The Real Problem with Heroics

20 01 2010

Firespirit recently made a post about the declining utility and purpose of heroics, and how they basically aren’t that heroic any more. I tend to agree. When heroics were released in BC, they were released closer to the end of the expansion, and so were much, much harder. Even people in T6 were known to wipe in a few of them, because they were just that damn difficult. However, in our current expansion, they were released simultaneously with the normal instances, when T7.5 was basically end game raiding. Now, there is nothing wrong with a changing game, but now that we are at T10 sets…those heroics that used to still be challenges in T7.5 gear are laughable.

Now, I don’t need to repeat what others are saying about heroics, as bloggers and forums are literally bursting at the seams with insight. However, it wasn’t until I was recently playing on my Paladin that I sort of realized just what was so ineffective about them.

As others have mentioned, people can burn through heroics now quite easily and even carry a lagging DPS through it. However, as both a tank and a healer on my paladin, the “burn burn burn” strategy is quite annoying. Especially when I am tanking. I recently did a run through Old Kingdom, and I was assigned to tank by the Random LFG. Unfortunately for me, I spend a lot of time on my mage trying to gear him out, and I spend a lot of time on my Spriest leveling her up, so what badges I’ve managed to acquire on my Paladin have all gone towards his healing set, and not his tanking set. This means that I am still tanking mostly in item level 200 gear, or Naxx gear. I have a few pieces of 213 or 219 gear, and the necklace from ICC 10 man where I successfully off-tanked it, but that doesn’t change the fact that a lot of my gear is still, while more than enough for heroics, beneath that of most players. So when I’m in a group where the warrior is in 2 pieces of T10, 2 pieces of T9.66, and otherwise 251 gear…well, there wasn’t a fight where he didn’t get aggro.

To be fair, he never once complained, and was overall very nice the entire time. However, it was frustrating when both he and the DK were getting aggro, because I was trying my hardest to tank and tank well. I’m still learning to tank with my paladin, and it’s not helpful if I can’t tell if it’s just them massively outgearing me or if I’m doing something wrong. And I’m sure, for a lot of new tanks, this is a common occurrence. It leads me to believe that when a lot of them finally DO get T9 gear, they still aren’t quite sure of what they need to be doing in some of the higher raids, and believe that their stats will carry them (which, as anyone who has gone through ToC, ToGC, or ICC will tell you, is clearly not the case).

However, I’ve been in groups before where people would yell at me for not holding aggro, yet it was them who pulled when I had little or no mana to gain any threat. Consecration takes up a decent chunk of mana, and rushing through an instance doesn’t exactly give me a chance to regain it. I’ve had to seal and judge for wisdom before just to have enough mana to gain and hold aggro, even though Corruption actually generates more threat. As a healer, rushing through instances is also quite annoying, though with Divine Plea and a 22k mana pool, decidedly less so. Still, all players that get pushed through heroics suffer from the lack of patience of those who simply want their frost badges (thus keeping those who need the extra triumphs from getting gear) and don’t care about the “proper” way to run an instance. This affects both first time 80s and alts, as for many classes, the “leveling” spec is not the “raiding” or “PvP” spec one will use at level 80.

Am I the only one who has experienced this, or do others feel that the quality of players is steadily declining, and that the new push for heroics aren’t helping?





OMG New Post…that is a rant…

14 01 2010

Wheeeeeeeeeee back for one of my sporadic posts (soon to hopefully be less sporadic). Outside of grad school kicking my ass, harder and harder each and every day, I was finally able to come back form my WoW hiatus this past break and have tried to accomplish as much as possible. Admittedly, with 3.3 and the availability of T9 to…well, everyone, it wasn’t very difficult. I appreciate them making it more available, but I think this time they went overboard. Killing Heroic bosses in 30 seconds or less just…isn’t fun. Trash pulls that once required at least SOME care can now be AoE’ed down with ADDITIONAL trash without difficulty…overall kind of lame, in my opinion. It’s not really Blizzard’s fault (in a roundabout way it is, I suppose) but in general they have been making the game a bit too easy, lately, especially PvE-wise. PvP will always be somewhat challenging and dynamic, as real humans are fairly less predictable (in many cases) than a computer program, but PvE…ugh.

To be fair, I can’t tell you how many people STILL stand in the bad stuff (aka fire) in raids. STILL. It’s hard to pressure them to create new mechanics when half of their player base can’t handle the oldest one in the game. When you see a giant pillar of flame erupt at your feet, and you start taking damage, you should move. Period. I don’t really know why they would ever think otherwise. Even if you think the mage in your party/raid cast it for AoE, why not be safe and alive rather than sorry and dead? If green gas is being emitted around you, what makes you think standing there and breathing it in is going to help your dps?

ANYway, what I will say is that with the new system, it’s been even harder to maintain two characters, especially with one having dual spec, while leveling 2 alts. I know, I know, some people manage it just fine. I guarantee their /played is higher than mine. And now the expectation is for everyone to be in full T9, and since most people are, it’s very difficult being in a group that is not, especially as a tank. I don’t think I’m a bad tank, but a dps in almost all 232 gear plus a few 245/251 pieces is going to be able to pull aggro from a tank in mostly 200 to 219 gear. And it’s not that I don’t know what I’m doing—I was able to successfully off-tank the first wing of ICC 10-man, and tank heal it in my healing set (which has 4 pieces of T9, though not many more 232 pieces beyond that), but…in heroics, people just get impatient and reckless.

Dear Warlock/Priest—if you pull a mob and put 4 DoTs on it because I’m “going too slow” and you expect me to save your ass, think again. I probably didn’t pull because I probably didn’t have enough CDs ready. They are short CDs, so if you’d waited 5 more seconds, I would have been good to go. Alternatively, I might have been trying to get mana, because a mana-less paladin tank cannot tank.

It’s funny, because I usually go pretty fast, so when someone complains, I just roll my eyes.

I am a bit frustrated, though. My defense rating is 633, which is almost 100 points too high. Yet, I’m not enchanted or socketed for def rating at all—the only thing I have is the helm enchant, and I got it for the +30 stam. Everything else is stam or avoidance. I’m hoping to get some gear that prioritizes other stats soon, because being that far over cap is just annoying. What I’ve noticed is that the newer gear actually decreases stam a LOT in favor of not quite as much avoidance, so it seems as if they are actually making paladin tanks a little worse…I can’t be sure though. So far, it’s been mostly heroics which are EZ-mode, and in ICC since dodge is reduced by 20% avoidance is low anyway, and it’s really up to heals to keep the tank up (thanks, Blizzard, cause we didn’t have a hard enough job already…QQ).

But now for my fun-fun frost spec. Bottom line? I love it. So much fun. Second bottom line? Not reliable enough. It’s also nearly impossible to test. Let me handle reliability first, as it’s really a quite simple problem: Fingers of Frost just doesn’t proc when I need it to, and doesn’t proc often enough.

Now let me back-track and compare all three specs briefly, so people can see where I’m coming from.

