments are a random drop I really can’t dictate how many you should make. In other words, if you end up getting an extra five points on the ink, deduct five from the next item. ![]() I assume you will adjust your numbers depending on how many points you ended up getting from ink. Most of the time I indicate this with a range “20-25” for the ink and the recipe immediately following it. Since you’ll need much more ink than skill points allow, there’s some play in how many points you actually end up milking from them. Inks are usually not good grinding recipes, they often start green and change to gray very quickly. On the chart this will simply be noted as “change recipes every 5 points”. Make five, then learn the next batch, then make five more. Glyph recipes tend to turn yellow after five skill points, when making glyphs to level up you need to switch recipes every five points. There are some recurring issues in the leveling process, instead of reiterating it every time it comes up I’m going to cover it here. Payment: PayPal, Skrill, Cryptocurrencies. two regular ink, so I advise using the rare ink recipe since you’re unlikely to use rare inks for anything else in a power leveling scenario. There are some areas where you can make items with one regular ink and one rare ink vs. When milling your herbs for pigment, rare pigments are a bonus item. I’ve included them because they might allow you to conserve your regular inks, which use up more herbs than the ‘rare’ inks. In some cases the alternate columns has somewhat “higher” ingredient requirements. In other words, there are two recipes that can gain the same skill points, you select which column has the materials that are easier for you. The Recipe column lists alternates you can use interchangeably within the same skill range. Type of Pigmentĩ.75 stacks of Peacebloom, Silverleaf or EarthrootĦ.25 stacks of Mageroyal, Briarthorn, Swiftthistle, Bruiseweed or Stranglekelpġ5 stacks of Wild Steelbloom, Grave Moss, Kingsblood or Liferootġ7.5 stacks of Fadeleaf, Goldthorn, Khadgar’s Whisker or Wintersbiteġ7.5 stacks of Firebloom, Purple Lotus, Arthas’ Tears, Sungrass, Blindweed, Ghost Mushroom or Gromsbloodġ8.75 stacks of Golden Sansam, Dreamfoil, Mountain Silversage, Plaguebloom or Icecapġ7.50 stacks of Felweed, Ragveil, Terocone, Dreaming Glory, Ancient Lichen, Netherbloom, Nightmare Vine, Mana Thistle This chart assumes a minimum of 2 pigments per milling action, you will often get 3-4 pigments. Stop milling when you hit the target number of pigments. ![]() The quantities in this chart represent a worst case scenario, hopefully the maximum number of herbs you’ll need to progress. Next to each pigment is a list of the herbs that can be milled to produce it, and the number of stacks you should collect of those herbs. The following chart shows the amount of pigment needed to make the Inks on the Progression chart at the end of this guide. You might also want to review my inscription guide if you want to learn about the basics of Inscription. You’re always welcome to take a detour for those items if you’re more interested in the profit potential of a particular item rather than component cost. While I do present some alternative recipes at certain levels, I do not suggest using the more component intensive recipes. This is a materials list and suggested progression chart for power-leveling Inscription.
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