Mounts & Collectibles / Planner
WoW Mount Farming Planner
A mount farming planning page that helps players choose routines, avoid burnout, and verify source details before committing weekly time.
Quick answer
Group mounts by lockout, travel path, and personal motivation. A small weekly route that survives three months is better than an exhausting mega-list.
Search intent
Plan a mount farming routine that fits the player's available time.
Source notes before publish
- Check each mount source before publishing a specific recommendation.
- Do not invent drop rates or bad-luck protection details.
- Mark legacy, current, event-limited, and removed sources separately.
Sort farms by time cost
Players need a routine they can actually repeat. The best planner starts with time blocks instead of a giant alphabetized list.
- Five-minute checks for quick lockouts or vendors.
- Thirty-minute weekly loops by continent or portal path.
- Long session goals for achievements, reputation, or meta collections.
Track why each mount matters
Collectors stick with farms longer when the list includes motivation, not just source names.
- Visual theme: dragon, undead, mechanical, elemental, faction, class fantasy.
- Rarity or personal story.
- Display value for screenshots, profiles, or themed setups.
Keep volatile facts isolated
Drop rates, event windows, and availability status change or get misunderstood. Put volatile facts in a dated source block.
- Show last checked date.
- Link to current source notes when the live page is published.
- Use careful wording for community-estimated data.
FAQ
Should a mount farming page include drop rates?
Only when the source is clear and the date is shown. If the number is community-estimated, say so plainly.
What is the best mount farm for returning players?
The best first farm is usually a short route with easy access and a mount style the player actually likes, not the longest checklist.
How should mount pages link internally?
Link from mount planners to event pages, collectible trackers, transmog look pages, and any decor or display pages with visual overlap.