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Arcane Brilliance: Inscription and the common MageArcane Brilliance: Inscription and the common Mage
Glyphs Every Mage can benefit from these, regardless of whether they have Inscription or not. Your Mage can obtain his/her first glyphs at level 15. At level 70, you have room for three minor glyphs and two majors, and you should absolutely be trying to fill those slots as soon as possible. In this column, for the sake of space, I'll only be talking about the glyphs available currently on the live servers. So what glyphs can we get now, and which of those are worth the getting?
For PvP Arcane Mages, this isn't bad. Those extra five yards can be a life-saver in Arena, and in theory, being able to cast from farther would help even in PvE. The fatal flaw with this idea is that the other DPS spells you'll be casting as an Arcane Mage (Arcane Barrage, Arcane Blast) are still stuck at a shorter range, meaning this glyph isn't realistically going to allow you to stand any farther back that you would otherwise be able to. Glyph of Ice Armor Meh. If you're fighting a lot of melee opponents or a Frost Mage, having a bit more armor and frost resistance isn't a bad thing to have, but otherwise this seems a waste of a glyph slot. Glyph of Frost Nova Not too shabby. That 20% is significant. What this basically translates to is an extra Ice Lance or so before your Frost Nova breaks. More control, more damage, more killing, right? Who doesn't want more killing? Wait...that came out wrong. Glyph of Arcane Explosion As major glyphs go, this one is of limited value. Unless you're planning on spamming AoE a whole lot all of the time, I wouldn't burn a glyph slot on this. Glyph of Improved Scorch Ahhh, now we're talking. This is a sexy glyph. There are a few things this glyph has the potential to do for you. First, it'll save you time on every pull, allowing you to cast Scorch twice at the start of the fight to fully stack the debuff, instead of five times. Second, when and if the debuff happens to fall off your target, two casts of Scorch will fully re-stack it. Again, time will be saved, and DPS will be increased. A third and slightly more nebulous use for this glyph is that you may now consider not spending all three talent points on Improved Scorch. I'm not advocating this, only suggesting it as a possibility, since combining this glyph with even one talent point into Improved Scorch could still apply the debuff with reasonable efficiency, now that each proc will apply three applications instead of just one. Good glyph. Glyph of Icy Veins This is really nice for Frost Mages in PvP. This glyph gives you another snare-removal option, and in Arena, that's more than worth a glyph slot. Glyph of Evocation I like this glyph far more than I expected to. It's really nice to have a quick healing option, especially now that evocation has a shorter cooldown. This speeds up leveling, PvE grinding of every kind, and is quite useful in PvP. Mages have never had many options for recovering health, so this is a welcome addition. Glyph of Blink I would prefer this glyph if it was minor instead of major. Blink's usefulness as an escape option has never really been about the distance as much as it has been about the instant location-swapping. The extra 5 yards does help, but not as much as it needs to to warrant a major glyph slot. This is especially true when you consider the distinct possibility each time you use it that your Blink will malfunction, making the glyph useless. 5 extra yards doesn't help much if you're going backwards. Glyph of Mana Gem Getting more mana each time you use your mana gem is undeniably useful, and 10% of the 2400ish mana these gems give back at level 70 is a solid 240 mana. Still, I'm not sure this is worth spending a slot on, especially given that managing mana isn't nearly the problem post-patch that it was previously. Glyph of Ice Block Picture this: you Ice Block, and the Rogue that you're trying to escape from cozies up to you, stabbing away at your block of ice, waiting for you to pop out and die. With this glyph, you now have a guaranteed Frost Nova waiting for him. Mmmm. Yummy Shatter combo deliciousness. With this glyph, you'll even see some Frost Mages using Ice Block offensively, as a way to instantly follow a Shatter combo with a second one. This one's useful in PvP only, but the possibilities here are very intriguing. Glyph of Mage Armor Nice. Mage Armor's passive mana-return is already incredibly powerful in long encounters, and this glyph makes it even better. It's essentially a must for raiding Mages, especially as we start picking up the spirit-heavy caster gear available in Wrath. Glyph of Arcane Power As an Arcane Mage, I like this. An extra three seconds of Arcane Power gives you an extra powered-up nuke or two, and for burst-damage-oholics like myself, that's worthwhile.
I know minor glyphs aren't intended to be truly useful. They're designed to be minor conveniences or cosmetic alterations. I get that. But holy crap, this sucks. Anything else is probably a better use of your minor glyph slot than this. It gives you an extra 30 minutes on your Ice Armor spell. If my calculations are correct, that saves you one button press...once...every half-hour. Seriously, my kid just drew something in oatmeal on her high-chair that's more magically potent than this. Glyph of Arcane Intellect Again, not very worthwhile. At best, this saves you a small amount of mana if you choose to reapply Arcane Intellect after getting it eaten by a felhound or something. A minor convenience. That's what we're getting with these minor glyphs, I know, but there are better choices. Glyph of the Penguin So. Awesome. If you're going to apply a cosmetic glyph, this is the one. My only complaint is that I wish it gave you separate penguin and sheep buttons. I know I can take the glyph off if I ever want to go back to sheep, but I still feel a sense of loss knowing my sheep ability is gone. Glyph of Slow Fall This is actually quite nice. It frees up an inventory slot, and means that you never have to think twice about casting Slow Fall. This is great fun. Arathi Basin becomes a fantastic festival of floating Mages when this glyph makes Slow Fall a consequence-less proposal. Yes, I like alliteration. Lay off. Glyph of Fire Ward Of limited use, but a for PvP Mages, this is a better use of a minor slot than most. 5% chance to reflect is better than nothing at all. Glyph of Frost Ward Same deal here. A good collection of minor glyphs for PvP is probably this one, Fire Ward, and Penguin for the embarrassment factor, or Slow Fall if you do a lot of Battlegrounding. All things considered, Inscription seems like a perfectly appropriate profession choice for Mages, both for leveling and at the current end-game. We'll have to reevaluate its viability--along with every other profession--as things get ironed out at level 80, but for now, any Mage would be well served with this profession in their spellbooks. It isn't anything that's going to blow the current favorites out of the water, but it can certainly hold its own. Every week Arcane Brilliance teleports you inside the wonderful world of Mages and then hurls a Fireball in your face. Check out our recent look at how long your gear will last you in Northrend, or our analysis of the current state of the Mage class as we move into the new expansion. If you're sick and tired of all this Mage-talk, there's a veritable treasure trove of guides and tips related to all of the other aspects of WoW over in the wow gold Directory. Until next week, keep the Mage-train a-rollin'. Author: This original article is the property of wow gold. We provides independent customer of cheap wow gold.
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