DPS can prioritize one of two stats to their choosing (or do nothing in particular with either and let the gear scale itself naturally). One is crit, the other is haste. In a nutshell, hit harder, or hit faster. We all know this. Here’s the problem:

Fire doesn’t really gain much from haste. It gains a LOT from crit. Bigger Ignite damage, Hot Streak, you name it, it needs crit. Arcane gains some from crit, seeing as AB increases damage by a percent, so crits can get bigger. Additionally, the Arcane tree grants a 10% bonus to spirit, so coupling that with the Molten Armor glyph and T9 set bonus, it’s easy to get higher crit going into the arcane tree (and indeed, many fire mages choose to take that talent, and for good reason.) However, it gains a lot more from haste. A 1.8 second AB is pretty damn fast, but when you get the AM proc (which procs 40% of the time when using AB), missiles are firing 3-4 times a second. There are 5 missiles total. You get the idea. Imagine stacked with Icy Veins and Bloodlust…yummy.

Frost, on the other hand, is a huge problem. Frost gains no stacking damage like AB does, and has a lower overall damage output than fire. While it has a slightly higher base damage output than AB, Arcane mages scale intel and spellpower, so it cancels out fairly quickly. As in by level 80. Fire and frost mages both get an elemental debuff that increases their crit on a boss, but fire gets the extra ignite with the heightened crit. And has talents to increase crit, whereas frost just increases damage from crits. In terms of haste, well, as mentioned before, Arcane just does better, and has a talent increasing haste by 6%. Frost does have talents to reduce the cast time of frostbolt by a total of .7 seconds, but that’s just frostbolt. We’ve no other spells really, unless we want to cast frostfire bolt (which has a higher crit modifier).

If I didn’t articulate it clearly, this is what I’m getting at. If you have gear stacked with crit, fire is the way to go. If you have gear stacked with haste, arcane is the way to go. If you are in the middle, you could pick either of those, because it outperforms Frost, as frost has no abilities that utilize them as greatly as the others. Fingers of Frost has a 15% proc chance, which is abysmally low. Thankfully, blizzard gave us Deep Freeze, but the damage is still not quite high enough. In my mostly 232 gear I can get crits for around 14k-15k with Arcane Blast at 3 or 4 stacks. Deep Freeze usually crits for 18k. Deep Freeze can only be used once every 30 seconds AT MOST. And herein lies the problem. The damage isn’t high enough, and combined with the CD, it’s just too long inbetween casts to be a reliable source of damage. It will end up being the 4th highest source of damage, sometimes third if I’ve been unlucky with FoF and haven’t gotten many ignites up. But it still only amounts to 10% of my damage.

Now, I understand Blizzard’s position. We have 2 specs that are both viable for raiding and one that is viable for both leveling and PvP. What more do we want? There are other classes that need work, right?

Yeah, uh, wrong. Hybrid classes all seem fine, some even almost too good (druids wut? Good in all four specs? Paladins? PvP like crazy). And pure dps classes (the only “pure” anything class (we don’t have a class dedicated to ONLY healing or ONLY tanking…)) I know, I know, I’m still QQing over it…all I’m saying is, Blizzard is quick to shut down arguments saying that things already work (and the mage class does work, I won’t deny it.) But right now it’s also fairly boring in PvE. Especially Arcane. Frost can be the most boring, because you just spam frostbolt, unless you get a FoF and then you cast Deep Freeze if it’s up, or you cast a fireball if Brain Freeze pops up. Fire is at least marginally interesting…but overall, like everything else in the game, it’s getting to be too easy. Arcane is about mana management for longer fights, and could use a new spell or two that could help pump out DPS at the cost of a bigger chunk of mana (besides just continuously using AB past 4 stacks or using Arcane Power, which isn’t a huge liability) to make it slightly more interesting. And AB could have different damage scaling, maybe.

But what could we possibly do with frost? What mechanic could Blizzard possibly put into place? Well, remember that one time that a Paladin’s Exorcism changed functions depending on whether or not the target was a player or non-player enemy? I propose we bring that back. For example, if they have Brain Freeze make Fireball treat the target as if they were frozen (if they are a non-player target) and not consume a charge of FoF, then you’d probably see more mages using that talent. Additionally, they should increase the damage bonus from Deep Freeze, and maybe have it so that, upon consumption, if Deep Freeze deals damage to a target, spell haste and crit are increased by 10% for 15 seconds. That’d be very nice indeed, since it’d be a short but effective buff. I know mages have the 12% haste buff on the T10 2-piece set, but again, it benefits both arcane and fire FAR more than it does frost, especially since Missile Barrage and Hot Streak proc FAR more often. Having a buff that is unique to frost would be awesome.

I’d also like to see an increase in the proc of FoF, but I’m not sure how OP that would make mages in arenas. Anyone here know how useful it is in Arenas? I’d imagine people don’t count on it because it’s so random and doesn’t proc all that often, but when it does happen, does it make frost mages unfairly strong? I don’t arena and rarely PvP, though I do plan on getting back into it at some point…

And I still like my “chains of ice” or whatever spell. I think it would be awesome and would allow frost mages to stack either crit or haste, and would be awesome for raid bosses and arena. For those of you that missed it, here’s the skinny from an earlier post.

1.) The spell lasts for x seconds. During those x seconds, each time a spell you cast critically hits, it adds a “chain” to the target. When the spell fades or is dispelled (so there is SOME PvP application), it takes the total damage that was the EXTRA CRIT damage, and applies it to the target, possibly as a DoT effect, equal to the number of chains on the target x 2. Along with that possibility, it might be necessary to take the extra crit damage and half it, so as not to be over powered.

By extra crit damage, I mean that if your frostbolt normally hits for 3k, and it crits for 5.5k, the damage stored is 2.5k (and the original 5.5k damage is still dealt to the target.)
So lets say you get in 3 crits with frostbolt and 1 crit with Ice Lance. That’s 4 chains on the target. Take the damage done that was the added critical damage, half it, and apply that damage each second for 8 seconds, as the “chains melt away.”

2.) The spell lasts for x seconds. During those x seconds, each time you cast a spell that normally has a cast time (not an instant like Ice Lance, not channeled like Blizzard or Arcane Missiles), a “chain” is applied. At the end of the spell’s duration/it is dispelled, it applies a fixed amount of damage per “chain” as a DoT effect equal to the number of chains x 2. If a spell crits, the DoT effect for it’s particular chain gets 50% of bonus damage applied as did the original spell.

For instance, let’s say a Frostbolt hits for 3k and crits for 6k, and each chain does a base of 100 damage per second per chain. If you land 3 and crit one Frostbolt, you’ve done 15k damage, and gotten 4 chains on the target, for an additional 400 damage per second over 8 seconds. However, because one of them crit, that one chain will get an additional 50 damage (because 50% of 100 is 50, and it was a 100% damage bonus to the original cast (3k+3k=6k)), so the spell will now do 450 damage per second over 8 seconds.

This will not affect your instant Fireball (should you have specced into it), so if that procs you do still get a chain added because it originally has a cast time.

Alright. That’s that for now. Now that it’s winter break, I’ll *actually* be able to post more. And I’m already planning another one for tomorrow or so. About me being an alt-o-holic. It was recently brought to my attention because I tend to yell excitedly in trade when I see people I know, then clarify and say “Ten’nen” so they don’t think some rando is saying “hi” to them. One of my friends went. “Ten’nen. Just how many alts do you have?!?” So that’s for next time. Until then!





