WoW The War Within Season 2: Solo Gearing Guide

26.03.2025 - 06:36:00
Game Guides , World Of Warcraft

WoW The War Within Season 2: Solo Gearing Guide

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Playing solo isn’t all that bad. If you’ve got a plan in mind, WoW The War Within Season 2 solo gearing is definitely possible. This is perfect for those whose guildmates are busy and caught up with other things so they can’t hop into the game. You can also do this as a challenge for yourself.

WoW The War Within Season 2 solo gearing guide image

Solo gearing is very difficult, and you’ll also need a lot of WoW The War Within gold to pull it off. Lucky for you, we’ve got a good selection of gold offers here at RPGStash. We’ll hook you up in no time. Now, let’s talk about how you can execute a well-planned solo gearing run in the game.

What Is a "Solo" Player in WoW: The War Within Season 2?

Before getting into the specifics of gearing in The War Within Season 2, we need to define what a "solo" player actually is. This term gets thrown around a lot, and depending on who you ask, the definition can change quite a bit.

Some players consider soloing to mean doing everything entirely alone—no other players involved whatsoever. In this mindset, you're not relying on anyone else for anything when it comes to gearing up your character.

You're avoiding all group content completely and focusing entirely on activities you can do by yourself. The goal is to squeeze as much loot and as many rewards out of the season as possible without waiting on anyone or depending on them. You're aiming to be fully self-sufficient, to handle everything the game throws at you on your own terms.

Then there’s another kind of solo player. These are people who don’t have a raiding guild, a consistent group of friends, or a regular Mythic+ team. So while technically they do engage with other players, it's not with a stable or reliable crew.

These players often find themselves pugging—jumping into random groups for open-world content, instanced activities, and even raids. They’re fine with working alongside others, but they don’t have that dependable team they can log on and jump into content with at a moment’s notice.

This guide is going to focus primarily on the first kind of solo play—the type where you're not relying on anyone else. We'll look at how you can gear effectively without needing other people at all. That said, we’ll also sprinkle in a few pug-friendly options here and there.

These are extra bits of content you can tap into if you’re open to occasional interaction with others, but still want to keep that mostly solo playstyle intact. If you’re planning on doing this, you’ll need WoW Retail Gold to make it easier but this is completely optional.

World Content – Your Core for Solo Progression

At a minimum, you should be doing the world objectives and world quests available from Caz Algar. Whether it's the Archivist objectives, the main world quest chains involving Loam, or even the weekly Delve objectives—these are all solid sources of gear, crafting materials, and currency.

There's also a variety of different events scattered across the open world, and ideally, you want to do at least a bit of everything. Each of these world events and objectives gives you access to reward boxes, and those boxes matter.

WoW The War Within world content rewards and progression

These boxes contain a weekly cache of rewards, which includes materials used to upgrade gear—like Valor Stones and some of the entry-level crests. You'll also get gold, which is helpful for enchanting your gear or buying materials needed to craft gear. That’s a key point here: crafting is very important in this solo gearing approach.

The first two activities you do each week will contain Veteran track gear, and the first four will grant Restored Coffer Keys. These keys are used to access Delves, which we’ll get into more later. Completing the main weekly objective from the core zone in Caz Algar also awards Sparks, which you’ll use to craft gear. Sparks are going to be one of the major routes you’ll want to pursue to push your item level higher.

These events and objectives aren't optional—they’re highly recommended and should be considered a baseline. At the very least, do the main Caz Algar weekly event and four other activities that give you boxes.

Four is the bare minimum, but the more you do, the more Valor Stones, crests, and gold you’ll stack up. It all adds up fast, and every piece of it goes into fueling your character’s power curve.

Beyond the basics, there are several other open-world events across the zones that help supplement your gearing grind:

  • The Theater Within in the Isle of Dorn
  • Awakening Machine Event in the Ringing Deeps
  • Hollowfall Event: "Spreading the Light"
  • Ashaj Leader Quests: Once you pick a leader to serve from the main faction, you’ll unlock more world quests and objectives tied to them. Completing these earns reputation and reward boxes.

In Undermine, there’s the Surge Pricing Event. When it's active, ride around and knock out activities and odd jobs. These tasks reward you with extra boxes and valuable items. Other than this, you can try out the WoW The War Within Cartel content too which is just as rewarding.

You’ll also have Special Assignments, which rotate from zone to zone every few days. These are tied to world quests, and once you unlock and complete the special assignment in a zone, you'll get a reward box similar to your weekly caches.

There’s a lot available just in the open world. Even if you only stick to solo-friendly activities, there’s a significant amount of gear, resources, and progression available.

You should also make sure to kill the new world boss located in Undermine. The gear that drops is randomized, so there’s no way to guarantee something useful every week, but the items are very good.

