Great idea Smodrat! I wish you luck with it, and if you pull it off I vote you change your title to something like "Most F of Qs"
You might stress that one doesn't actually need much money to simply play GW because the cheaper armor and gear options are perfectly adequate to get through PvE and you get most everything for free on PvP-only characters with the equipment panel.
I'd also stress the importance of playing through the game instead of rushing ahead to get rich by farming. Simply playing a character through a campaign getting the money from drops and quest/mission rewards (primaries and at least some secondaries) always seems to be a net profit to me these days. Prophecies can be a little dicey, but Factions and onward always seemed like the quest rewards were doing a good job of lining my characters' pockets. While playing anyway, it might be worth keeping the appropriate
storybook handy. Those provide a decent amount of cash for something you were doing anyway.
It seems like a big money sink for newer players/characters is the skills. Note that they do not need to buy every skill right away. Others have already suggested getting as many free as possible from quests and hero skill trainers. Normal tomes are often much cheaper than 1k to a skill trainer, but those require that the skill in question is already unlocked on your account. Another sink they might want to avoid at first is keys and lockpicks.
Various other random thoughts in no particular order ...
It can be a lot faster to sell unid gold items for title points at ~700g ea. Then again, I've met a number of people who claim to turn a nice profit from buying unid golds and then selling the choice weapons or attached mods. That probably takes at least some trading experience and certainly takes willingness to spend time trading, so it may belong in the "advanced" section of your guide. :/
I agree with the suggestion to ID the closer-to-max whites before merching, but I never bother to ID the ones I salvage for iron, granite or dust. It might work - I've never tried it, so I can't say.
Get familiar with the all NPC traders and how to gauge the trader's buy price and both demand and normal player-to-player prices based on the traders' sell prices. Get in the habit of checking them now and then (especially material traders) so you have a feel for what's in demand.
While the odds of getting an especially valuable gold weapon or offhand are pretty low, it might help to know how to find PC info.
- Learn what max means
(I find this wiki page does a good job of explaining,)
- Learn what PC sources there are for common items. In game NPC traders and the various
PC guides here on Guru are my favorite sources. Realize that the most useful information from most of the PC guides may be in the recent posts on the last page(s) instead of in the OP (which may not be kept up to date.)
- Learn to use search! It's usually a lot faster and easier to search your own PC than to ask and wait for someone to come along and tell you. Sadly, there's no guarantee that anyone will help you with PC, and when they do, there's not often an easy way to guarantee it's something you can trust. On this site, when I'm looking for PC info I check to see what similar items might be listed in the auctions. I also do an advanced search, limited to Ventari's sections, for the name of the weapon (without it's suffix/prefix mod names) in quotes.
It didn't always work, but Guru's search lets you enter quoted text strings these days!
Cheers & GL with the snazzy new guide!