RSS Feed
Jan 4

DKs should shield bash

Posted on Monday, January 4, 2010 in PUG

Heroic Old Kingdom PUGs seem to be among the worst for me. In this particular case, a Fury warrior insisted on charging ahead on every pull and then screaming for me (the tank) to “fucking tank!” while also screaming “fucking heals!” Sadly, the healer and I were unable to initiate a kick as this Warrior charged ahead time and again.

The best part was his sage advice to me, a Death Knight tank, that I should “shield bash” more. Indeed, we should.

Jan 4

Forge of Idiots

Posted on Monday, January 4, 2010 in PUG

Forge of Souls. I zone in and assess the field – 3 people in the same guild, which is either very good or very bad. I start to respec to tank. Paladin pops wings and pulls first mobs, dies. I am far enough out that I am not in combat, so I cancel the respec, change gear, and tank the two giants. We take them down. I eat to recover health from the battle and the gear swap.

The Warlock and Priest run off ahead and cast Seed of Corruption and Penance on the next group. The last DPS, a well-geared Rogue, takes the smart path and leaves the party. I get kicked for daring to tell them my threat is low when I am not even in combat.

Jan 4

New category: Bad PUGs

Posted on Monday, January 4, 2010 in PUG

It’s time to regale you with stories of the wicked bad PUGs I always seem to find. Goull [HDL] swears it’s some kind of bad karma I am reaping – I think it’s good karma I am storing to live to be 180.

Please share your bad PUG stories as well.

Dec 2

What it’s like leading TotC 25 PUGs

Posted on Wednesday, December 2, 2009 in Uncategorized

I hate being RL on the Faction Champs fight:

“Don’t stand in the Bladestorm”
“Don’t stand in the Hellfire”
“Attack the SKULL”
“Interrupt”
“Use Hammer.”
“Kick”
“Pummel”
“Kick”
“Mind Freeze”
“Get out of the hellfire.”
“Stay on the skull.”
“Run away from the chained warrior.”
“Stay on- ah, it’s a wipe.”

Sep 17

Situation Awareness and tanks

Posted on Thursday, September 17, 2009 in General, Tank

Good article on Tanking UI on nostockui.com. The real story is not the eye candy, but the need for a tank to have good SA – echoing the original post on SA and the others touching on the subject.

Jul 8

How to Blood DK DPS

Posted on Wednesday, July 8, 2009 in Death Knight

• Stack Armor Penetration. Blood DKs actually do physical damage versus spell damage, so ArP helps. I didn’t switch over until I had > 200 ArP. If you go Blood early, your DPS won’t be amazing. (Mine still isn’t where it could be with more ArP.)
• Heart Strike. Heart Strike some more.
• You want to Death Strike to generate Death Runes, with which you can execute – wait for it – Heart Strikes.
• Watch your diseases. You won’t have the simple reapplication of Frost Fever and Blood Plague that Unholy DKs have, so watch for it. Heart Strike does more damage when you have more diseases on the target.
• Fire off Death Coil only when your DRW is on cooldown. This means you should be building Runic Power leading up to every 90s. You also want to keep your RP up for Death Strikes. (Read below)
• Don’t be afraid to call a ghoul during a boss fight. You won’t have control over it but once the fight starts you should be good to go.
• I glyphed for Dancing Rune Weapon, Death Strike, and Dark Death. You want a longer lasting DRW (esp. come 3.2), more damage and healing from your Death Rune generator, and with Sudden Doom the Dark Death glyph pushes your DPS.
• Speaking of Death Strike glyph – the glyph will increase your damage by 2% for every 2 runic power you currently have (up to a maximum of 25%).  The runic power is not consumed by this effect. Keep your RP up for this, but dump whenever DRW is ready.
• Use Hysteria on yourself. You want to pop it right before you trigger DRW.
• Make sure you talent for Virulence. Why you don’t have the spell needs of an Unholy DK, you still need to ensure you hit a lot.
• Stay in Blood Presence.
• Heart Strike.

Apr 28

Are you a robot?

Posted on Tuesday, April 28, 2009 in General, PVE, Raids, Rant

I read a post on WowInsider about the difficulties of playing a Ret Paladin. Someone commented that while DPSing as a ret paladin was pretty simple, there are very few who know how to use other abilites to prevent deaths, wipes, or other things that make raids go wrong.

This touches on a few things, namely situational awareness, but it also concerns how well you know your class, its specs and capabilities.

I’ve known a few people who play hybrid classes as DPS specs. But they played like their toon was a pure DPS class. Even more so, it seemed as if they wouldn’t press a button if it didn’t cause damage. I liked to call them DPS robots, since really, a bot could do what they do. To a certain point this is OK, but to really be good at your class and affect how your raid performs, you have to use all of your available abilities when they’re needed. Of course, this doesn’t just apply to ret paladins, but I’ll use this particular example.

I raided with a ret paladin who lived up to what I described above. He never did anything except press one of his three dps buttons (pre 3.1). He barely even wanted to cast blessings, but he at least cast Blessing of Might on himself because it boosted DPS. During raids, you would never see a self-cleanse, a blessing of protection on someone who had aggro, a hand of salvation. This same person usually died to void zones or fire as well.

Point is, there are a lot of abilities that every class has, that most people never use. The best players will learn how, when, and where to use them. Rogues can blind or vanish/cheap shot a mob. Mages can polymorph, frost nova, decurse, spell steal, etc. DKs can save a healer by using chains of ice, or death gripping and using chains. A feral or balance druid can barkskin/tranquility to save a raid. I don’t play every class, but I’m sure every class has these tricks that can save a fellow raid member, save him or herself, and even just make the raid go more smoothly. It’s up to the player to know these things however, and to use them without needing the raid leader to ask you, or to have it done before the raid leader asks you.

Even though you may be a hybrid class, it doesn’t mean that you should limit yourself to what your tree offers. Pure dps classes shouldn’t think that since they can’t heal or tank, that their class has no utility.

Apr 12

How to make your guild leader happy

Posted on Sunday, April 12, 2009 in Uncategorized

An amusing and good read: http://wordywarrior.wordpress.com/2009/04/08/10-ways-to-make-your-gm-love-you/

Apr 2

An ounce of prevention..

Posted on Thursday, April 2, 2009 in General, Heal, PVE, Raids

..is worth a pound of cure. The old saying still applies in some aspects of this game. Learn to dispel, it will save you and your other healing buddies a lot of headache, healing, and mana in the long run.

Consider the average poison or curse that affects one person. If it’s a dot, it would probably deal anywhere from 12,000-15,000 damage. Ok that’s easily taken care of with one nuke heal, or two quick heals, maybe a stack of dots. Estimate anywhere from 800-1000 mana spent to make up for that. But if you dispel it as soon as you can, you spent 1 global cooldown, less than 300 mana, and your raid member is cured of any other possible negative effect from that poison or curse.

When there are raid bosses that cast poison volleys or area of effect curses, this becomes even more important, and every dispel after the first one saves that much more time and mana.

This isn’t just for healing classes either. Any class that can remove a negative on itself or other should do so. The momentary lapse in dps is trivial. Even as a paladin tank, I try to replace a GCD with a self-cleanse if it doesn’t affect my overall threat or survival. Everything counts, and dead raid members don’t contribute anything.

Mar 19

Battle.net mobile authenticator announced!

Posted on Thursday, March 19, 2009 in Uncategorized

Battle.net mobile authenticator announced! I’ve been asking for this for years: http://us.blizzard.com/support/article.xml?articleId=26109

I always have my iPhone with me, and don’t want to carry yet another RSA-type fob. This is awesome.