Hypermasculinity, Homophobia, and General Idiocracy in WoW

19 08 2009

We’ve all experienced it in WoW. Whether we, ourselves, are male and have recognized/demonstrated those behaviors (as Theerivs at “A High Latency Life” quite honorably admitted in his post on “General Gaming: The Gender Wars“), have seen it in trade, guild, or raid chat, or have been the victim of it yourself, hypermasculine, homophobic, or downright rude conversation, comments, insults, or general behavior plagues WoW as much as it does our everyday lives–in general, though, I would argue that it does so to a much further extent than one normally encounters it in our day-to-day lives.

Before I get too far, I just want to remind everyone that the average playing population of WoW (that is social, at any rate) consists of those raised in Western or psuedo-Western environments. The game booms greatest in the United States, Europe, and Oceania, with some players (and, let’s admit it, farmers) in several Asian countries. Naturally farmers exist everywhere, but beneath every stereotype there is a grain of truth, even if that truth is the result of something entirely out of that groups control. Back to the point, hypermasculine behavior has been a staple of Western societies, especially since they were so patriarchal in nature. History is told mostly from the perspective of men, ABOUT men, and about what it takes to BE a man. A great one at that. As time went on, being a man became equivalent to being dominant in everything, and being the best, the strongest, and the most desired person around. I must point out that it’s obvious that capitalism was a system invented by and for men–generally, women care more about the well-being of others than just themselves (which explains why traditionally, women were more involved in volunteer work, religious missionary societies, charities, etc.) and men care usually just for themselves and their immediate family/friend circle. They advance themselves first, and everyone else…well, who cares about them?

I feel the need to point out that I am very well aware that I am speaking in some generalizations, and that there are probably exceptions to everything I’m saying. However, I don’t feel like going into them and for purposes of this argument, I’m going to continue to discuss them somewhat generally.

Anywho, we’ve now reached a point in history where being a “man” involves putting others down so that your status is elevated, flaunting off your money, power, and abilities wherever possible. You spend it on lavish things, you get lots of women and have power over them and everyone around you, and never show any behavior that could be considered “feminine” or portray you as “weaker” than someone else, either in terms of financial strength, intellectual strength, emotional strength, or physical strength. Only women are poorer than men, dumber than men, more emotional than men, and not as strong as men.

And if you are one of the small percentage of the male world born with an attraction to other men, you are therefore less than a man as well, just like women.

But if you’re not, good for you! Now it’s time to prove it to other people by buying expensive things, wearing the coolest clothes, bragging about your sexual escapades with women, and reminding women and those damned queers of their place in society.

Sound familiar? You mean to tell me that you don’t go off to get those achievements just to brag about them, buy expensive mechanohogs, pets, and mounts just to show them off, and rush through raids just to get those purples so you can show them off? Really? You mean you don’t often make jokes about the size of the elf/human breasts, or don’t notice that female armor is much more revealing than the male version of the same chestpiece/leggings? You mean to tell me you don’t make cracks about making a woman make you a sammich, or how girls are worse players than guys at WoW? You don’t talk about that girl you got with (or wish you could have gotten with) last night in explicit detail, knowing there are females in your guild who might feel violated by your lewd and crude language? You don’t say things like “that’s so gay” or “he’s such a faggot” knowing (or not knowing) that there are individuals on the queer spectrum who might take offense to you saying that their very state of being (of which they have no control) is somehow wrong or flawed and that you are somehow more perfect than them?

It’s a problem in the WoW world and in the real world. Many people don’t understand how damaging and destructive language can be. Many people don’t quite get that it was words–just words–that got so many Americans to believe that the Japanese were nothing more than the spawn of Satan during WWII, when just years before they were trading with them for televisions that they still watched. It was language that made people fear communism without knowing what it really was. It was language that allowed us to get involved into numerous wars that had as much purpose as success. Every time you make a gay joke, or a blonde joke, or a joke about women, you’re oppressing that group of people just by giving negative power to the words you use and the connotations associated with it. Even if you personally believe that women belong in the kitchen, and that blondes are really stupid, Muslims are all terrorists, and gays are causing soldiers to lose lives in the wars in the Middle East, realize that making jokes about and insulting a group of people always has, and always will be rude.

If you have a problem with the way someone is, take it out of the public. When in public, do two things: treat them as you want them to treat you, and then treat them how THEY want to be treated. And the only way you know how they want to be treated is if you ask them.

And don’t be a smart-ass and say “What if they tell me to treat them like a king? I don’t want to do that!” Obviously I’m talking within reason, and I’m trusting to the fact that you are a reasonable, logical person. Life is too short to hurl stones at others, when it is probably all to easy for someone else to hurl stones at you too.





New Spec? Sweet! New Gear? Meh.

18 08 2009

So since the patch I basically didn’t play for almost two weeks. There were a couple of reasons for that. First and foremost, I had a huge dinner I essentially was self-catering for that following weekend, and since most of my add-ons needed time to update and I had a lot of food to prepare, I focused on that. Then I went to NYC for the weekend. When I came back on Sunday evening, I had to move out of my room into the downstairs apartment (it’s one house building with an upstairs and downstairs apartment) where my friends lived so that the landlord could have the floors redone upstairs. To redo them, however, they had to unplug the router. So I basically went 4 days without any home internet access. Then Thursday was my 21st birthday, and I had no intentions of spending it on WoW. Friday night I went out with friends, and so that meant that Saturday and Sunday were really the first chances I had to do anything on WoW. Thus, I also had nothing really to blog about. But I’m back, with some interesting tidbits.

I’ll start with my spec. I’ve mentioned several times a trying a frost spec that was based around awesome haste and decent crit. Final analysis? IT WORKS! And (excuse the language) it’s fuckin’ awesome. And really fun. And actually takes management. It’s still behind my arcane spec in terms of dps, but not the 400 dps it used to be. Admittedly, I haven’t had a chance to really try it out in a full raid yet, due to the fact that I haven’t been playing much and the only raid I’ve been on since the patch was…well, quite interesting. More on that later.

Anyway, I did do a heroic DtK, and decided that I’d be fine in my frost spec because the people I were with I knew were pretty competent. I’ll a little ADD so on trash my DPS varies due to me getting distracted by other things, or talking to other people both in game and IRL. However, on bosses I’m always focused. On most standard bosses that don’t involve crazy mechanics (random mind-control, shape-shifting, constant Heigan-esque movement, etc.) I pull anywhere between 3.2 and 3.5k dps as Arcane. While in DtK I definitely was pulling between 3k and 3.3k dps, and that was with me generally forgetting to pop Cold Snap so I could use IV twice in a row (I know, I’m a bad mage). But that told me that I could count on my spec to do a lot for me. What’s interesting, though, is that by not going into the Arcane Tree, while still pretty mana efficient, I still have to keep an eye on it, though not nearly to the extent of Arcane. I’ve never had to pop Evocation, but I have reached the 30% or lower mark a couple of times for long fights. To me, though, that’s a blessing, as I can’t count the number of times I reached, you know, 4% or less as Arcane.

