Class Transmogrification List
With the popularity of our previous weapon transmogrification list, we have expanded the list to more slots for each class. Because these lists are so long and take some time to prepare, the lists will be split into groups of a few classes at a time. Today we start with Warriors, Paladins, and Death Knights.

This time around items that share the same model and color are counted together in the rankings, but not items that have different color variations of the same model. Cloaks and offhands will be included in a non class specific list in the future.

All of the items in the list have screenshots on the database page if you are looking for some transmogrification ideas!


Warrior
Head Shoulder Chest
Onslaught Battle-Helm Onslaught Shoulderblades Onslaught Breastplate
Wrathful Gladiator's Plate Helm Wrathful Gladiator's Plate Shoulders Brutal Gladiator's Plate Chestpiece
Ymirjar Lord's Helmet Ymirjar Lord's Shoulderplates Breastplate of Might
Helm of Might Brutal Gladiator's Plate Shoulders Wrathful Gladiator's Plate Chestpiece
Brutal Gladiator's Plate Helm Pauldrons of Might Gendarme's Cuirass
Waist Legs Feet
Belt of Broken Bones Onslaught Greaves Myrmidon's Treads
Girdle of Stability Brutal Gladiator's Plate Legguards Hellfrozen Bonegrinders
Belt of Might Wrathful Gladiator's Plate Legguards Sabatons of Might
Onslaught Belt Legplates of Might Guardian's Plate Greaves
Guardian's Plate Belt Ymirjar Lord's Legplates Wrathful Gladiator's Greaves of Triumph
Wrist Hands Main Hand
Bracers of Might Onslaught Gauntlets Quel'Serrar
Onslaught Wristguards Brutal Gladiator's Plate Gauntlets Maladath, Runed Blade of the Black Flight
Onslaught Bracers Wrathful Gladiator's Plate Gauntlets Quickening Blade of the Prince
Bracelets of Wrath Gauntlets of Might King's Defender
Imperial Plate Bracers Ymirjar Lord's Gauntlets Brutal Gladiator's Pummeler

Paladin
Head Shoulder Chest
Judgement Crown Lightbringer Pauldrons Judgement Breastplate
Lightsworn Helmet Lightsworn Shoulderplates Lightbringer Chestguard
Lightbringer Faceguard Judgement Spaulders Brutal Gladiator's Lamellar Chestpiece
Brutal Gladiator's Lamellar Helm Brutal Gladiator's Lamellar Shoulders Lawbringer Chestguard
Mask of Penance Wrathful Gladiator's Ornamented Spaulders Breastplate of Many Graces
Waist Legs Feet
Judgement Belt Judgement Legplates Judgement Sabatons
Lightbringer Girdle Lightbringer Greaves Lightbringer Treads
Lawbringer Belt Lightsworn Legplates Lawbringer Boots
Guardian's Lamellar Belt Brutal Gladiator's Lamellar Legguards Guardian's Lamellar Greaves
Girdle of Many Blessings Cassock of the Loyal Wrathful Gladiator's Greaves of Salvation
Wrist Hands Main Hand
Judgement Bindings Judgement Gauntlets Brutal Gladiator's Slicer
Lawbringer Bracers Brutal Gladiator's Lamellar Gauntlets Quel'Serrar
Virtue Bearer's Vambraces Lightsworn Gauntlets Maladath, Runed Blade of the Black Flight
Imperial Plate Bracers Lightbringer Gauntlets Syphon of the Nathrezim
Lightbringer Bracers Lawbringer Gauntlets Brutal Gladiator's Pummeler

Death Knight
Head Shoulder Chest
Acherus Knight's Hood Blood-Soaked Saronite Plated Spaulders Saronite War Plate
Greathelm of the Scourge Champion Scourgelord Shoulderplates Acherus Knight's Tunic
Scourgelord Helmet Acherus Knight's Pauldrons Scourgelord Battleplate
Sanctified Scourgelord Helmet Sanctified Scourgelord Shoulderplates Brutal Gladiator's Dreadplate Chestpiece
Brutal Gladiator's Dreadplate Helm Brutal Gladiator's Dreadplate Shoulders Sanctified Scourgelord Battleplate
Waist Legs Feet
The Plaguebringer's Girdle Engraved Saronite Legplates Greaves of the Slaughter
Acherus Knight's Girdle Acherus Knight's Legplates Acherus Knight's Greaves
Guardian's Plate Belt Scourgelord Legplates Guardian's Plate Greaves
Belt of Absolute Zero Sanctified Scourgelord Legplates Woe Breeder's Boots
Girdle of Many Blessings Brutal Gladiator's Dreadplate Legguards Rock Furrow Boots
Wrist Hands Main Hand
Bands of the Stoneforge Bloodbane's Gauntlets of Command Wrathful Gladiator's Cleaver
Acherus Knight's Wristguard Acherus Knight's Gauntlets Scourgeborne Waraxe
Virtue Bearer's Vambraces Scourgelord Gauntlets Netherbane
Imperial Plate Bracers Sanctified Scourgelord Gauntlets Wrathful Gladiator's Slicer
Polar Bear Claw Bracers Brutal Gladiator's Dreadplate Gauntlets Soul Blade



Blizzard and Bots
Nevalistis answered some of the common complaints that come up every time a player complains about bots not being banned.

