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  • Archive for March, 2010

    Things I’m learning: Rep farming and raid lockouts


    2010 - 03.16

    A brief post this, because my intended next post is rather more work than I’d really bargained for and I keep putting it off. To apply a little pressure to myself: this intended next post will cover the comedy of [spelling, typography, grammar] errors that are the two Brady guides included in the battle chest, UK edition. It will also serve as the introduction to a series of posts looking at how some mechanics have changed, from the perspective of someone who started playing at patch 3.2 (and has therefore never experienced the old ways).

    Anyway. In my last post I talked about getting my first raid achievement, for downing Sartharion in a 10 -man in a somewhat fractious, but ultimately successful manner. In a move which may or may not make sense to raiders who know what they’re about, my next raid encounter (note I’m not mentioning achievements or defeated bosses) was ICC. Which wasn’t exactly what I was expecting, but hey.

    Specifically, it was rep farming in ICC by trawling through the trash preceding Lord Marrowgar, resetting, and repeating. On two separate nights.

    First of all, I had no idea what a “rep run” would entail and so was more than slightly terrified when the GL sent me a tell asking me if I wanted to join. Yes, I know, I’m such a noob. So there was me, frantically trying to find/read tactics for Marrowgar on a secondary screen in any downtime between pulls or during buffs/rez, only for us to never quite make it to him. And yes, there was the odd rez happening — a couple of times we managed to have several giant skellys munching on us at once, which wasn’t terribly successful and resulted in the odd “run away” moment.

    Once I’d figured *that* part out, I was able to settle down a bit. But then, OMG, look at that: could that be a familiar name at the top of the, ahem, combat log parser? Could it be … me?

    A quick aside: I’m not one of those people who post damage meter logs to /p (or /ra). Whenever that happens, you can almost guarantee the person doing so is saying “I’m great, you suck”, or occasionally just “you suck”. I do like to have one running when I’m dpsing though, as a means of checking whether I’ve missed something in my preparation (a buff? did I leave Crusader Aura on again?) or how well I’m coping with a movement-heavy fight.

    Quick aside number 2: I also know it’s not all about the big numbers (pulling threat, CCing casters, focus targeting). If I screw up it’s because I’m feckless, not because I’m looking for a WoWcock extension.

    This, perhaps naturally enough, made me think “we can take him, totally”, and so I suggested to the group that, as we seemed to have settled in nicely, perhaps we should go say hello to the BIG skelly at the back who’d been eyeing me up all evening. And to my surprise, most people said “no”. It was at this point I finally understood, at least a little, about raid lockouts and being “saved” to a particular raid instance. Which I guess I’ve probably read about in a score of different blogs and evidently always dismissed as something not relevant to version of WoW *I* was playing. Suddenly, it was relevant.

    We'll be back for you later, you big bony tease. [lord marrowgar]

    We'll be back for you later, you big bony tease.

    A question: Can you be saved to multiple raid IDs for the same instance? My assumption (based on the above) is that you can’t: you’ve got one shot, buddy, so you’d better use it well. Which is a bit of a bugger, really. It means that, if I’ve got two groups of friends I want to play with, I have to do different content. And it also means that, as in the case of this rep run, if you’re having fun and fancy making a night of it you’ve a good chance to be out of luck. It seems like it wouldn’t be that hard to implement from a technical standpoint so I wonder whether it’s a data storage issue (having to retain state-of-play data per player, per raid, *per copy*) or a game design problem where being able to run the same content with multiple groups would destroy the value of the loot drops?

    So anyway, I’m now left with what feels like a definite answer to the “do I want to raid” question: Yes. Yes please, thanks.

    My coming of age


    2010 - 03.11

    EDIT: This post at Slash Two made me laugh today, and reminded me of  the helpful chap mentioned below.

    Last night I had a number of “firsts” and other remarkable events.