Even if you're playing a cloth-wearer like a priest and the boss drops plate or leather gear, everything is warbound. That means your alts might be able to use it.

Sometimes, you’ll get lucky and get something your main character can actually equip right away. Even if not, these world boss items can still serve a purpose.

There’s never been a guarantee when it comes to world boss loot, but this is still worth doing on every one of your characters. Especially if you play multiple classes, these drops can be extremely helpful across your roster.

On top of the loot itself, the currency from world quests is also worth chasing. It often overlaps with other events, especially the weekly Caz Algar rotation, which lets you double dip rewards when timed right. Keep an eye on what’s available and overlap where you can.

Timewalking Content – High Value with Low Effort

If you're not strictly against pug content, then Timewalking events are something you should absolutely take advantage of whenever they’re up. These events rotate in weekly and are a strong option for solo players willing to queue for group content without needing a consistent team.

Weekly Timewalking Dungeon Events

The weekly Timewalking events are easy to complete and can reward some serious gear. Take, for example, Mists of Pandaria Timewalking, which is active this week.

All you have to do is run five Timewalking dungeons, which you can queue for directly. Just select your role—tank, healer, or DPS—and you’ll typically get fast queues since these events tend to be popular.

Once you complete those five dungeons, you’ll get a Cache of Undermine Treasures. This chest can drop any item from the current raid, Liberation of Undermine, and that includes loot from any boss. So even though all of the items are Champion track, they come from a pool of very strong raid gear.

Some of the best trinkets in the game and other rare items are in that drop table. On top of that, there’s a variety of weapons with bonus Shadow damage—great for DPS. Playing solo puts extra weight on raw output, so check where your class lands in our best DPS in Patch 11.1 ranking.

WoW Timewalking dungeons - rewards and raid loot opportunities

Even if you're playing something like a Rogue, you can equip one in your offhand and still get excellent value from it, even if the item level is a little lower. These weapons tend to perform well and sim incredibly high, so they’re worth the effort.

Bottom line: Timewalking dungeons are fast, straightforward, and give you a shot at powerful rewards, making them one of the better weekly activities for players doing solo or limited group content.

Timewalking Raids – Even More Loot Opportunities

You should also keep an eye out for Timewalking dungeon weeks from older expansions like The Burning Crusade, Wrath of the Lich King, and Cataclysm. These weeks come with their own Timewalking Raids, which open up even more loot opportunities.

Let’s say it’s Wrath of the Lich King week. That means you’ll have access to a Timewalking version of Ulduar. Every boss in that raid has a chance to drop Champion track items, and there are a lot of bosses in those old raids. That’s a big pool of loot you can farm.

Beyond gearing, there’s also the collectible factor. These raids can drop mounts and other unique items, making them a two-for-one value: gear progression and transmog or collectibles. If you want to shorten the gearing grind, a WoW gear boost can help you catch up while you focus on the build itself.

In addition, each raid comes with a weekly quest that asks you to defeat the final boss of the instance. For example:

  • Ragnaros for Cataclysm
  • Yogg-Saron for Wrath
  • Illidan for Burning Crusade

Completing this weekly quest gives you a random Hero track item from that raid, adding even more incentive to run these.

One of the best things about Timewalking raids is that they’re scaled down, so you don’t need high item level gear to join. Everything adjusts to your current power level, so even freshly leveled or undergeared characters can jump in.

The difficulty mostly comes down to mechanics, and even then, only a few fights are particularly demanding. Most pug groups can handle them easily. If you're okay jumping into a random group every now and then, Timewalking raids are an excellent, low-barrier option for solid gear and bonus rewards.

Delves – The Primary Gearing Method for Pure Solo Players

If you're playing as a pure solo player—meaning you don’t want to rely on or interact with other players at all—Delves will be where you spend the majority of your time.

This is going to be your bread and butter for gearing every one of your characters. Delves are built for solo play and offer a solid mix of progression, challenge, and rewards, even at higher difficulties.

WoW Delves solo gameplay content overview

To get into Delves, you need Restored Coffer Keys. You’ll get four guaranteed keys each week from completing the four weekly objectives tied to world content. Beyond that, you'll need to collect key fragments, which you can earn from world quests and other open-world activities. Once you’ve gathered 100 fragments, you can convert them into a key.

You’ll be accompanied by Brann, who is actually pretty useful—especially if you customize him with the right role and equip the proper curios. With the correct setup, Brann can tank, heal, or support you, depending on what your class needs.

Running Delves gives you access to Radiant Echoes, which are used to engage in World Soul Memories. Most players recommend stacking up and running five Memories at once. You can choose different difficulty levels, but doing five simultaneously gives you five times the rewards—so it’s definitely more efficient.

