How many achievement points does loremaster give




















The Loremaster is a meta-achievement that rewards the player with a title and tabard after they have completed a high number of quests in each continent of the game. Daily quests do not count toward this achievement; some other repeatable quests only count the first time they're completed. The [ Loremaster's Colors ] — the other reward from this achievement — comes in the mail attached to a letter. For the Alliance, they will receive their letter from Tyrande Whisperwind.

Your accomplishments have been profound and far-reaching. Azeroth, with all of the recent turmoil, benefits greatly from those who seek to rid the land of evil. Only those who take the time to know our lands understand the sacrifices of the fallen and the valor of our heroes.

You are one such hero. Hopefully, you will recount the tales of your adventures for years to come. For the Horde, they will receive their letter from Baine Bloodhoof. Only those who listen to the winds understand the debts our fallen heroes have paid to protect our people.

The numbers for Alliance and Horde are different in all respects. In order to complete the achievement for Outland and Northrend, the player must complete a set number of quests in each zone.

In the pre-expansion areas Kalimdor and the Eastern Kingdoms , players must complete a total number of quests across the entire continent, regardless of zone.

I hope you can see my perspective here, and I hope you can right this wrong. Thank you for reading this post, and I look forward to receiving some communication. Im pretty sure A GM wont be able grant you the loremaster title only because u didnt earn it before the SL achievements were added GM can only act on what can be proven but becasue u didnt earn it in time they more then likely wont be able to grant it. Unfortunately, that is correct. They are unable to grant achievement credit.

I already submit a ticket to no avail, as they recommended I take my issue here. I have done everything exactly the same as everyone else who has earned the achievement. Thing is if they were to do it to you they would have to do it to everyother player they cant do it just for one player. Darthwraith, so I philosophically agree. If anyone meets the same criteria as I, they have fundamentally earned it, too. They should be appropriately rewarded.

But I have to hand it to Earl, he went and did that. Then came Cataclysm, and much of old Azeroth was recast with changes in scenery and new quest chains. Blizzard took the time to make achievements for most of the zones in the old world, so rather than just a lump sum of quests they were divided up into single zone or two combined zones in a couple of cases quest packets.

If nothing else, that makes things a little more digestible in my opinion, having a set of sub goals. Still, I did not go after the achievement. You had to do the whole thing on a single character which would mean a significant amount of back-tracking through zones you had out-leveled. Those get particularly annoying when even without a weapon your minimum hit will kill the mob in question a few times over. However, since Mists of Pandaria , achievements have been shared across your account.

Since I noted last week that I was actually having fun running down zones at level, the time seemed ripe. I was practically giddy at the prospect of having so many free character slots and rolled up four new characters with zones like Darkshore in mind. Some of the zones feel very familiar from the old days, though the quest chains have been tightened up quite a bit. No doubt because characters level up much faster now.

My night elf rogue… I am not sure why Blizz felt it was necessary to make leather wearing classes feel ridiculous by putting them in shorts and a vest in the starting zone.

Classic TBC. Report Links. Table of Contents Quick Facts. Comments Comment by Cool guide. How long did you spend by making loremaster? Comment by Nice Guide! Shame i'll probably never use it because I hate questing, but its a nice guide! Comment by It took me several months to get Loremaster, not weeks, but I didn't start at level I levelled to 60 through Kalimdor and started then.

I got the achievement at about quests, doing roughly quests an hour when you include peripheral stuff like levelling fishing, etc. This is over the mandatory number of quests because each region has extras and I like to finish most of them.

But if as the guide says you do quests a week, and you've done before you start, you are still looking at 6 months. I reckon I did more each week than that, but you can check the stats page to see what you've been doing up until now and do the maths relevant to you.

If you don't enjoy questing I reckon you'd be mad to do it. I'll add some points to an excellent guide if I might. Each continent breaks down into regions and the regions follow logical flows. If you do them in order, life will be much easier. Azeroth and Cataclysm are very good about this flow and Northrend fairly good.

Only Outland makes the ordering difficult. For example, in Eastern Kingdoms dwarves and gnomes start in Dun Morogh then are "expected" to go to Loch Modan , Wetlands , Arathi Highlands and the Hinterlands If you follow an expected track you will usually find breadcrumb quests that lead you to the next region instead of the Hero's Call or Warchief's Command quests that you will probably be too high a level to get - so the breadcrumb for Westfall is in Elwynn Forest.

These quests count, so by flowing you have one quest less to do when you get there. There's also flow within most regions. It's not hard and fast, but especially in Azeroth you tend to have quest hubs, and when you've finished a hub, there'll be a quest that leads you to the next hub.

If you find the expected flow, you'll also find all the quests you need without breaking sweat. If you find a quest in an area you haven't been led to, perhaps while gathering herbs or mining, jot it down or check it out rather than just taking it.

Some breadcrumb quests become unavailable if the quests that they lead to are taken. That brings me to Never abandon a quest without writing it down!

Open up a text document and jot down any quests you abandon, and if you move away from a hub without taking all quests at the hub, write that down too. Sometimes hubs fork questlines and you are expected to come back to the hub to get the next set of quests.

Fine if you've picked up the starter quests in your log which is ideal , but otherwise a quick note will save headaches. There are addons that will take the place of this if you prefer. Quests which end in a instance don't usually count for Loremaster, but you will often be sent to see someone standing outside the instance portal, and these quests typically do count, especially if it's in the same region.

Daily quests don't count, but there are quests with a similar name that are identical and done first which do count. As another example there are four separate quests called Membership Benefits which are each identical and repeatable, just done at different reputation levels.

These can count four for the region total Nagrand. You certainly have to do some of the group quests and can't solo them until much higher level. ETA: And the Outland regions are more dependent on each other than elsewhere, so if you can't find all the quests in some regions, such as Nagrand or Blade's Edge , don't panic.

It might just be you need to do parts of another region first. If you start at 85 you'll probably already have Azeroth flying, but if you start at a lower level, spend the money to upgrade speed as soon as you have it. As the guide says, you'll end up with money to spare and this can save you a lot of time. If you follow the human flow first, it brings exalted of Stormwind and makes your flight purchases much cheaper. I'm guessing an orc track will do the same for Og.

A good guild gets you cheaper goods and repairs, and wearing a guild tabard while questing will get you to exalted and the nice goodies in the shop. It'll also get you a few gz's and approving noises the day you get Fading into Twilight, Loremaster of Cataclysm, The Loremaster and that huge grin all over your face!

Comment by karatechop nice guide, just one thing though Comment by Arjuana I'd like to add my 2p here: - Breakdown by region. Yes, you probably will pick up the breadcrumb quests halfway on a region to another, but don't leave the region you are in it until all other quests are exhausted. It helps to keep control. Well, you don't need to complete this quest, you can complete all others and still get the sub-loremaster achievement for the zone you are in.

Why to avoid similar to these? No matter your level, power, stamina, you must survive based on the level of the "vehicle", so it can get pretty hard to do.

So some quests can get you with your epic pants down. Comment by Sooba I have the title. My strategy: I started at cata zones pandaria wasn't out yet , after that I did northrend, then outland, then azeroth.

While it can be hard to find quests in particular zones, I found the high-level zones worse because you couldn't one-shot the mobs the difference between one-shot and two-shot is annoyingly big if you want to get over with it! I again started at the worst zones - the ones with the most quests.



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