Anyway, for those of you interested in rotation, here is my general boss fight rotation. Know that I’m still tweaking and learning, so later I may find something else works. Standard rotation is FFB, FBx2. The reason is that about 15-20% of your damage will come from Ignite. Once WC is in effect, and with the additional crit from Improved Scoch, you can keep it up with the occasional FFB while casting super fast Frostbolts (right now I have a 1.9ish second cast time. It’s sexy.) Always cast your free Fireball as soon as it procs, or wait until the end of your next spell cast. If you’re casting FFB, give it another half second so that your Ignite doesn’t get eaten. Whenever Fingers of Frost Procs, you’ll either be casting FB or FFB. If you’re casting FB, make your next cast a FFB and hit Ice Lance at the end so it can crit as well. If you’re casting FFB, make your next cast a FB and hit Fire Blast instead of Ice Lance to get/keep Ignite up. If your free Fireball is available when FoF is active (which actually happens with surprising frequency) when you’re casting FB, cast it instead of Fire Blast, then cast Fire Blast. It’s one of the only times you’ll let your ignite get eaten, but its two instant casts that will do high damage. The reason you don’t do it with Ice Lance and Fire Blast is that by that point, FoF would already be gone and wouldn’t affect Fire Blast, as Ice Lance travels much faster than Fireball. Strange, huh? With Enough haste, your GCD can beat the Fireball travel time, but never the Ice Lance. Another strategy is to pop a Fire Blast in between your two Frostbolts if FFB doesn’t crit, and as long as FoF isn’t active.

It’s a lot of managing of CDs and procs, but that’s what I love. It makes it more challenging and more fun. A couple of spec points: Once hit capped I’d like to put a point in to Improved Blizzard and Frostbite, especially for any AoE trash pulls or when trash needs to not move as much. You can put in another point into Improved Scorch for the extra crit to Fireball and FFB, but since there is no Arcane tree involved in this, mana regen is a lot lower, so I’d rather have the extra mana back from my crits. Unfortunately, I couldn’t find a way to get 3/3 in Brain Freeze, but I think that ultimately my points were better spent increasing all damage by another percent rather than getting a smaller chance to get an instant spell. I get it plenty often at 10%. I’d be interested to see what I will do once I’m in four pieces of T8 when the Brain Freeze buff doesn’t always disappear.

Anyway, that’s all my rambling for now. I did want to share my recent spec success. I feel much better about playing my mage, and often times I only go Arcane when damage in the entire raid is low and the extra 200 or so DPS will significantly help us. It’s a little frustrating that I have to make that sacrifice, but ultimately, if we down the boss, we down the boss, and after a long night of wiping and failing, you really just want the pain to end.

I did, however, manage to get enough badges for the T8 helm. As much as I hated to part with the 53 haste I got on Volkahn’s Hood (or however much it was) I really needed the upgrade. It did knock off over a percent of my haste, but I put in a gem to kick it up a notch so it shouldn’t be too bad. I did desperately need the hit…but it made me sad. Now if I could just win Dying Curse and get a decent off-hand…and no, I don’t want to use the old Badge of Heroism one. No haste = no go.

Anyway, if anyone has any suggestions, comments, or criticisms, I’d love to hear them. And expect to see more posts from me in the future now that I am less busy again!





It’s Just a Patch…

5 08 2009

I did have a nice little post nearly ready in my drafts to compare the coming of 3.2 to the coming of Dual Spec, but then…well, 3.2 came before I finished so I couldn’t post it x_x so now I’ll rant about 3.2 a little bit.

First of all, chill the fuck out people. There are ALWAYS problems when a new, pretty major patch comes around. Give the add-ons about a week for their authors to update them (and don’t forget to thank them and give them a little $$ for their time if you can afford it, even just a dollar) and give Blizzard a chance to collect info about how some of the patch changes have messed up graphics, let them clean it up, and we can all move on with our lives. You should be used to this by now, and going on about it in trade, raid, guild, party, whatever chat is just annoying. I’ve got to admit that Blizzard isn’t always the best about updates and cleanliness in terms of bug-free programming, but at the same time, we’ve all had hours upon hours of continuous, uninterrupted play time. There is no way I’m going to expect them to be able to predict what every individual graphics card is on all of their subscribers’ computers and program according to them. I imagine part of this whole new “info collection” thing might be collecting that kind of data. Who knows?

Second of all–the whole having both alliance and horde on PvP servers was really annoying the first day. I think it was just the novelty of it for a lot of people, but trade chat was just…irritating. Whole groups of friends would create toons that all ended the same (for example, we were swarmed with ~panda) and clogged trade chat…I think my ignore list will grow too long soon. Hopefully this will die down soon as well.

A couple of things I am upset about (and by upset I mean I rolled my eyes in the sheer irony of it all) are as follows:

1.) Now I just need to run tons of heroics/naxx 25s to get Emblems of Conquest to upgrade, you know, all of my gear, and I can finally replace the blue helm and offhand I’ve had since…well, since March.

2.) Instead of running heroics on my mage, I saw that people needed a healer and then a tank so I hopped on my Paladin and got a bunch of badges from 3 heroics…

3.) I was tanking with 570 defense rating (how’d that happen? What a waste of gem sockets…) but only 23k health buffed (with Sanctuary and GotW). Humalgreg was an amazing tree healer and I take my hat of to him for keeping me up–I know it wasn’t easy, so if you ever run into him, he’s awesome :-D

4.) The RNG gods apparently see fit to give me almost every green in a heroic run on greed rolls (winning from 39 to 96), yet when I actually roll need on an item I, you know, need, I get a 4.  Then winning roll was a 12.

5.) All of my frost gear (all, you know, 4 pieces I’d managed to gather) that gave me extra crit are now useless, as frost is now more centered around haste than crit…which totally destroys my plan for a slightly more crit heavy Frost/Fire spec that is centered around fast frostbolts and the ignite debuff from my fire spells. I can still do it, of course, but it’ll take some tweaking to get my crit where I want it to be without losing too much haste.

6.) All my haste gems that used to match any color socket from the Dragon’s Eyes (JC specialty!) now actually have color assignments. Meaning I lost out on some intellect from socket bonuses. Which was sad because as an arcane mage, every little bit helps. Bye bye 120 mana…

7.) Yet I was unable to test out how effective all this haste was on my mage in Frost spec because, since the patch just came out, so many add-ons were messing up, including recount. So I have to wait and see if perhaps this haste bonus really was enough to make Frost slightly more viable than arcane. I tried it before the patch and was about 400 or so dps behind on a boss…maybe I’ll be able to make up for that? Can’t wait to find out…

I really wish I had 3 other things to make a nice, round list of 10, but I just haven’t had much playing time. Anyone else have any stories of interest, frustration, fun times?





Utility, Utility, Utility…

28 07 2009

Yep, I’m back to discussing class utility. However, this time it’s in a response to Firespirit’s post discussing the failure of the hybrid tax, specifically in the case of the paladin, as well as reiterating some previous thoughts from my last post where I discussed the mantra “bring the player not the class”, and finally more concrete ideas as to class mechanics. I suggest taking a look to read over Lightfury’s post, as I’ll be referencing some of the excellent, well thought out points he made.

