This series quotes gold-per-hour figures constantly — 150 for dailies, 100-150 for primals, 60-100 for fishing. The number nobody computes is the one that decides everything: what YOUR hour is actually worth.

The three-question framework

  • How many hours do you really play? Not the aspirational number — the honest weekly average. Ten hours weekly means every hour carries ten percent of your entire WoW life.
  • What fraction is prime time? Hours when your raid runs, your friends queue, your brain is sharp. These are irreplaceable; a farming hour spent here costs more than its gold yield suggests.
  • What does an hour of your income buy? If an hour of your real-world work converts (via legitimate purchase channels) into more gold than an hour of Elemental Plateau, the plateau is a hobby, not an income — enjoy it as one or skip it honestly.

The efficiency ladder rebuilt

Ranked by gold per PRIME hour, the ladder inverts: profession cooldowns and AH posting (minutes of attention) crush any active farm; background-attention income — fishing, gathering while queuing — comes second; dedicated farming hours rank LAST despite the biggest raw numbers, because they consume the scarcest resource.

The mistakes the math exposes

Farming consumable gold during raid-window hours; grinding a mount fund across six weekends a purchase would solve in minutes; and the reverse error too — buying everything and losing the gameplay loops you actually enjoyed. The framework cuts both ways.

The one-line takeaway

Price your hour once, honestly, and every guide in this series becomes a menu instead of a mandate: farm what relaxes you, automate what compounds, and buy what a deadline demands. That is the entire economics of playing WoW as an adult.