Final Fantasy XIV: 10 Tips For Leveling Crafting Classes
The MMORPG, Final Fantasy XIV, has a lot of crafting classes that a player can take up. These include Blacksmith, Carpenter, Goldsmith, Leatherworker, Weaver, Armorer, Culinarian, and Alchemist. All of these can be pretty useful to the player to make gil, gear, housing items, and consumables like potions and food.
Leveling up these classes is a far different experience than the combat classes. They cannot level up with the games' story and there aren't dungeons, hunts, and leveling roulettes for crafters. Luckily though, there are plenty of opportunities to level up fast. You just need to know where to find them and how to best utilize the resources.
10 Do LeveQuests
While the main story can let you completely level up one combat class, there is no such crutch for the crafting classes. Luckily, there are LeveQuests. There are NPCs that give out these special quests all across Eorzea that can be used by both Gathering and Crafting classes to gain a lot of experience.
The best way to utilize LeveQuests is to do them once you have reached level 15 in a crafting class. It is around that level where players trying to grind through crafts will notice a low input of experience points. LeveQuests can help with that through the extra experience of quest completion.
9 Get Into Ishgard Restoration
Ishgard Restoration has not always been around and new crafters should be quite thankful that it exists now. It is available to crafting classes once they hit level 20. The moment a crafter hits level 20, it is recommended to dedicate themselves to Ishgard Restoration. The amount of experience you get for each item turned is major.
To add even more reward, you also get scripts that you can spend on cool mounts, minions, housing items, and gear. As you level up though, the crafting may get more tedious and/or expensive. Don't worry though, there are plenty of other ways to gain experience when at those levels.
8 Do The Daily Beast Tribe Quests
Every expansion has its own Beast Tribes but only a fraction of them are for crafting classes. In A Realm Reborn, it is the Ixal. For Heavensward, it's the Moogles. The Namazu are in Stormblood. Lastly, the Dwarves are in Shadowbringers. It is a great idea to do Ixal quests until 20 when you can do Ishgard quests. Then you can move on to the Moogles once you hit level 50. Finally, the Namazu at 60 and the Dwarves at 70.
What is great about these quests is that they refresh daily and are pretty easy to complete (as long as you have good enough gear). The Beast Tribes also have unique rewards such as minions, resources, and mounts.
7 Look For What Sells On The Market Board
It is very easy to get burnt out by grinding crafts all day, especially if the reward is a minuscule of experience. An easy way to spice things up is to also level up crafting classes with the goal of making a lot of gil.
To do this, see what sells for the most on the Market Board and check if it is within your power to reasonably craft many of that item. That is easy experience with the extra reward of gil. After all, crafters often need gil to buy resources for their crafts. This is especially true at the higher levels.
6 Get Into Housing
If gil doesn't inspire you, maybe a cool house would. Nearly everything you can find in a players' house is craftable by a certain class. If you are a particular fan of this idea, carpenter is the best class when it comes to making housing items.
If you are lucky and rich enough to buy an in-game house, then just craft every housing item available to your crafting class. You can see if you like it in your home and if you don't, then you can just sell it.
5 Do Custom Deliveries
Once you reach level 60 in a crafting class and reach Idyllshire in Heavensward, then you can do custom delivery quests. This will not only get you experience, but also gil and special scripts to spend. These can be done with Zhloe in Idyllshire, then M'naago in Stomblood, and lastly with Kai-Shirr in Shadowbringers.
Each custom delivery client has a little story and it is recommended to do all of them. The quests refresh on a weekly basis.
4 Complete The Crafting Log
If it is recommended to not start LeveQuests until level 15, then what should crafters do to level up until then? The answer is just crafting one of everything in your crafting log.
As a beginner, this is bound to level you up fast. The resources required for these low level crafts are also super cheap and easy to get. Enjoy it while you can, as the higher levels will get you less experience and will be more difficult and expensive to make. That is why many move on to LeveQuests at level 15.
3 Do Grand Company Turn-Ins
Everyone forgets about Grand Company supply missions, which is strange since it is a great way to to gain company seals and experience points all at once. With the company seals, you can get gear, housing items, experience boosts, and more.
In any of the three Grand Company's, there is an NPC who will collect one specific item based on your crafters level each day. Like the Beast Tribes, this is a daily activity you can do in the game.
2 Eat Food
Food is the easiest experience bonus item available in the game. It doesn't usually matter what kind of food because they typically all give the same three percent bonus experience boost. Many players just buy a ton of orange juice from a bartender and drink it before crafting or turning in any kind of quest. Its dirt cheap and eating it only takes one second. There is really no loss here.
1 Take Advantage Of Free Company Actions
Not every player is in a Free Company, though most are. Free Companies can give players some resources that are unobtainable otherwise. Players in Free Companies are ranked. At rank five, they can buff everyone in the Free Company. These buffs can last for an entire day at most.
There are all kinds of Free Company actions, but what the crafters want is the "Helping Hand" action. That action increases experience gained by crafting. The increase does a little better than food, as the experience is boosted by five percent instead of three.
Post a Comment