    Please wait …

    Queuing for RFC (actually for a random, but it was always going to be RFC) last night took *ages*. Now that’s fair enough, but this made no sense. We already *had* a tank. We already *had* a healer. We even had a dps. But nothing, zip, nada. No-one in LFG was interested in us. None of the Singles were up for joining us — too high level, too low level, already busy elsewhere. So we sat and, being in SAN, wittered away in guildchat with all the other fine folks, and waited. And waited. I swear it must have taken close to an hour before we finally got in for a run, which then proceeded to be a total cakewalk (thanks largely to Hurtado, who was sufficiently indestructible that I spent as almost as much time whacking mobs as I did healing). And whilst one member of the group dropped after Taragaman, the rest of us hoovered up XP from the remaining trash and minibosses.

    Deadmines

    Fresh from RFC we requeued and were ported fairly quickly into Deadmines. I was a bit of a passenger on this run — I zoned in as DPS rather than healer and was most definitely bottom of the meters for damage. I’d like to think that I was still useful, as I switched to healing periodically when our priest healer went OOM or the overexuberance of the other DPS meant we had a chunky pile of adds to deal with. There *was* a little minor drama over loot, but no-one got too excited and we cleared all the way to the end, again gaining levels (Ano, as I clearly should have named her, is now level 18!).

    All growed up

    I finally ran my first raid, or at least the weekly raid quest portion of one, and received the achievement Besting the Black Dragonflight for beating Sartharion. “Only” a 10-man raid, sure, but still. They say you always remember your first. It certainly makes me keen to do more — albeit with a few structural changes…

    While there were quite a few of my guildies there, the raid was led by a couple of clearly more experienced players (edit: who weren’t from our guild, I should make clear). Unfortunately no-one felt the need to respond when I admitted my noobishness at the start and asked for tacs/tips, so I just wandered about hitting whatever the tanks seemed to be hitting and not really having a clue — does that still count as “raiding”?

    Thanks to a “this is too slow, hurry up” vibe bouncing through raid chat I didn’t have time to find tactics to read on my second screen — we had one member of the raid stranded somewhere because we couldn’t stop to summon him. This meant I didn’t have a clue what was going on when the drakes were creating portals and the like. I guess I probably should have been looking around more but there was also complaints about the group dps (from our somewhat irritating experienced leaders) so I was too focused on my rotation and didn’t realise what was going on. Yes, ok. I’m a bit thick. Plus I think I may have been the only melee so I was always alone apart from pets. But mostlyI’m a bit thick.

    This continued to Sarth himself, where to another question about tactics I received the detailed response “look out for the flame walls”. Which I did. I saw them. I saw no way through them (der, clearly wasn’t watching that carefully then). So I carried on regardless. Yay me, I’m *that* dps :( . Healers, start your battlewagons.

    In the end though, no-one (except the bosses) died, various people who weren’t me got loot, and everyone got a small stack of badges. So it was ok, really.

    Except…

    …that I couldn’t help but reply to our helpful leader when “Did you all just turn 80 today or something, lol” (or thereabouts) was broadcast in raidchat.

    “Why? Is there a problem?” I asked. “Too slow and not enough dps” was the answer. *grrrr*

    And so the final part of my growing up came to pass. As my guildies were standing round, wondering in /g why our peerless leader was such an aggressive jerk, I thought I’d find out. I whispered a question to our long-since dropped group hero, asking why he couldn’t have offered some advice or suggestions instead of just repeating “not good enough, do better”, reminding him that I had specifically mentioned that I was a first-time raider and was keen for any tips. His response:

    “Sure, I’ve got a tip: Learn2Play”.

    My first post


    2010 - 03.09

    I suspect not the last, though.

    If you’ve somehow made it here without reading anything about Single Abstract Noun, then hi Mum, how did you find this blog? Also, read this announcement from Tamarind and this one from Miss Medicina. All caught up? Goody.

    So I rolled a belf paladin (Anorak) over on Argent Dawn, purloined a /ginv, and set about questing. And chatting. And more chatting, and a bit of questing, and more chatting, and more chatting, and more chatting. Leveling as a member of SAN-EU is going to be a bit of a challenge …

    Look out, a horde!

    Yeah, I’m struggling a bit with that. I’ve played Alliance since I started (ok, so that wasn’t that long ago, but still) and I’m terrified of PVP so my first trip into Orgrimmar was very strange. Even when just randomly questing, looking up to see a random tauren or troll gives me a jolt. I know that, eventually, I’ll get used to it but still. *shudder*

    Pour allez a la banque, s’il vous plait?