Originally Posted by Blizzard (Blue Tracker / Official Forums)
It is a paying account, why ban them?

This is one of the biggest misconceptions we have, and I genuinely wish we could permanently clear it up. I'll provide a few hypothetical situations (mind you, these numbers are ENTIRELY made up).

Let's say 90% of botters were compromised accounts. This means that 90% of these botters aren't paying accounts; they're stolen accounts, which are generally fueled by stolen credit cards. These payments usually get disputed and taken back, which actually costs us money. If we're looking to make a purely fiscal observation, it makes no financial sense to let these continue (aside from the fact that we don't like compromised accounts to begin with - we want our players to be playing their own accounts safely and enjoyably).

Let's go on the other side of the fence and say 90% of these botters were otherwise legitimate players paying for their accounts, as you purport. When players bot, other players are inconvenienced by this behavior (and trust me, you guys outnumber the botters, even if you may feel it's the other way around). The inconveniences range from normal players having difficulty farming on their own to struggling to keep up with an economy that's being forcibly fluctuated via unfair advantage. When players are inconvenienced in this manner, they submit petitions.

Every petition submitted goes to a Game Master for review. A living, breathing person that is paid to provide customer service looks over it, does what's necessary for the situation (in botting cases, usually forwarding the info on to our exploitation/hacks team), and provides a response. Let's say 1-2 people are inconvenienced by a single botter (in all likelihood, we probably get many more petitions per botter than that). This would mean each botter is inconveniencing at least as many, and likely more, players that are positive to the community (the kinds of players we like and want to continue to play our game). For each botter we allow to continue botting, we potentially stand to lose more than we gain for a single subscription, just out of the sheer inconvenience it causes other players.

Even if you change those numbers around of legitimate players versus compromised accounts - we only stand to lose more if we don't take action on bots (which we do, regularly).

Blizzard needs to step it up. Unfortunately, the bots you see are no longer just hacked accounts...it's actual players exploiting the game by using bots to farm when they sleep or are away, therefore when blizzard sends a message investigating the matter they respond as a real player and no action is taken..at least that is my assumption since two of these jerks are still regularly botting Uldum.

This has been stated many times before, but action being taken against botters takes a long time to come about. The reason why is pretty simple, and another player in this thread has stated it quite eloquently, so I'll be highlighting it here:

Blizzard investigates every single bot report. But as they are intelligent they wait until they can patch a hotfix for the bot before they do mass ban waves. This cures the infection instead of treating the symptom.

We don't generally hit bots individually as we receive the reports because it doesn't ultimately solve the issue - they just acquire another account, either legitimately or illegitimately, and get back to botting. Instead, it's much more effective to study the bots, devise the method they are abusing, and break that method. In the process, we also construct ways of detecting the behavior, and create systems in which we can catch those bots and remove them much more quickly.

It's an ever-evolving battle, however. Botters are smart too, and they figure out what it is we figured out, and develop new bots. We start the cycle over again, but it also means we've eliminated a method of exploitation and have to move on to the next. I hope that makes sense - it's a very lengthy process, and for the best intentions of that process (and preventing providing that info to those who would abuse it), I can't go into much more detail.

If they don't whisper you back its a pretty sure sign that they're botting

Not quite. I tend to get anti-social when I'm mining. It gets me in an almost hypnotic groove. >o.o<

All jokes aside, not all players will respond to unsolicited whispers - after all, they know as little about your intentions (unless clearly stated) as you know about theirs. Some just feel like mining for a while, or do it while multi-tasking and reading Facebook or Reddit or something. I may or may not be speaking from experience. /coughs

How many real people, actual players do YOU KNOW personally that can fly around in the exact same pattern for 48 straight hours...and sometimes in fact weeks continuously without logging off?


And how many real people do you know who will sit at their computers and watch someone commit to these patterns for 48 hours straight? It's not an efficient manner to monitor bots, and we don't have our staff to do it any more than we expect our players to. It's also one of many factors that's considered, and unless you've been personally observing accounts for that long yourself, it's probably not quite working the way you perceive it to be. >^.~< Again, my discretion here is necessary, but suffice it to say it's taken into account.

There are other, better ways to identify bots and fight them. We have a team staffed specifically for this purpose. But it is time consuming, and it regrettably needs to be to be most effective. Bots don't get removed in small numerical batches; when we strike at them, it's usually in the hundreds, if not thousands.
This article was originally published in forum thread: Class Transmogrification List, Blizzard and Bots started by chaud View original post
Comments 125 Comments
  1. mmoc9a55ae87d3's Avatar
    Quote Originally Posted by Redwine View Post
    My Question is on the Botters. I would Assume Botters do not do well on PvP servers right? If the opposite faction notices a botter, he/she can just kill them, and it stops thier botting... right???
    sadly you can't kill them, because they gather the plants/ore from under the map ^_^
    i play a pvp server and this is the only reason that is keeping me from raping them
  1. Ozztick's Avatar
    I am a farmer of many things, not to sell, but because I am a guild leader & supplies are needed for items required in the guild. I have personally come across some of these "botters" in Uldum [and other locations]. I think I have found a way to stop them, or at least it works for the few that I have run into. Let me tell you what I found.

