You play 4 hours Monday -Friday. 8 hours Saturday and Sunday. You you keep your fishing, cooking, first aid and both primary profs at your current lvl. You lvl up mainly by questing and running dungeons just once or twice to complete quests. You read all quests and don’t use any add ons.
It depends honestly, i would say a one month and a half or two. But if you’re keeping up with prof’s you’ll have money to spend as well as good gear, most likely know folk who are on the higher and lower end of things as well.
Let’s say… You get a level a day? Which you won’t… 1-15 is pretty quick, that’s already less then 60 day’s. if you can keep pace at 30 for a level a day easily you’ll get it give or take 35-45 days?
I would say it will take around 10 days /played if you read each and every quest, do dungeon quests (you got to factor in time to look for said dungeon) and leveling primary and secondary professions while you level.
10 days is 240 hours, so if you played 36 hours a week, that would be a little less than 7 weeks. So, given you are consistent and don’t take any breaks from your schedule outlined, it will likely take around 2 months give or take.
I’m estimating based on the 500 hours it took me to get 60 with 315 Engineering on my Gnome Mage on Elysium-PvE back before the staff split where the scammers kept the name. Still have it available on Light’s Hope now.
I can’t see it taking more then 12-14 days played unless you are actively trying to not level, doing a metric ton of BGs, or something similar. That comes to about 300 hours.
Most will probably hit level 60 in 200-275 hours. The fastest players will be 150-175 hours.
You outlined 36 playtime hours per week, in which case the math is pretty easy.
About 6-8 weeks depending on how much time you waste with things like gathering mats and sitting around in cities. And if you can keep to 36 hours per week.
It depends on what you are doing with your game time each day. I have seen Joana’s 4 day 20 hour speed run and I have seen people take 15 days or more of played time to reach 60. If you are being efficient everytime you are online, grinding as you run to quests, and you have a well mapped out route for which zones you will be going to I can see it taking 6-8 days of played time. If you are doing lots of dungeons, world pvp, leveling professions, or anything else that could take away time from leveling, you will be slower than the zerg.
If you’re keeping cooking/fishing/first aid up it will probably take you 250-300 hours to reach level 60 unless you’re really really efficient and have everything planned out.
So… 1.5 months to 2 months unless you’re going to poop-sock and do everything ultra efficient.
EDIT: I also would not recommend keeping everything current unless you just really want to. The best way to do it will be to have 2 gathering professions, and then drop one once you get 60 and powerlevel a crafting profession. It’s a lot easier to level professions at 60. Also fishing is dumb to keep leveled in my opinion.
Playing on average 8 hours a day through the week on a protection paladin and leveling engineering / mining at the same time with 0 competition for resources, I leveled 1–60 with 11 days 23 hours played and it took me 1.5 months.
My best time is 5 days 18 hours /played as a Warrior in PvE - I did this with a strict plan and a Priest teammate. With that said, I think that if you had a strict plan, but were solo, you could hit your Lv.60 target a few days shy of 8 weeks. If no strict plan or playing a slow leveler solo, it could take you 10+ weeks. Good luck!
My father played about 6-8 hours a day for a few months when I was little, back when he was still in a union. For some jobs, you’re paid well enough to be able to take the time off for months for other things. In his case, another electric job didn’t open up for almost half a year, but since he kept his finances in check, we were comfortable the whole time.
It’s not completely out of the realm of possibility to have 4 hours a day for WoW, especially if it’s construction or a 9-5 office job. But not every one of us has the luxury of a consistent work schedule.