Introduction
Questie Features Overview in which you will learn that questie offers more than simple quest markers on a map. Its feature set includes a layered filtering system, a structured icon display framework, and directional tools that work together to give players a clear picture of their questing environment at all times.
For players who have only used Questie wow classic at a surface level, understanding the full scope of its features reveals a significantly more configurable tool than it first appears.
Quick Facts about Questie Features Overview
- Questie’s filter system allows players to control which quests appear on the map based on level range, quest type, and completion status
- Icon types in Questie are visually distinct by category, including quest givers, objectives, and turn-in NPCs
- Directional features in Questie are limited natively but can be extended using TomTom integration for waypoint arrow navigation
- Filters can be applied globally or adjusted per session without affecting the core addon database
- The minimap and world map layers operate independently, allowing separate icon configurations for each display
- Questie supports custom icon scaling and transparency settings for UI customization
- Players on lower end systems can reduce icon density through filters to improve frame rate in quest-heavy zones
- Hardcore Classic players have access to adjusted display options suited to that ruleset’s requirements
- All features are accessible through the in-game settings panel or via the /questie chat command
What Questie’s Filter System Does and How to Use It
Questie’s filtering system is the most powerful and frequently underused part of the addon. It determines which quests and icons are rendered on your maps at any given time, giving players direct control over information density.

Without filters, Questie displays every available and active quest within range simultaneously. In high density zones, this can result in a cluttered map that obscures rather than assists navigation.
Level Range Filters and Quest Type Filters
The level range filter is the most practical in Questie’s system. It restricts which quest icons appear on the map based on your character’s current level relative to the quest’s recommended level range.
Players can set a minimum and maximum level offset. For example, setting a range of minus two to plus three means only quests within two levels below and three levels above your current level will display icons on the map.
How to configure level range filters:
- Open Questie settings via /questie or the in-game addon settings panel
- Navigate to the filter section within the settings menu
- Set your preferred minimum and maximum level offset values
- Changes apply immediately without requiring a UI reload
Quest type filters allow players to hide specific categories entirely. Available filter categories typically include:
- Daily quests toggle visibility of repeatable daily objectives
- Dungeon and raid quests hide group content quests when playing solo
- Class-specific quests show or hide quests tied to your specific class
- Profession quests filter out trade skill objectives when not actively leveling professions
Completion Status and Tracked Quest Filters
Questie can display icons for quests you have already completed on that character. This feature is useful for players doing full zone completion runs but adds visual noise for players focused purely on leveling efficiency.
The completed quest filter allows this layer to be toggled off entirely. When disabled, only active and available quests will render icons on the map.
Common Problems and Solutions:
- Too many icons cluttering the map Enable the level range filter and set a narrow offset to reduce displayed quests to only those relevant to your current level
- Dungeon quest icons appearing during solo play Use the quest type filter to hide group content quest markers entirely
- Completed quests still showing icons Toggle off the completed quest display option in the filter settings panel
- Filters resetting after each login This can occur with outdated addon versions. Updating Questie features and performing a clean settings reset resolves most persistent filter issues
- Available quest icons not respecting filters Confirm that available quest display is pulling from the same filter profile as your active quest icons
Understanding Questie’s Icon System
Questie uses a structured visual icon system to communicate different quest states and objective types at a glance. Each icon type has a distinct shape, color, and placement logic that follows a consistent visual language across all zones and quest types.
Understanding what each icon represents removes the need to cross-reference your quest log constantly while navigating the game world.
Icon Types and Their Visual Meaning
Questie’s icon set covers every stage of the quest lifecycle from discovery through completion. The core icon categories are:
- Yellow exclamation mark marks an NPC or object that has a quest available for your character
- Grey exclamation mark marks a quest giver for a quest you do not yet meet the requirements for
- Yellow question mark marks the NPC where you turn in a completed quest
- Circular objective markers display the location or area where quest objectives such as mob kills or item collections occur
- Skull or combat markers used in some configurations to indicate elite or dangerous objective targets
Icon color coding also reflects quest difficulty relative to your level. Green icons indicate quests below your level, yellow indicates on-level quests, and orange or red markers signal quests above your current level range.
Icon Scale, Transparency, and Layer Settings
Questie allows independent scaling of icons on the minimap versus the world map. This matters because minimap icons that are too large can obstruct nearby coordinate information, while world map icons that are too small become difficult to identify in dense zones.