    A frank admission: I’ve no sense of direction, in game or out, so at the moment I spend absurd amounts of time wandering around Silvermoon City and the like, trying to find <whatever>. I swear the guards are /sigh-ing when they see me approach

    Anorak: “Excuse me, could you possibly direct me to the auction house”
    guard [sighing]: “Again sir? This is the third time you’ve asked me today. Are you sure you can’t remember?”
    Anorak: “Sorry… er, yes. Sorry. I forgot. Sorry.”
    guard: “Fair enough sir. As you’ll see from my badge, which reads ‘Auction House Guard’, you are in fact standing in the doorway of the auction house, asking for directions to the auction house. Again. So, the auction house is … right here, sir.”
    [Anorak has disconnected]

    Who did that?

    Probably the biggest obstacle to leveling in SAN is the guild itself. Or rather, the guild chat channel. I was killed multiple times last night by the gnolls I was hunting because I was busily scrolling back up the chat history to find the starting point of some particularly entertaining conversation thread. I’m thinking I may have to customise my interface so I can make the chatbox stretch the full height of the screen. It’s a shame WoW doesn’t suppose multiple monitors — it would be wonderful to have the chat channel up on a secondary screen. Hmm, must see if there’s an add-on for that.

    It’s been great fun so far, and I even managed an RFC run for the very first time. I didn’t think to screenshot it but Issy did. I’m not in it, but I’m going to repost it here (hope that’s ok!). The run broke apart moments after this, when some of us had to log off, leaving poor Tamarind with a smidgen of XP required to equip his new sword, but it was great fun.

    I might not be in this screenshot but *yay* anyway

    I might not be in this screenshot but *yay* anyway

    Lots more to follow, I suspect. Bring it on.

    Mysterious button number 12: Hand of [whatever]


    2010 - 03.06

    I recently started reading the Aggro Management blog, and I’m enjoying it immensely. Conceptually it’s a really good idea: one tank, one dps, one healer, who play together and blog together.

    When you think about it, there’s so much potential: complaints about stupid dps and arrogant tanks should be tempered by a genuine understanding of what it’s like to play the other roles, how they’re played, how they *should* be played. It doesn’t hurt that protflashes, currently the most frequent poster, writes fluidly and well either.

    Aaaanyway, this post on healing caught my eye in particular. Protflashes (from the about page: “More than 60% of the 2.5-servers-worth of characters played by Protflashes are specced for tanking.”) has been trying out her paladin healing offspec, and finding it tricky for a number of reasons. I read this, and spent a fair amount of time nodding.

    I’ve not actually been brave enough to try healing a heroic yet — I’ve healed three or four regular dungeons through the dungeon finder, and that was plenty scary enough for me, for now. Healing is *very* different from my usual ret paladin zero responsibility faceroll. I think I like it, a bit, but I need some more practice before I’ll know for sure.

    The biggest problem I’m having is the gap between knowing what to do, and actually doing it. I know, or at least think I know, the general healing paladin mechanics for 5 man content. Beacon and Sacred Shield the tank, bounce heals off anyone else. Use Holy Light when there’s lots of damage incoming, use Flash of Light for lightweight trash and low damage situations. Divine plea in the gaps, possibly in combination with Avenging Wrath to recover some of the throughput loss.

    Where I’m struggling is with my cooldown abilities — the various hands and the like. In particular, when they’d be most useful (i.e. when everything’s going a bit sideways) I’m generally to busy frantically whacking the Holy Light button and hoping the beacon is still active to use the abilities that would probably be a big help.

    This is, I suspect, the gap between “having a healing spec” and “being a healer”, and thus far I’m most definitely the former. Perhaps once I’ve configured healbot I can move a few abilities around on my bars to give me shortcut access to the various — that might help — but where I’m going to get the brainpower to use them at the right time I’m not sure. Watch this space, I suppose.

    I’ll close with a quote from Protflashes:

    And to every fucker who ever told me healing was easy and healing heroics a cake walk – die in a fucking fire (couldn’t save you if I wanted to).

    Indeed.