I’m not going to try to summarize his post, but suffice it to say that Firespirit rather successfully argues that the 5% dps tax that is applied to hybrid classes (to make up for the fact that they can do other things outside of dps) simply isn’t effective or working at all. He cites the fact that for a paladin, his dps will be better on fights that don’t require as much movement, but also have multiple targets to hit with his AoE spells (very similar to a DK, in fact). However, other fights, such as Patchwerk, will see him behind other casters for dps, as they can finally stand still and don’t have to avoid circles of doom or fire raining from the sky.

This is where I originally came in and stated that it would be nice if they gave hybrid classes more utility. It’s VERY rare to ever see a druid have to pop out of cat form to heal. Occassionally they’ll use a battle rez should something happen, but when was the last time you saw one help heal? When was the last time a shaman stopped dpsing and tossed out some heals? Or see a warrior switch stances to have to tank? It’s happened, yes, but quite rarely. Not even once per Naxx run, which means you can easily go 20, 30 bosses between different raids and never have to have that happen. So just because they CAN do something doesn’t mean that they will.

My initial response was actually going to be to point out that Retadins can put up the Heart of the Crusader debuff on bosses to increase damage dealt by 3%. Then I realized that all 3 kinds of paladins tend to have it, and use it often. Tanks often spec into the ret tree for extra damage (afterall, extra damage increases threat), and healadins often spec into it for extra crit (we looooooooove our crit!) and it occurred to me that, once again, because it is so early in the tree, Retadins lose out on a mechanic that can be quite valuable to raids.

And that’s when I realized that one of the things Blizzard could do for all classes is to take a page out of Warhammer’s book and make each class quite unique by coming up with mechanisms that aren’t shared as easily as Mortal Strike or Replenishment. I say it over and over again, but Shadow Priests were in such a good place during BC. If their health/mana regen benefit mechanic had been kept more or less in tact into WotLK, then with the buffs that Discipline got (finally), Priests would have been an amazingly balanced class. Each tree is different and unique enough in play style and utility to make them desireable in raids and Arenas, and not that boring to play.

I will make one amendment to my earlier post. While I think it would be a positive benefit to all raiders to have raids that require specific abilities, perhaps what would be even better would be to allow certain mechanics to work on raid bosses that don’t currently always work. For instance, having them makes the fight simpler (not a ton, but a little bit) and makes it worthwhile to have a certain class/ability in the raid, but doesn’t make it essential. For example, Tranquilizing Shot wasn’t necessary in ZA, but it did make the Lynx boss easier. Whereas Instructor Rasuvius requires a Priest, perhaps the fight should have been designed to be very difficult without a Priest, but not impossible.

In addition, I think it would be very helpful if many classes got different kinds of abilities to make them useful in a raid (or arena) environment. For instance, I still don’t understand why Survival Hunters have a replenishment…it doesn’t make any logical sense. Hunter’s suddenly have super magical abilities that mirror what Shadow Priests used to do? How does that even make sense? Mages I can understand–lorewise, mages have very tight connections to the arcane. Paladins were a stretch, but tolerable. But Hunters? Really? If, say, replenishment were buffed up (remind me why it’s getting nerfed again…?) and removed from Hunters and probably Paladins (hold on a second Retadins) and kept to just Mages and Priests, then it would make it NICE to have them in the raid, but not necessary.

But wait…what if the mechanisms were different? What if Shadow Priests had their old mechanism back, but Frost Mages had the ability to,  I dunno, “freeze” the usage of mana? Bear with me now–suppose that they were able to apply a raid-wide buff that, instead of giving back a certain crappy percentage of mana regen (I shouldn’t say it’s crappy, it’s helpful on longer fights…right?) but instead, reduced the mana/energy/rage/runic energy cost of abilities, or made every Xth ability used have its mana/energy cost reduced by 50%, or something like that? The abilities are inherently similar in that they help with mana/energy conservation and allow for more heals, but functionally quite different.

What if Heart of the Crusader were moved down the tree so that Tankadins and Healadins didn’t have full access to it, so that a Retadin was actually more unique when it brought it to the raid? Or better, still, have a talent deeper in the tree (maybe tag it on to another talent, say Swift Retribution) that increases the effectiveness of Heart of the Crusader by 33/66/100% and increases critical strike damage bonuses to party members by 1/2/3%. That’d be awesome for everyone, tanks and DPSers included. Maybe it doesn’t help healers that much, but Heart of the Crusaders never really helped them that much anyway.

There are so many mechanics that can still be toyed with. Certain silence mechanics, for example, that work in heroics but not in raids. What if a boss has a spell that is a 2 second cast that he casts 5 times in rapid succession (as soon as one finishes casting, the other one starts) that does lots of AoE damage/single target damage to one target of his/her/its choosing and needs multiple different interrupts (KT doesn’t count) to prevent lots of damage/death? And what if it becomes immune to a certain classes interrupt after it had been used for 60 seconds? All of a sudden you have a use for multiple classes to use their interrupts. Even if the silencing effect doesn’t work, the interrupt does.

And I’m not just talking about PvE stuff here either. In PvP, why can’t the force taunts for tanks be on a seperate, longer CD when used on other players and have it change the target player’s target to them? Or give the tanking specced classes an ability deep enough in the tree that another tree can’t go down 3 tiers and still have it. And so many PvE abilities can come into play in a PvP environment, especially when “Replenishment” means different things depending on the class, so it changes up the makeup of your team. Have 3 casters in addition to the healer? Maybe a mana replenishment might be more useful. Got a warrior and a rogue on your team? Maybe you want your abilities to cost less so you can use more of them faster.

And all of this can be achieved as the compromise for a “hybrid tax” or used on specs where DPS is lower and Blizzard doesn’t want to fix it.

The point being, if Blizzard were to pull back from number charts and comparing DPS/HPS/TPS from one class to another on different boss fights, and thought more creatively about how to implement different skills a class could use that would change the way a boss fight works, then maybe more players would feel more useful to a raid without any raids ever feeling like they HAVE to have a certain class.





The Best Way to Wipe a Raid

22 07 2009

I thought about doing a list of the top 5 or so ways to wipe a raid, but I realized that one single behavior causes so many other problems which lead to raid wipes that I thought it best to just talk about the one. So, this post will be all about one thing, and one thing only: IMPATIENCE.

Imaptience wipes raids. Whether it is on the part of the raid leader, the tank, or the DPS, any time you try to rush a raid along, you are inevitably asking for a wipe. Let me list some common raid practices I’ve seen that are inevitably acts of impatience.

1.) “All of class x do job  y.”

This is not only extremely confusing, but often inaccurate. I was doing a run of Naxx 25 when the raid leader said this when we were about to fight Gluth. He said “All mages and hunters kite the Zombies in the back. PULLING!” First of all, there were 3 mages and 2 hunters, one mage who then said she was bad at kiting, and one hunter who had no idea what was going on. Naturally, this led to a lot of confusion, as not only was I the only one kiting, as the third mage had no frost spec and thus felt he couldn’t kit, but I also was not getting heals, and the other hunter was not dropping Frost Trap…ever.

