AION Classic has that familiar MMO problem again: too many active systems, not enough time, and a weekly reset that is always closer than it looks. Right now, Gameforge’s current Classic schedule has the Daeva Pass running until April 8, 2026, while shorter-cycle content like Atreian Boosts and Flower Bouquet ends on March 25, and longer events like Tiamaranta’s Eye continue until June 3. That creates a simple but important question for players: what should you prioritize first?
The answer is not “do everything,” because that is how players end up with a half-finished pass, a missed event deadline, and the vague feeling that AION has personally insulted them. The better approach is to rank your goals by deadline, reward type, and how flexible the content is.
Start With the Shortest Deadlines First
If two activities are equally valuable, the one ending sooner should usually win.
That matters right now because Gameforge’s official maintenance schedule shows that some Classic content is on a much shorter timer than the current Daeva Pass. Atreian Boosts and Flower Bouquet are listed to end on March 25, while the current Daeva Pass continues until April 8 and Tiamaranta’s Eye lasts until June 3.
In practical terms, that means limited weekly or short-cycle events should often take priority over pass progression if they are about to disappear. A pass with more time left is a better “background objective.” A short event is the thing that punishes indecision.
The Daeva Pass Is Best Treated as Your Long-Game Track
The current Daeva Pass is important, but it is also structured differently from a short event. Gameforge’s recent activity listing shows the current season’s mission-completion period running from March 18 at 9:00 AM to April 13 at 9:00 AM CEST, with reward collection open until April 15 at 4:59 AM CEST.
That longer runway is exactly why the Daeva Pass should usually be treated as your baseline progression track rather than your immediate panic priority. It is something you keep advancing steadily while you handle the more fragile weekly content around it.
In other words, the Daeva Pass is the project. Weekly events are the deadlines.
Weekly Events Usually Deliver Faster Value
Shorter events tend to be where AION Classic gets very efficient with player motivation.
Gameforge’s current Classic schedules show several event-style activities with firm end dates, including 8.6 Support Event through April 8, Little Devil’s Temptation through April 8, and previous short-cycle events like Flower Bouquet ending on March 25.
These kinds of events often make the most sense to prioritize when:
-
the rewards are time-limited,
-
the tasks are quick to complete,
-
or the event lines up with what you are already doing.
That last part matters more than people think. The best AION grind is the one that overlaps with your normal routine instead of demanding a second job.
A Simple Priority Order for Most Players
For most AION Classic players, the smartest order right now looks like this:
1. Finish anything ending on March 25 first
That includes shorter-cycle event content and weekly systems that are about to rotate out.
2. Keep progressing the Daeva Pass in the background
Because the pass remains active longer, it is better handled as steady progress rather than a last-minute rush.
3. Use long-running events as filler content
Things like Tiamaranta’s Eye, which runs until June 3, should be treated as the least urgent from a timing perspective.
That order will not be perfect for every player, but it is the safest general rule if you want to avoid wasting limited-time opportunities.
When the Daeva Pass Should Come First
There are exceptions.
If you are close to a major Daeva Pass reward tier, or if your playtime naturally completes pass missions without much extra effort, then the pass can absolutely become the better priority. The current pass structure includes a full mission period and a separate reward-collection window, which gives it more flexibility than most event timers.
So if your weekly activity already aligns with pass objectives, it may make sense to lean harder into it. Efficiency in AION Classic is not just about what expires first. It is also about what you can complete with the least friction.
The Real Trick Is Overlap
The smartest AION Classic planning is rarely about choosing one system and ignoring the rest. It is about overlap.
If you can complete event objectives while also moving your Daeva Pass forward, that is the ideal setup. If a short event gives fast rewards but does nothing for your broader progression, then it may still be worth doing first — but only if the deadline is tight enough to justify the detour. Gameforge’s current Classic schedule is basically a reminder that not every active system carries the same urgency.
This is where players usually gain or lose efficiency. Not in raw hours played, but in whether those hours counted toward two goals instead of one.
The Best Rule for March 2026
For the current March 2026 Classic cycle, the best rule is simple: prioritize the weekly or short-end-date events first, and treat the Daeva Pass as your steady long-track progression unless you are close to an important reward tier. That fits the official timing Gameforge has posted across the current event and pass schedule.
AION Classic is still AION Classic. There is always one more event, one more pass, one more reward table, and one more reason to reorganize your week. The only real win condition is making sure your grind is pointed at the right deadline.

0 kommentarer:
Post a Comment