Defender of Ascalon

Legendary Defender of Ascalon is a title that you can display for prestige. It is awarded per character for reaching level 20 in Pre-Searing Ascalon.

This title is meant as an incentive and reward for "perma-pre" characters; however, you keep the title if you leave pre-searing.

Defender of Ascalon title track
You will earn the "Legendary Defender of Ascalon" title if you reach level 20 prior to the Searing.

Note: Progress for this title is not shown until the character reaches level 12.

Guide
The most important thing if you want to start working on this title is to understand how the experience gained from killing monsters decreases as your character gains level. Please read the Experience article.

Step by step

 * 1) You may start any and all quests (especially to unlock skills given upfront or in the process of the quest), and you may even complete the quest, but do not claim the reward until you reach at least level 16, preferably level 19 - the quest can sit in your log marked as complete, but do not talk to the final person to claim your reward. The only exceptions to this rule are your very first quest for your first two skills (such as from Van the Warrior, Ciglo the Monk, or Verata the Necromancer). It is advantageous to wait until level 19 because when you begin death leveling (see below), you will not need to wait as long for the monsters to be the same level as you are (or higher).
 * 2) *Note: Some quests cannot be completed without claiming the reward. Such quests should be abandoned and postponed, especially if quest items occupy a valuable slot in the inventory.
 * 3) Fight your way to level 16 solely by killing monsters. Most foes in pre-searing are level 3 or less. You may climb to level 7 or so quite fast by killing level 3 foes, such as Black Bears, Blood Sworn Bandits, and Ice Elementals in Wizard's Folly. Indeed, there is a trail of Black Bears and Bandit Blood Sworns just north-west of Foible's Fair. After killing them, follow the path between Foible's Fair and Lakeside County and proceed west once you pass the house. There should be a portal to enter the catacombs. Use this to respawn the enemies as necessary. It is recommended to do this until level 7 or 8.
 * 4) *There are some higher level foes in pre-searing as well: an adult drake in the river outside Ascalon itself, and a warrior boss skeleton in the dead end above the pit in the Catacombs. Or you can choose to skip to steps 3, 4 or 5 to accelerate your progress - though be warned that you will inevitably spend a lot of time repeating them later.
 * 5) An effective method to finish (or earlier speed up) the climb to level 11 is by repeating the quest Charr at the Gate and abandoning it every time it is completed. The foes are level 5 and Prince Rurik and his forces beat them easily while healing you effectively if you join in. Make sure that you have the foes in your danger zone in order to collect the XP. Map back to Ascalon and abandon the quest immediately so as not to accidentally accept the reward. There is also a level 5 Rogue Bull nearby on the path to the Charr.
 * 6) *Instead of abandoning the completed Charr quest the process can be sped up (at the cost of one kill's XP and possibly drop) by map traveling back to Ascalon City while one Charr remains alive. This saves abandoning and reclaiming the quest from Rurik. This is done via a small bug; Prince Rurik will only move while you are in his danger zone. With practice, it is possible to leave him behind just before the battle against the Charr, but bring his troops with you. Without Rurik, they are considerably weaker offensively, giving you time to map travel back at the appropriate time.
 * 7) From level 11 on you will have to venture into the Northlands to kill level 7+ Charr.
 * 8) From level 14 you must get your XP from killing the level 10 Charr bosses.
 * 9) From level 16 on, you must use the "death leveling" method. For details see the section "Death-leveling" below.
 * 10) At level 19 you may claim the XP reward for all quests, including all quests for all secondary professions. This will boost your level to 20, or very close to it. Be warned that as soon as you've confirmed your secondary profession, other profession-specific quests become unavailable, so you should complete those first, but do not click the "Accept as secondary profession" button. As long as you have the quest in your quest log, you may complete it and collect the reward at any time - but be sure that you have all the profession quests in your quest log before accepting your secondary profession.
 * 11) *For a list of all quests available in pre-searing Ascalon, click here.

Death-leveling
Due to the fact that you do not gain experience from killing foes that are more than 5 levels lower than yourself, and the fact that the highest level foes in pre-searing are level 10, the only way to climb higher than level 16 is by completing quests with an XP reward, and by so-called "death leveling".

This involves leveling an opponent monster by allowing it to kill your character over and over (typically while the player is afk). The monster gains experience from this and levels up. The monster must be located near a Resurrection Shrine in order not to lose aggro before your respawn.

Once the monster reaches an appropriate level (preferably level 20, at least your own minus five) it can be killed for experience. Remember there is no death penalty in Pre-Searing. Remember, too, that if your character is dead when the monster dies you will get no XP from the death and all the leveling will have been wasted. For this reason health degeneration attacks are not recommended.

Monsters commonly used for death leveling are Striders in Ashford Village and Moss Spiders and Striders near Barradin's Estate. A more complex but ultimately much faster method is to lure several Charr patrols in the Northlands close enough to the Res Shrine (where they get stuck) to death level them. This method requires some time to set up as a single Charr patrol may not be strong enough to defeat the NPCs defending the shrine. However the set up is easier than it first appears because the paths from the shrine to the main ruins are effectively a trap for the Charr from which they will not usually find a way back to the open. Using that feature it is possible, with practice, to lure more than one patrol together. See the guide in the External Links section for details.

You can speed up the frequency of being killed (and consequently the experience gained by the foe) by
 * removing all armor to reduce your AL.
 * aggroing more than one foe at a time (but only one of them will level up).
 * wielding a vampiric weapon (giving yourself -1 health degeneration). As of April 2006 they no longer drop in presearing but can be purchased from people who found drops before the update.
 * repeated life sacrifice (which means you can't go afk).
 * using the warrior skill Frenzy, causing you to take double damage.
 * repeatedly activating the warrior skill Healing Signet just before getting struck and canceling it with the escape key after being struck, causing you to have -40 armor without getting healed.

Warning: After 10 hours of no activity at all (no movement, no keystrikes, no inputs, etc.) you will be automatically disconnected from the server with an error 059. Also beware that sometimes after 24 hours you will get kicked off the game regardless - though there is a way around it. Press Ctrl, Alt, and Del (or Delete) on your keyboard to bring up the Task Manager. Click the "Processes" tab at the top, select Gw.exe, and click "End Process". This will force the game to close and cause the server on ArenaNet's end to think that you have disconnected due to a computer problem. Log back on to Guild Wars and accept the offer to reconnect with the server. The enemies you were fighting will still be fighting you and gaining experience. This way does no longer work! When you have been disconnected for more than 10 minutes you will not be able to reconnect.

Tips

 * Setting your pet to "Heel" will prevent it from attacking, preventing it from killing your foe before you are ready to do so yourself and giving your foe a small amount of experience. Additionally, since high-level foes will generally kill you several times while you are working on killing them, having a pet limits the amount of time they spend healing while you are dead (as they will be busy attacking the pet and will not have time to gain natural health regeneration.