The second time, he said “All druid healers heal the kiters. PULING!”  Again, impatience, as we had 3 druid healers, which is a lot for the number of kiters we had (I still don’t know how many of us were actually kiting). So of course, we wiped.

LESSON: Always say names when assigning raid duties, and make it very clear that individuals know exactly what their assignments are.

This situation, however, leads us to a second problem…

2.) Boss Fight Explanations

In the aforementioned example, I cited a hunter who didn’t know the fight, and thus didn’t know his responsibilities. In many raid situations, I’ve seen raid leaders tell the couple of people who don’t know the fight to “Just dps” or “just heal” and say “you’ll probably die even if I explained it.” Not only is that incredibly unhelpful, but that kind of attitude is extremely rude and demoralizing. Each raid member should feel as if they are an asset to the raid, and a good raid leader will explain the entire boss fight to them, even mechanics that they don’t/shouldn’t necessarily have to worry about. After all, it only takes one person to screw up Thaddius.

LESSON: Boss fights require explanations for the entire raid. Any raid leader that pulls the boss without first offering explanations of the boss fight to the entire raid should not be leading the raid. Even if everyone claims that they know the fight, a quick recap is always helpful. Any individual tasks, like kiting, should also be explained–for example, explaining to kiters that they need only hold aggro, not spend time trying to kill the zombies and wasting mana.

3.) Buffs

This is a classic one–pulling before everyone is buffed up. I can’t speak for all classes, but I know that when I have the opportunity to receive certain buffs and I don’t get them, I get pretty frustrated. Especially in a 25 man, where typically every class is represented, its not only expected, but often times it’s needed to survive boss encounters.

Paladins, I’m sorry to say, are the worst at buffing. Frankly, if I’m ever missing a buff, it’s usually a paladin buff. Paladins should stop griping and fucking get Pally Power–its incredibly light weight and helps the raid immensely. Whenever I’m in a raid on my paladin, I always just take over paladin buffs and tell the other paladins what exactly to buff. I happen to be specced into both Improved Wisdom and Improved Might, but for many paladins this is not the case. A good raid leader/other paladin should check in with the others to see what they do best, and then have them do it.

In any event, many classes do very well with additional buffs in raids, such as getting the extra mana regen from Wisdom, or the extra HP from Fortitude (which can be the difference of life or death in EoE), or the extra intellect from Arcane Brilliance.  Since only mana-using classes can cast these, it’s generally polite to make sure that all buffs are given out and mana is regained before starting the next pull.

LESSON: Buffs are very important to many classes and their ability to do their job, WAIT FOR BUFFS! Blizzard gave them to us for a reason. So we should use them all whenever possible, even before trash.

4.) Trash Pulls and Deaths

People sometimes die on trash pulls. It happens. Either an aggro mistake, or the mob exploded, or they were the target of an unfortunate ability. Whatever. Get over it. However, it’s extremely irresponsible to begin the next pull before they have been rezzed and rebuffed. As stated before, buffs cost mana, but rezzes cost even more. If you pull before healers have enough mana to heal you, and then the tanks die, it’s possible that your impatience just caused a wipe.

LESSON: Rez before looting, rez before pulling. Simple as that. It may seem like it takes a bit of time, but in reality, you’re saving yourself much more time than you think you’re “wasting.” I’ve seen many groups wipe more on trash because they are fighting with half their dps, tanks, and healers up and most of them are low on/out of mana.

5.)  Because 5 is a number that fits nicely into people’s heads, I had to figure out a fifth. It didn’t take long. LOOT and LOOT RULES!

Far too often, especially when you have a few PuGs in an otherwise guild/friend run, loot rules aren’t explained when new members come in, especially if the run has already started. So many runs I’ve been on, I lost the chance to roll on something because no one bothered to explain the rules and they were in a rush to get to the next boss. Loot rules vary from guild to guild, run to run, and it’s worse when you ask about them, but they continue with the countdown anyway or give a very short, incoherent/incomplete answer. It’s quite irritating when you miss out on a chance at loot or you roll too early and then your awesome roll is discounted.

LESSON: NEVER pass out loot before explaining, in every detail, the loot rules. It ensures that PuGs want to run with you again, and keeps your guild from getting a bad rep. Happy raiders = better raiders, and you’ll save yourself a lot of time and energy from not having to deal with irritated whispers, etc.

The bottom line: Raiding requires time. Rushing wastes time in the form of wipes and rebuffing. Incomplete explanations are just as much a form of rushing as pulling before everyone is done eating/drinking. If you’re going to raid, realize the time commitment and be ready to invest in it. I’m not saying you need to spend 7 hours trying to clear Naxx, but I guarantee that assuming everyone is always constantly alive and buffed, assuming everyone knows all the mechanics of every fight, and assuming that everyone psychically knows exactly what their assignments will be on every fight and what the loot rules are is asking for a wipe.

Take the time to prevent unnecessary wipes, and you’ll see your raid times drop.





Make the Numbers Go Away

17 07 2009

Two posts in one day. You guys are lucky.

In short, I’ve been thinking more and more about the reasons I enjoy WoW, and the many different aspects of the game. A little background on myself–I like to be intellectually challenged, and I like to have to think about, consider, and analyze any and everything I do in my life. This goes from my academic work to my extra-curricular activities to my down time, recreational activities.  For me, WoW has provided an outlet for my creativity and story telling capabilities (through RP, which used to be my primary focus and is what got me into the game) while allowing me to learn to manipulate and change aspects of the game to my liking while being different (my avoidance of cookie cutter specs).

Recently, a lot of the changes to the game have been really frustrating to me on an intellectual level. There is a lot of emphasis on “bring the player, not the class” which has been changed, as Critical QQ put it, to sometimes mean “bring the classes, not the class.” My question is this: why? This especially became prevalent as mages the entire game over saw Frost mages get a Mortal Strike buff to their Permafrost Talent tree, and asked the same question: why?

In case you haven’t gotten it yet, this is going to be a ramble, a verbal flood of thoughts that aren’t extremely organized. Comment away, and hopefully my responses will be able to clarify everything I’m saying. I also state that you “need” things a lot. Note that I am saying this in the context of a raid that is entering the instance without any of the gear found within it or any gear of raids of equal difficulty or beyond. For instance, entering Naxx 10 in heroic gear. Just to be clear.

Anyway, here we go.

First of all, I really want to know: what the hell is so bad about wanting to bring along a class for a specific skill or set of skills they add to the raid? For example, Shamans. Everyone loves Shamans, but we ESPECIALLY love them because of Bloodlust. If you have one Shaman in the raid, even if their dps is only mediocre, you have Bloodlust. That’s an awesome talent that helps the entire raid. Great. Class utility right there. If you have a Druid along and someone dies mid-battle, like one of your healers or one of your top DPSers due to an unlucky lag spike or whatever, BOOM! Battle rez, and keep on going. Class utility. It’s another reason to have a Druid in your raid.