Transparency settings reduce icon opacity so underlying map detail remains visible beneath the markers. This is particularly useful in zones with complex terrain or when using a custom map-skin add-on alongside Questie.
Recommended icon configuration for different playstyles:
- Efficiency focused leveling small icon scale, narrow level filter, objective markers only, no available quest icons
- Full zone completion medium scale, wide level range, all icon types enabled including completed quest display
- Casual questing default settings with dungeon quest icons disabled and transparency set to sixty to seventy percent
- Hardcore Classic minimal icon set, narrow level filter, no clutter from grey or low level quest markers
Questie’s Directional Features and Navigation Support
Questie’s native directional capability is intentionally limited compared to dedicated navigation addons. Its core function is zone-level objective awareness, not turn-by-turn navigation.
However, Questie does provide enough directional context for most standard questing scenarios without requiring additional addons.
Native Direction Indicators in Questie
When you hover over a quest objective icon on the world map, Questie displays coordinate information and a brief descriptor of the objective at that location. This gives players enough positional data to orient themselves without leaving the map screen.
On the minimap, nearby objective icons update in real time as your character moves. Icons shift position on the minimap edge to reflect the direction of the objective relative to your current facing, providing a basic but functional spatial reference.
Questie does not display a floating directional arrow natively. Players who require a persistent directional arrow pointing toward active objectives should install TomTom alongside Questie for that specific function.
TomTom Integration and Waypoint Compatibility
In supported versions of Questie, clicking an objective icon on the world map can push a waypoint directly into TomTom. This automatically causes TomTom’s floating arrow to point to the selected objective coordinate.
This integration turns Questie’s map-level data into actionable turn-by-turn navigation without requiring manual coordinate entry.
Steps to enable TomTom waypoint integration with Questie:
- Confirm both Questie and TomTom are installed and enabled
- Open Questie settings and locate the TomTom or waypoint integration toggle
- Enable the integration option if available in your current Questie version
- Click any objective marker on the world map to test whether a TomTom waypoint is created automatically
- If automatic integration is unavailable, use TomTom’s /way command with coordinates shown in Questie’s map tooltips as a manual alternative
Players using Guidelime alongside Questie and TomTom should be aware that both Questie and Guidelime may attempt to push waypoints to TomTom simultaneously. Disabling Questie’s TomTom integration when Guidelime is active prevents conflicting waypoint instructions.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I open Questie’s settings to configure filters and icons?
Type /questie in the in-game chat window to open the Questie settings panel. Alternatively, access it through the standard in-game addon settings menu available on the game menu screen.
Can I hide available quest icons and only show active quest objectives?
Yes. In Questie’s settings panel, the available quest icon display can be toggled off independently from active quest objective icons. This is useful for players who find the available quest markers distracting during active questing sessions.
Why do some quest icons appear grey instead of yellow?
Grey exclamation mark icons indicate quests for which your character does not yet meet the requirements. This includes level requirements, prerequisite quest completions, or faction standing thresholds. These icons can be hidden using the filter settings if preferred.
Does Questie show objective areas or only single coordinate points?
Questie displays zone-based objective areas for most quests rather than single pinpoint coordinates. For quests where mobs or items spawn across a wide area, the icon placement reflects the general spawn zone rather than a precise single location.
How do I reduce map clutter from Questie in busy zones?
Use the level range filter to restrict visible icons to quests within a narrow level band around your current character level. Additionally, disabling dungeon quest icons and available quest markers significantly reduces icon density in high traffic zones.
Is the TomTom integration built into Questie or does it require a separate setup?
TomTom integration depends on your current Questie version. Some releases include native TomTom waypoint support that activates automatically when both addons are installed. Others require manual coordinate entry using TomTom’s /way command system.
Can I change the size of Questie icons on the minimap without affecting the world map?
Yes. Questie’s icon scaling settings for the minimap and world map are configured independently. Adjust the minimap icon scale separately from the world map scale within the icon display section of the Questie settings panel.
Does Questie work correctly after each WoW Classic patch update?
Questie requires updates following major WoW Classic patches to maintain database accuracy and interface compatibility. Always update Questie through CurseForge, Overwolf, or the official GitHub repository after a significant game patch to avoid broken functionality or missing quest data.