But in Vanilla
gold wow classic, you would spend amounts 1-40 running anywhere like a peasant, driven by the tenebrous hope that one day that you too would be able to pay for a basic white goat like another, better dwarves. A class ability would help you vanilla's vast expanses slightly quicker -- Ghost Wolf, thanks if you were blessed! --but it was excruciatingly slow.
Many of the areas were massive, and, before Patch 4.2.0, flight paths had to be"discovered" before a participant could use them. Learning how to ride was expensive, too. Trainers would instruct apprentice riding at level 40 for 100 gold, and when you finally reach level 60, you needed to pay again to the journeyman riding skill that would enable you to buy a swift mount that would double your speed--in this case, a trendy 1000 gold.
Was it worthwhile? Yes, if only so that you could find a use for your'walk' key and saunter in to Goldshire or The Crossroads just like a high-fantasy cowboy. Could Tauren be cowboys? Is that weird? Let's proceed.
Can you scoff at the thought of saving 100 gold? If this is so, it's possible that you never experienced the devastating poverty of vanilla WoW. Just like real life, there were players
buy classic wow gold that were absurdly rich and had all of the best gear, and there were others who'd scrape a living selling seller trash just so that they could rub two copper coins together.