So, Blizzard, why do you insist on spreading abilities around, like handing out ice cream at a 5 year old’s birthday-party? I’m a fan of a more socialist outlook on life in general, but this would make even Marx roll over in his grave. Let’s consider this for a moment, and to do so, we are going to go back to the Burning Crusade (I’m not familiar enough with Vanilla WoW, so we have to go there. Apologies to all who would have better examples). We’re going to go back to our favorite starter instance: Karazhan. And we’re going to look at one Boss in particular: Shade of Aran.

For those of you unfamiliar with Shade of Aran, let me break the fight down for you as best as I can remember. He does several things.

1.) Casts Frostbolt, Fireball, and Arcane Missiles.

2.) Sucks everyone into the center where he is standing, casts a raidwide “Slow”, and casts a massive “Arcane Explosion” that mages only see in their wildest dreams, killing anyone who didn’t get out in time.

3.) Has a funky aggro table, a tank favorite.

4.) Summons 4 water elementals about 2 minutes into the fight.

5.) If his mana gets to 20%(maybe?) before he is dead, he casts a raid wide Polymorph that cannot be broken, drinks, and casts a raidwide Pyroblast.

If I’m forgetting anything, it’s not important.

…False. I forgot the worst part. I don’t know how I did, but I think it’s funny that I did which is why I’m letting you all know that I did. Get it?

6.) FLAME WREATH! He casts it, if you move, the raid wipes. Don’t argue with me. You know its true. Even if 4 people live, its still a fucking wipe. Don’t be a prick about it.

So. The thing about this guy is that his three mage spells are interruptable. What people forget is that the first time they did it, it probably wasn’t with a group of 70′s in mostly T5 or better gear. You went in there with blues, maybe a few Heroic epics or badge gear, but that was it. And this fight was all about utility. You NEEDED to have melee classes who could interrupt his spell casts. You NEEDED ranged classes that could also interrupt (mages or spriest). You NEEDED healers who could toss up HoTs on the move, especially when the Water Elementals come out (usually Renew was fine). If you didn’t work out who was interrupting what spell when, chances are a lot would go through and hit random raid members, which wasn’t good, because they hurt. Shade of Aran was a very good fight, and as much as I hated him, I loved him because it told me very easily who in the raid only cared about the damn numbers which mean NOTHING if the raid wipes.

Fast Foward to Netherspite. Basically, stand in the beams that increase stats, including things like mana costs, and don’t let them hit Netherspite or you wipe. You NEED two tanks for the debuff. You NEED a priest in the raid so you have the fort buff, or else some of your DPS won’t be able to stand in the beams due to low health (remember that whole non-T5 or better gear thing?) Naxxramas has a fight that requires Mind Control, and Noth requires some decursers, but otherwise, I can’t think of another fight that requires a certain class. Even KT, sure it’s nice of you interrupt the Frostbolts, but they don’t hit as hard or as often as the Shade of Aran spells, so thus it isn’t as crucial. Blizzard has changed everything to a numbers game, so the heals are just bigger to counter the damage done, and everyone’s damage is increased to make the fight go faster.

What I would love to see is a fight that requires the use of a certain classes abilities (like requiring a mages “spell steal” for Gruul’s Lair, or needing one of every kind of CC for Hex Lord in ZA). To do this, however, Blizzard needs to return certain class abilities to the classes. Make the abilities require timing and skill to use, so that the fights are no longer just plowing up and pew-pewing your heart out. Consolidate abilities to one or two classes, even changing the mechanics slightly for each of those classes. Now that what, 5 classes (and several specs beyond) have Mortal Strike (Frost Mages, Shadow Priests, Rogues, Hunters, and the original Warrior), it’s no longer a unique ability that one has to plan for. You know it’s going to happen in Arena’s, especially 5v5, even though there is no effective healing counter.

Some people might complain that it’s not fair to require certain classes to progress in a raid. I disagree. If you can’t manage to get 2 priests for 25-man Naxx for Instructor Rasuvius, something is wrong. If you can’t manage to get one mage or druid to decurse on Noth, something is wrong. Maybe some of the 12-year olds (or youngers) who play the game might find it to be too difficult. A Google search will indicate that the average player age is somewhere in the mid-20′s to mid-30′s. And those are probably the people who go to Blizzcon and have multiple accounts–they have jobs and thus can afford it, or at least choose where to spend their money.

I understand that Blizzard is a company and aims to maximize their profits. But (and this is the same complaint I have about the most recent Harry Potter movie) please stop fucking catering to the people who don’t give a damn about anything they see on the screen besides the colors. I’m sorry, but you would make MUCH more money and not lose as many players if you catered towards your biggest fan base. I’m certainly not in the biggest fan base, as I’m not a super hard-core gamer, but age/maturity/intellectually speaking, I’m certainly in the same ballpark.

There has to be a compromise and a priority. If you fear homogenization so much, why do many players feel like characters and classes are becoming more and more similar? Why is it that I can count on one hand the number of times I’ve been asked to use Polymorph in an instance, or seen any other CCing class use it? Why is it that Warlocks, Elemental Shamans, Boomkins, and Mages all seem to do around the same dps (in comparable gear) the difference being that it’s in different colors, yet really don’t add much more to the raid besides a random assortment of buffs?

So I turn to you, players of World of Warcraft: Do you think Blizzard has succeeded in creating a game where “bringing the player, not the class” has coalesced with non-homogenization? Are you pleased with the way classes differ from one another? Did everything get screwed up with the introduction of Dual Specialization as well? I’d love to hear your thoughts and responses!





Learning the Game

17 07 2009

I was running an instance (Razorfen Kraul to be exact) on my priest, which is something I rarely do as I’m trying to level her to 80 as quickly as possible without leaving her tailoring/herbalism behind (screw cooking/first aid, that’s why I have a main). In this instance, the party members and I happened to get into a discussion about our other characters. One rogue mentioned that his main/first 80 was a hunter (I think, I might have those backwards). I sort of sighed and though “oh well, we all have to start somewhere.”

But it gets worse. As we were talking, I said that I thought it was good to have rolled my pally so that I would get experience tanking and healing. The rogue/hunter (why is it always huntards?) stated quite boldly that he would “never roll a tanking or healing class, and if he had a hybrind he would never tank/heal.” I was a little dumbfounded, but responded with “The best DPS I know usually have either a tank or a healer.” The healer we had added that “It’s always good for people to understand the jobs of other classes, which includes tanks and healers learning about each other, and about DPS.”

The huntard continued making outlandish remarks about how his main was in part T8 and T8.5 and was doing mad dps, which only caused me to roll my eyes and say “numbers don’t mean you’re good, it means you have gear.”

Let’s just say I felt like I was talking to a pre-teen brick wall from that point on.

Anyway, it got me to thinking about the benefits of learning other classes. Here’s a list of things I can think of as I write (I wish it was preprepared, but alas, this is a spur of the moment post) of why everyone should learn to play the other classes, even if not seriously.

1.) Learning–you learn their jobs and the difficulties associated with it. Healers and Tanks can learn some of the complexities involved in some rotations, or why on some bosses certain DPS is better than others. DPS and Tanks can learn the stress placed on Healers, who have to prioritize who to save and predict how hard members of the raid/the tank will be hit so they know who to heal. DPS and Healers can learn threat build-up easier, and thus learn how to control/manage their own aggro better.

