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Inscription details: Glyphs, runewords, and moreInscription details: Glyphs, runewords, and more Eliah Hecht In the small patch that was applied to the Beta servers last night, there were a few Inscription tweaks. Of course there were some minor tweaks to various class glyphs, but the most interesting change came in the form of 2 new recipes: Minor Inscription Research and Northrend Inscription Research. We found out a little bit about inscription and what materials it might need when the Wrath of the Lich King beta debuted last week, and yesterday we learned that they will be helping Enchanters use the auction house, but we were still left wondering about what was originally promoted as the central purpose of the new profession: enhancing spells. Thanks to the WotLK Wiki, we now have some information on that very intriguing functionality.
By the way, I think I've solved the puzzle of what a practitioner of Inscription is called: "inscriber." The OED defines "inscriber" as "One who inscribes; the writer of an inscription." The other two major contenders, "inscriptor" and "scrivener," are defined respectively as "An inscription (obsolete, rare)" and "A professional penman; a scribe, copyist; a clerk, secretary, amanuensis." "Inscriptionist" is another possibility, being defined as "The writer or carver of an inscription," but it's longer than "inscriber" and so I do not favor it.
To get back on topic, I have here (via the wiki) several actual examples of Glyphs drawn from the data files, the first such we've seen, to my knowledge.
I foresee Glyph of the Penguin being in very high demand. And Glyph of Wild Endurance looks very pleasant for a Minor Glyph; that might be popular with the raiding druids. If spells found in the beta can be trusted, inscribers will have yet a few more tricks up their ink-stained sleeves: Runewords and Runes of Power. The concept of rune words will be familiar to players of Diablo II, though they seem to be quite different here. It looks like Wrath runewords will be temporary enchants for armor, similar to sharpening stones or mana oil for weapons. Here's an example: Runeword of Minor Magic. The reagent for this is one Dreamfoil. Unknown is whether runewords will be inscriber-only, or if they will be tradable. Runes of Power appear to be ways for inscribers to cast extra spells, consuming ink to do so (ink being derived from herbs). The only example to be found so far is Runic Blast; Ivory Ink is made from Peacebloom. From all appearances it looks like inscribers will be going through quite a bit of ink, between crafting and using their Runes of Power, so it might be wise to stockpile herbs of all kinds, especially low-level ones which are next to worthless right now. Overall, Inscription is looking very attractive. I'm pretty sure my Death Knight is going to be picking Peacebloom and grinding them up to make my ink, and it makes me smile to think about it. How about you guys? Patch 3.0.2 "Echoes of Doom" has landed and rogue builds talent has you covered. From patch notes to talent guides for every class to fixing your addons to 5 easy achievements you can snag right now. Make sure to check out the latest news.Author: This original article is the property of wow gold. We provides independent customer of cheap wow gold and power leveling.
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