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Topic: Missing Presets
Hi All,
My Miqobot appears to be missing default presets when I first open it up.
On your help section for fishing, it says there are “levelling”, “patience” etc.
I can only see Pterodactyl(HQ) & Steel Coins.Could somebody please assist me in getting those defaults back?
Thanks a lot!
Hello all! I’ve searched throughout the forum and found nothing for phase 3 fishing, so heres my attempt at it. Its very VERY rough and doesnt check weather. It goes to all 4 islands in order and fishes for 30 minutes each repairing after each session, afterwards exiting and re-entering the Diadem.
You can adjust the bait and fishing preset to your liking. Along with the Scenario file, i’ve added the navagation grid if you want to adjust that to your liking as well.For those who are new like me: when changing the Bait and preset, please keep them within the brackets. As for changing the fishing preset: Go to the fishing tab in Miqo, click new, name it what you like, adjust the settings, and save. You can copy/paste into the chapter with in the scenarios. Ive added images if that helps.
If someone figures out the weather check in Miqo before I do I’d greatly appreciate it. Otherwise Ill follow up with an updated scenario and grid.
Ive been messing around with the fishing settings, going to each respective island when the weather changes, it does alright.
Assembled by manually scraping the FF14 Gamer Escape wiki – all 1200+ pages on the seafood category – this preset contains only items that meet ALL of the following criteria:
- The item can be fished up
- The usage section includes an entry for desynthesis
- The usage section DOES NOT include entries for quest turn-ins, trades, recipes that use it, reduction, or collection
- Levequests, supply missions, and aquarium displays were not counted in the above – these items MAY be used for such things
- The ability to print the items onto canvases was also ignored – many of these items can be put onto canvases
The intent was that while fishing for ingredients or to level up, this preset can be used to clear out things that you don’t want. If you’re looking for particular items for some purpose, you want to use them (or at least put them in your chocobo saddlebag) BEFORE using this preset. As a matter of course, I would just recommend saving things you know you want, using this preset, and then going over whatever’s left to decide if there’s anything else you don’t want to keep afterward.
Also, since there are eight hundred and sixty-six entries in this list, no attempt was made to sort them according to the in-game desynthesis display, so I just left them alphabetised. Yes, that means Miqo will probably be going up and down the list a bunch. You are more than welcome to sort it yourself, but I don’t even have access to all of these items let alone the interest in spending a day or five sorting them by the game’s method.
Total time for creation was a couple of hours, thanks to three different mini-scripts I wrote for this specific project.
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This topic was modified 4 years, 8 months ago by
Vixen. Reason: Forgot I need to use strong tags not b tags
We all know Miqobot is the best bot out there for FFXIV. But what are your favourite things about her? What, in your opinion, makes Miqo the best FFXIV bot there is?
My favourite selling points, in no particular order:
- No extra fees, at all, whatsoever, at any time – once you have a license, you have the full functionality of the bot, plus any and all future features added during your time using it.
- Low price – $10 for a full month, and as mentioned above, you get everything for those $10. Absolutely well worth the price!
- Active (and interactive) dev team and a live community – you can make suggestions and requests here on the forums and the devs pay attention and respond to you. Same goes for asking for help, I’ve never even had to wait a single day for a reply.
- A lot of features, especially considering the low price! Even ignoring the scenario engine, there’s gathering, fishing, spearfishing, custom navigation paths for all three of those, crafting, desynthesis, 3D entity radar, FATE radar, PotD radar, combat assistance, chocobo racing, and GS minigame farming. And that’s just the features I know how to use, I never did figure out the treasure hunt thing.
- A scripting engine, for custom scenarios – including the ability to wait for/until some time, teleport around, move to points on a navgrid, fine-tune settings for other automated actions, and even manually trigger keybinds and actions in case there isn’t a function for what you want. If it gets conditionals or full flow control at some point, you could probably have Miqo play half the game for you; automating dungeon farming would be as easy as turning on combat assist and writing a scenario to move to the next area once all enemies are dead. As it is now, you can tour the world for fishing without even touching the game yourself. You don’t even need to be a programmer to use it!
- Licenses are NOT per-machine. You can save your license to a file that’s only valid on that machine, but you can still put in your license key on another machine, in case you play across multiple computers for any reason.
- Support for multiple instances of the game, too! On the monitor tab, you can tell Miqobot to attach to a specific instance, in case you have a beefy machine and want to run two characters at once.
- The interface is, for the most part, so simple and easy as to be self-explanatory. You go to the fishing tab, you probably know what everything there does. Same for the crafting/gathering sections. And if you don’t know something, you can ask on the forums here and either another user or the devs themselves will help you out.
- Export/import – you can create a navigation grid or a preset for just about anything Miqo can do, and then export it to a shareable file that other people can import. If you don’t want to build your own nav paths for something, someone probably has one already, and if not there are people who take requests too.
And also, just a personal bit I like, the presets are all stored in plain text, with a self-explanatory format. Thanks to that, I’ve written my own organisation program for them; I can close Miqo, run my organiser, and open Miqo back up, and know that all of my presets and paths are sorted according to my own criteria, and minor cleanup tweaks have been automated for things like generated naming conventions.
If the devs see this, thank you for all the time and effort you’ve put into making Miqobot the best FF14 bot out there. Your work is amazing, and I know it takes a lot of effort. Thank you.
To everyone else, what are your favourite features in Miqobot?