2.) Understanding: Not the same as learning, but similar. Now Healers know why sometimes DPS gets stuck standing in the very bad thing, because they’ve spent all this time casting a spell or they blew CDs they don’t want to waste, so they are a little more ok with tossing you that extra heal if you don’t quite get out in time, so long as you aren’t stupid. Now Tanks understand that sometimes, if it looks like your health it dropping but so is the rest of the raids, those defensive CDs just need to be used to help the healers out a bit. And sometimes, DPS will crit or proc trinkets/spell procs at a different ratio, so you have to burn those extra CDs to keep the aggro. DPS can understand that healers really need to focus on those three 10k hits that the boss is about to rape the tank with, so you standing in the fire is only going to hinder their ability to fully heal the tank.

3.) Respect: Everyone knows each other’s jobs and won’t ask questions like “why wasn’t I getting heals?” Instead, they know that everyone likely tried their best on that attempt, and that it wasn’t anyone’s fault so much as a combination of factors.  There is less finger-pointing, less epeen stroking, and more overall cooperation.

4.) Flexibility: You learn very quickly how to change your playstyle to match the tank/dps/heals you’re with, because you’ve been there and can recognize the signs of a player who knows very well what they’re doing, is undergeared, is overgeared, is still learning but is trying hard, is a bumbling idiot, or any combination thereof. You know to constantly spam Hand of Salvation on the tard DPS that keeps pulling because the tank is in mostly blues and the DPS is in T8 gear, or you know to drop Vigilance on the healer because their normal heal gives you 16k health or more, or you know that you need to slow down your rotation because the tank is having trouble holding aggro from everyone.

5.) Fun: You have another 80 toon! You can make more money from more dailies, and be in the same raids as friends if they happen to be missing a class you can play on another toon. You’re a bigger asset to the raid because you just know more, and you can learn fights from another perspective to make it that much easier when you go back to your “main” job. You’re basically never bored, because if you’ve done a bunch or are saved on one toon, you have another you can log in on and continue to play and experience the game.

So yeah, it’s not the cleanest, neatest list, but I think you all get the point. Basically, you have no right to complain about how another class is doing their job until you’ve done it yourself. After you have, I guarantee that your complaints will be cut down a lot, and only saved for the dingbats who don’t spec into Vigilance.





Frost PvE Additions

15 07 2009

Because of the release of the Harry Potter movie last night, I didn’t really play much and have nothing to really share of interest. However, below you will find a copy of a post I made to Blizzard regarding Frost PvE, and an additional spell they could add to our arsenal to make us PvE viable again. Please post any comments you have–I’d love to hear your thoughts/criticisms/suggestions on the idea! It’s a little long, but very thorough (I hope). Enjoy!

____________________________________________________________________________________________

I was recently thinking about ways to make Frost more viable in PvE without over buffing them for PvP. It wasn’t until I was running Dead Mines for the first time on my Priest (or at least, the first time in a long time. I didn’t even remember the instance layout at all–I’ve probably only done it twice) that I got an idea when a caster in there used Chains of Ice on me, that then grew when I was doing my daily quests for in the Storm Peaks for SoH rep.

For purposes of this argument, we are going to call the spell Chains of Ice, though another name should probably be selected. However, the name will probably help with the explanation of the spell. Here we go.

On the 8th tier down (or maybe 7th–deep enough that you can’t spec into it too early), have a spell called “Chains of Ice” that takes one talent point to learn. It should have the same application as Vampiric Touch by Shadow Priests, an instant cast. However, it should only last for 10-15 seconds and have a 25-30 second cool down. I have two ideas on what happens after it is applied.

1.) The spell lasts for x seconds. During those x seconds, each time a spell you cast critically hits, it adds a “chain” to the target. When the spell fades or is dispelled (so there is SOME PvP application), it takes the total damage that was the EXTRA CRIT damage, and applies it to the target, possibly as a DoT effect, equal to the number of chains on the target x 2. Along with that possibility, it might be necessary to take the extra crit damage and half it, so as not to be over powered.

By extra crit damage, I mean that if your frostbolt normally hits for 3k, and it crits for 5.5k, the damage stored is 2.5k. Unlike Ignite, the damage will stack.

So lets say you get in 3 crits with frostbolt and 1 crit with Ice Lance. That’s 4 chains on the target. Take the damage done that was the added critical damage, half it, and apply that damage each second for 8 seconds, as the “chains melt away.”

Additionally, this makes Ice Lance more useful in raids, as you will be more likely to get crits with Ice Lance after the 5 stacks of winter’s Chill, but it also encourages players not to spam Ice Lance to get tons of “chains” because if they don’t crit, no bonus damage will be applied.

2.) The spell lasts for x seconds. During those x seconds, each time you cast a spell that normally has a cast time (not an instant like Ice Lance, not channeled like Blizzard or Arcane Missiles), a “chain” is applied. At the end of the spell’s duration/it is dispelled, it applies a fixed amount of damage per “chain” as a DoT effect equal to the number of chains x 2. If a spell crits, the DoT effect for it’s particular chain gets 50% of bonus damage applied as did the original spell.

For instance, let’s say a Frostbolt hits for 3k and crits for 6k, and each chain does a base of 100 damage per second per chain. If you land 3 and crit one Frostbolt, you’ve done 15k damage, and gotten 4 chains on the target, for an additionall 400 damage per second over 8 seconds. However, because one of them crit, that one chain will get an additional 50 damage (because 50% of 100 is 50, and it was a 100% damage bonus to the original cast (3k+3k=6k)), so the spell will now do 450 damage per second over 8 seconds.

This will not affect your instant Fireball (should you have specced into it), so if that procs you do still get a chain added because it originally has a cast time.
_________________________________________________________________________________

In my opinion, both of these options give benefits to stacking either haste or crit. The first one gives a little more preference to stacking crit, and the second a little more stacking haste, but in both cases, either will help. For instance, in the first, obviously you want as many crits as possible. However, if you have enough haste, you might be able to get in more spells casts and increase your chances of landing a crit if you’ve enough raid buffs. With the second option, crits will up your damage some, but the more spells you can cast, the more chains you will DEFINITELY have.

I would love to hear responses to the idea, though not so much the specifications/numbers. If Blizzard likes the idea, they’ll work that out. Obviously the numbers will have to be crunched a bit, but I feel like this idea would give Frost an extra spell in their rotation that can seriously up their numbers, but wouldn’t be that big of a deal in PvP because it would require the Frost Mage to be standing still for a long time and for the healer to not be dispelling anything. In a 5v5 environment, if they let the frost mage stand there for a solid 15 seconds casting Frostbolt, they deserve to die.

Also, whoever says “Frost spells shouldn’t have DoTs, that’s Fire’s thing” clearly has never done daily quests for Sons of Hodir reputation. There are mobs that apply Frost DoT damage already–why shouldn’t we?

Oh, and like other Frost CDs, it should be affected by Cold Snap. Additionally, to balance out points, take a point out of, say, Shatter, so each point gives 25%/50%. Finally, any damage that is absorbed will not apply a chain. Again, in PvP, not a great spell, but since most bosses don’t have Power Word: Shields over them, it will once again be useful in Heroic and Raid encounters.








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.