Clearing a Delve involves slaying enemies, defeating bosses, and completing events. Doing this efficiently means you’ll walk away with a good haul of Valor Stones, crests, and gear.

Starting at Tier 8, every Bountiful Delve rewards Champion track gear. Higher tiers (Tiers 9, 10, and 11) not only maintain that gear quality but also scale up the Rune Crest rewards. These tiers drop:

  • Two crests at Tier 8
  • Four at Tier 9
  • Six at Tier 10
  • Eight at Tier 11

Keep an eye out for Nemesis Allies, including goblins and hobgoblins working under the Underpin. These elites show up throughout the Delves, and defeating them—and clearing the entire delve—grants you additional crests at the end of your run. It’s well worth the effort to track them down and eliminate them.

While Champion track gear is the norm in Delves, there’s a way to earn Hero track gear: Maps.

Maps aren’t guaranteed, but they function as a kind of bad luck protection. The more Delves you run, the higher your chance of eventually finding one. Once you have a map, completing a Bountiful Delve and defeating the final boss will reward you with an extra box containing Hero track gear.

Delve maps and Hero track rewards in WoW

To increase your chances of getting better Hero track upgrades, run these Delves at Tier 8 or higher. That ensures your map leads to higher-quality rewards.

There’s also a method to directly spawn the Underpin inside a Delve using a Wave Scrambler 2000—an item you can either buy from Merren for 2,000 Undercoins or loot from small treasure caches throughout the Delves. The drop rate is low, but it’s not impossible. Players have reported success, so it’s worth checking all treasure nodes during your runs.

Maximizing Your Gilded Crest Gains

If you're aiming to maximize Hero track and Gilded Crest gains, save your maps and use them in higher-tier Delves, ideally Tier 11. These harder Delves award:

  • 7 Gilded Crests per run
  • 3 runs per week, capping at 21 Gilded Crests

If you use a map during one of these Tier 11 Bountiful Delves, you can earn up to 10 additional Gilded Crests per week. That’s a massive boost.

So if you loot a map at Tier 8 and that’s your limit, go ahead and use it. But if you can clear Tier 11 Delves, save the map—you’ll get much more value out of it.

Gilded Crests are incredibly valuable. They can be used to upgrade top-tier gear—including the Hero track gear you find in Delves—but more importantly, they’re essential for crafting some of the strongest gear in the entire game. And crafting is something we’ll break down in full detail a bit later.

Mythic+ Pugging – Optional but Rewarding for the Semi-Solo

If you’re a solo player who’s open to pug content, Mythic+ is another great route to boost your gearing potential—especially for Gilded Crest acquisition. While Delves can provide a maximum of 31 Gilded Crests per week (if you're fully optimizing Tier 11 runs with a map), that’s still only part of your weekly cap.

The rest of your cap can be earned through Mythic+ dungeons, and honestly, it might even be easier to cap via M+ than from Delves, assuming you’re okay jumping into group content without a premade team.

Your target should be +7 keys or higher. Once you can reliably clear +7s—even if you don’t time them—you’ll earn Gilded Crests at the end of the run.

That means your priority is:

  1. Push to +7 keys.
  2. Spam +7s to finish out your weekly Gilded Crest cap.

This method works well for players who can handle the pug environment and are willing to queue up regularly. If you’re solid at mechanics and build a decent Raider.io score, things get easier as the season progresses.

Eventually, you’ll want to aim for +10 keys, not for end-of-run gear, but because +10 dungeons start contributing to your Great Vault rewards—which can contain Mythic track items, some of the strongest loot in the game. More on that later when the Vault system is discussed.

At the very least, though, Mythic+ gives you a clear and efficient route to max out your weekly Gilded Crest cap, especially if you're combining it with Delves and other solo-friendly content. If you’re planning on doing raids, you may as well try out the Undermine raid in patch 11.1.

Crafting – Consistent and Deterministic Gearing for Solo Players

Now let’s talk about crafting, which is arguably the best and most consistent method of gearing for pure solo players.

Sparks and Crafting Rhythm

You receive a fragment of a Spark once a week, and while the early weeks of the season may front-load more Sparks, the standard pacing is about half a Spark per week. That means, on average, you’ll be able to craft one item every two weeks.

When you combine these Sparks with Gilded Crests—from either Delves or Mythic+—you can convert 60 Gilded Crests into one Enchanted Undermine Crest, the item used to craft gear up to item level 675. Delves carry most of your solo progression, and our dedicated Delve gearing guide goes deep on squeezing every item level out of them.

Pure Solo? Craft with Delve-Capped Crests

Even if you're only doing Delves and don’t touch group content, you’ll still earn about 31 Gilded Crests per week from fully optimized Tier 11 Delve runs. That means you can reach the 60-crest threshold every two weeks, allowing you to consistently upgrade or craft one high-end item on that timeline.

