Conjure Refreshment Table

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Conjure Refreshment Table
Spell arcane massdispel.png
Properties
Class Mage
School Arcane
Cooldown 1 minutes
Other information
Level learned 72

Conjure Refreshment Table is a level 72 mage spell that creates a Refreshment Table. Friendly players can interact with the table to gain a stack of conjured refreshments, similar to a Soulwell. As with [Conjure Refreshment], the exact type of refreshment granted varies depending on the mage's level, with level 100 tables providing  [Conjured Mana Fritter]. The table will last for 3 minutes or until 50 stacks of refreshments have been handed out.

Essentially a convenient group alternative to [Conjure Refreshment], the table's primary use is in parties to save the mage from spending excessive amounts of time conjuring refreshments. The refreshment table is commonly referred to as a "mage table".

Refreshments

A successfully conjured Refreshment Table.

Refreshments are provided in stacks of 20. The maximum amount of any type of conjured refreshment a character can have in his/her inventory is limited to 80 (4 stacks). Refreshments are conjured items, and as such will disappear after being logged out for 15 minutes.

The exact refreshments provided by tables depends on the level of the casting mage. Since this also determines the required level for use of those refreshments, players even a few levels below that of the mage may be unable to use the refreshments provided by the table. There is no way for mages to summon a lower-level version of the table.

Below is an incomplete list of the various refreshments provided by the table:

Refreshment Level Expansion
 [Conjured Mana Fritter] 100 Warlords of Draenor
 [Conjured Mana Pudding] 90 Mists of Pandaria
 [Conjured Mana Cake] 85 Cataclysm
 [Conjured Mana Strudel] 80 Wrath-Logo-Small.png

Tips

The refreshments provided by [Conjure Refreshment] and Conjure Refreshment Table are functionally equivalent, and both spells have a 3 second cast. The difference between the two lies in the method of delivery:

  • [Conjure Refreshment] summons a single stack of refreshments directly into the mage's inventory. Providing refreshments to others requires opening a trade window. This is a quick and convenient way for the mage to refresh their supplies, although when more than one stack of refreshments is required it may be quicker to summon a table than to repeatedly cast Conjure Refreshments.
  • Conjure Refreshment Table summons a table that can dispense as many as 50 stacks of refreshments. Players can serve themselves, without further effort from the mage. However, the spell has a 1 minute cooldown. This option is usually preferable for dispensing refreshments to others, or when multiple stacks are desired.

"Mage tables" are often requested by players at the start of battlegrounds, while the team is preparing. Mages who are able should go to the trouble of conjuring one, allowing their teammates to stock up on refreshments. This can help reduce downtime in the battleground, improving their team's chances of success. Mage tables are usually appreciated by players, saving them time and money otherwise spent acquiring food and drink, and the refreshments provided can also be consumed outside the battleground such as while levelling or doing dailies. Players who see a mage table should do their best to take advantage of it, ideally acquiring the maximum 4 stacks for use in the future.

History

This spell was introduced in patch 2.3[1][2] as Ritual of Refreshment. On the PTR, it originally required a  [Rune of Portals] to create, but this was changed to  [Arcane Powder] during testing. Channeling the spell created a portal which party members could click to assist in the summoning of a Refreshment Table; two party members were required to join in channeling the effect in order to summon a table.

Learning Ritual of Refreshment used to require already knowing [Conjure Water] (Rank 9) and [Conjure Food] (Rank 8). These spells used to be only learnable from two rare books, Tome of Conjure Water IX and Tome of Conjure Food VIII, respectively, which dropped in level 70 instances. With Cataclysm this requirement was removed, and the spell made available to any mage of the appropriate level.

Patch 5.0.4 simplified the spell substantially, changing it from a channeled summoning effect to a simple 3 second cast. Other players were no longer required to participate in order to complete the cast, and the reagent cost was removed. The name of the spell was also changed at this time to Conjure Refreshment Table.

See also

Patch changes

  • Legion Patch 7.0.3 (2016-07-19): Merged into [Conjure Refreshment].
  • Warlords of Draenor Hotfix (2014-10-30): Conjured food no longer has a level requirement to use.
  • Warlords of Draenor Patch 6.0.2 (2014-10-14): Now provides Conjured Mana Pudding instead of Conjured Mana Buns.
  • Mists of Pandaria Patch 5.0.4 (2012-08-28): Name changed from [Ritual of Refreshment] to "Conjure Refreshment Table". Reagent cost removed. Changed from a channeled spell to a 3 second cast. No longer creates a portal or requires participation from party members, instead simply creates a Refreshment Table on cast.
  • Cataclysm Patch 4.1.0 (2011-04-26): Is now placed on cooldown even if the ritual is not completed.
  • Cataclysm Patch 4.0.1 (2010-10-12): Now costs 27% of base mana, down from 80% of base mana.
  • Bc icon.gif Patch 2.4.2 (2008-05-13): Will no longer be placed on cooldown without having completed the summon.
  • Bc icon.gif Patch 2.4.0 (2008-03-25): Soulwells, Portals, Refreshment Tables and Herbs now have ambient sounds around them.
  • Bc icon.gif Patch 2.3.0 (2007-11-13): Added.

References

 
  1. ^ Vaneras 2007-09-27. Upcoming changes for the Mage class. WoW EU Mage forums. Retrieved on 2007-10-14.
  2. ^ Drysc 2007-09-26. Re: What is in store for 2.3? Cherry pie Here. WoW US Mage forums. Retrieved on 2007-10-11.

External links

Spell Object