    One day I was farming Whiptail in Uldum, when I came across a troll priest farming too. He landed at an herb, looked like he was picking it, mounted & flew away. If I get to an herb at the same time someone else does, I stick around until they mount & take off, just in case they are not able to pick it up, I can grab it myself. This priest flew away without picking up the herb. I flew behind him & watched him/her do it a few more times. I sent the character a whisper, informing him/her that he missed a few herbs. Well, the character stopped dead in their tracks. I continued around my farming loop of Uldum & came back to the same spot that I had sent the whisper to the character & the character still had not moved. I sent in a ticket to have the person investigated. Within an hour, the character logged off. I came back in a couple of hours & the person was back again. This time, they were picking the herbs, but I sent them a tell to say I was glad they were not a bot. The person again froze dead in their tracks & did not move again for a few times around my farming route. I entered another ticket. The character logged off within another hour. The character returned again the next day, same thing.

    So I am not sure if Blizzard is actually investigating these concerns or is just putting a "band-aid" on the situation & logging the character off or if they are in fact investigating the issue & correcting the "bot farmers" scripts that they are using.

    The economy in WoW is a supply & demand, those that have the supply, can make the demand for the price. The botters have the advantage & are in fact hurting the economy in the game more than players know.

    So, what can you [as a player of the game] do to try to get those botters to stop? Send them a friendly whisper & see if they stop. If they stop, come back in 5-6 minutes & see if they are still there, if they are, put in a ticket & report them. What harm can it do to send someone a whisper to prevent them from making YOUR gold? What harm can it do to have a GM investigate YOUR findings? If Blizzard continues to get these tickets & are overwhelmed with answering them, investigating them, & tracking them down, maybe they will do more to stop them before they get a chance to start.
  1. Ozztick's Avatar
    I am a farmer of many things, not to sell, but because I am a guild leader & supplies are needed for items required in the guild. I have personally come across some of these "botters" in Uldum [and other locations]. I think I have found a way to stop them, or at least it works for the few that I have run into. Let me tell you what I found. One day I was farming Whiptail in Uldum, when I came across a troll priest farming too. He landed at an herb, looked like he was picking it, mounted & flew away. If I get to an herb at the same time someone else does, I stick around until they mount & take off, just in case they are not able to pick it up, I can grab it myself. This priest flew away without picking up the herb. I flew behind him & watched him/her do it a few more times. I sent the character a whisper, informing him/her that he missed a few herbs. Well, the character stopped dead in their tracks. I continued around my farming loop of Uldum & came back to the same spot that I had sent the whisper to the character & the character still had not moved. I sent in a ticket to have the person investigated. Within an hour, the character logged off. I came back in a couple of hours & the person was back again. This time, they were picking the herbs, but I sent them a tell to say I was glad they were not a bot. The person again froze dead in their tracks & did not move again for a few times around my farming route. I entered another ticket. The character logged off within another hour. The character returned again the next day, same thing. So I am not sure if Blizzard is actually investigating these concerns or is just putting a "band-aid" on the situation & logging the character off or if they are in fact investigating the issue & correcting the "bot farmers" scripts that they are using. The economy in WoW is a supply & demand, those that have the supply, can make the demand for the price. The botters have the advantage & are in fact hurting the economy in the game more than players know. So, what can you [as a player of the game] do to try to get those botters to stop? Send them a friendly whisper & see if they stop. If they stop, come back in 5-6 minutes & see if they are still there, if they are, put in a ticket & report them. What harm can it do to send someone a whisper to prevent them from making YOUR gold? What harm can it do to have a GM investigate YOUR findings? If Blizzard continues to get these tickets & are overwhelmed with answering them, investigating them, & tracking them down, maybe they will do more to stop them before they get a chance to start.
  1. marixis's Avatar
    I'm sure they have, but I've never seen a reference to it (which means nothing to my idea) but why doesn't Blizzard in some manner just buy a copy of the bot and reverse engineer it so they can see how they are programmed and then set flags in system that monitor accounts that perform the actions they find? Or if they receive a report of someone botting, why don’t they flag that account and compare it to the programmed actions of the known bot programs? Sure, that could fall under the Bot program TOS, but isn’t it unlikely that someone would be sued, considering the nature of bot programs anyways? Or, even go as so far as to change node location for materials / herbs required for current expansion?* I have zero programming ability// skill / knowledge, so I don’t even know what an undertaking like that would entail or even if it would be possible*Just a random thought.
  1. mmocc12a0e0502's Avatar
    I like !

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