Crafting vs. Upgrading

You can choose to use your Gilded Crests to:

  • Upgrade Hero track gear from Delves.
  • Craft gear outright, tailored to your spec and needs.

If your goal is to get the highest possible item level, crafting is the better option. It removes RNG, gives you full control over stats, and guarantees a specific item slot.

Why Crafting is a Huge Win for Solo Players

Crafting is deterministic. That means:

  • You choose the item.
  • You guarantee the item level, assuming your crafter can craft at the required quality.
  • You control the stats—you don’t have to settle for random combinations.
  • You can even add embellishments based on your class, spec, and role.

These embellishments are powerful and vary by class/spec, so you’ll want to check a class guide to find the best-in-slot options for your build.

At the bare minimum, crafting:

  • A weapon early in the season gives a huge power spike.
  • Non-tier armor pieces (belt, bracers, boots, rings, necklaces) provide big secondary stat bonuses.
  • Fills in gaps where RNG hasn’t helped you.

And all of it can be done without ever stepping into a raid or group dungeon.

Using the Crafting Order System

You don’t need to be a crafter yourself. Anyone can use the Work Order system. All you need to do is:

  • Find a crafter.
  • Supply the mats (which can all be bought with gold).
  • Pay a reasonable commission.

Gold for crafting mats can be earned easily through weekly solo activities, so you’re not locked out if you don’t play the Auction House game. With the War Order system, you're essentially getting high-end, targeted loot every two weeks just by staying active with your solo content loop.

Crafting is reliable, scalable, and offers some of the best gear available in the game—without relying on random drops or other players. For a pure solo player, it’s one of the most important systems to lean into this season.

The Great Vault and Catalyst – Securing Tier Gear as a Solo Player

Even as a solo player, the Great Vault and Catalyst systems offer you consistent ways to get powerful tier gear, which is one of the biggest upgrades you can get for your character in The War Within Season 2.

The Great Vault rewards you at the end of each week based on your activity across different types of content. The more content you complete—be it world content, Delves, dungeons, or raid bosses—the more item slots you unlock in your Vault. Each unlocked slot gives you an additional item choice, which increases your chances of seeing something useful.

For solo players, especially those focused on Delves and world content, it’s still very possible to get decent Vault rewards. By consistently completing higher-difficulty Delves, you'll contribute to your Vault progression. The more you do, the better your reward pool.

WoW The War Within Great Vault Tier Gear

But the real value of the Vault isn’t just high item level pieces—it’s tier gear. If you need extra currency for gearing, consumables, or catch-up costs, RPGStash's WoW gold for sale page can help you prepare faster. Tier bonuses provide a powerful boost to your character. While the two-set bonuses are generalized—one per role (healer, tank, ranged DPS, melee DPS)—the four-set bonuses are much more impactful.

  • Healers become more efficient and reactive.
  • Tanks get sturdier.
  • DPS classes become significantly more lethal.

These tier pieces can shift your gameplay entirely and are worth going after, even if you’re a solo-only player. The Vault gives you one of the most accessible solo-friendly paths to get them. These are going to be very helpful if you’re planning on making the Best DPS, healer, or tank.

Another tool at your disposal is the Revival Catalyst, which allows you to convert eligible Season 2 gear into tier set pieces. This includes:

  • Helm
  • Shoulders
  • Chest
  • Legs
  • Gloves

If you’ve picked up a solid item from Delves, Timewalking, or other world content, and it’s in one of these slots, you can convert it into a tier piece using the Catalyst.

However, there are a few important notes:

  • Catalyst charges are limited. You get one charge every two weeks, starting from the season’s reset.
  • Ideally, you should save your Catalyst for Hero track items. While Champion track gear is easier to get, converting it early might be a waste if you end up upgrading to Hero gear later on.

The tier bonus itself doesn’t scale with item level, but if you're looking for long-term value and avoiding replacements, it’s smart to wait until you have a solid Hero piece before converting.

Strategic Recommendation for Solo Players

  1. Fill out your Great Vault as much as possible each week. Even if you’re not running group content, you can earn Vault progress from Delves and world objectives.
  2. Prioritize Hero track items for Catalyst use.
  3. Craft non-tier slots with your Sparks and Gilded Crests.
  4. Use the Vault and Catalyst together to secure your four-set bonus.

This combination lets you push your character’s power without relying on a raid team or Mythic+ group. Between Vault rewards, Delves, and crafting, you can build out a full kit of high-performance gear entirely on your own timeline.

Ready To Go Solo?

Going solo isn’t all that bad in WoW The War Within. If you’ve mastered solo gearing in season 2, another good step would be to start Gearing in Patch 11.1’s Delves. For the open-world and Timewalking angles, our broader gear farming guide rounds out your weekly checklist.

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