After finishing up the Arena Tournament, I figured I'd share some of my hard won knowledge. My team did pretty good, 20/30, and I found it to be a wonderful learning experience.
I played a disc priest. It's the class I'm most familiar with, and is generally considered to be pretty decent in pvp. Of course, my personal survivability in BGs has always been rather stinky, because I tend to approach BGs like I do raiding. I heal everyone and hope the big bad/many small bads don't notice me. This is NOT an effective approach to arena. It's not really an effective approach to PVP in general.
So, my first lesson? Your survivability is your own responsibility. A dead healer heals no one. Disc priests have a lovely amount of tools to ensure we survive. We have our overpowered shields, several different heals, Pain Suppression, and a fear. You need to look at what your class has to help you survive and learn how to use those abilities.
Second lesson, shutting down your opponents. Once you get the hang of survival, you can move on to annoying others. There's some overlap here, as many of the abilities that help you survive do so by shutting down your opponent. A fear's a good example of this.
Third lesson, killing your opponent. For a healer, this is always a bit of a challenge. Let's face it, healers are not big in the damage department. But every class has some damage-dealing abilities we have access to, even if they're not very powerful. For a disc priest, you can smite, shadow word:pain or death, use devouring plague, holy fire, penance, and even that aoe heal/damage spell that I can't remember the name of. I'd suggest running around the world for a bit and killing mobs with various spells, to try to get a sense of what's going to be the most useful/powerful for killing. You can also try practicing on a target dummy.
Fourth, know your abilities. This is the biggest lesson of all. Stuff that you never use in pve, stuff you thought was useless, well, that stuff can be highly useful in pvp. Take Mana Burn, for example. It's not a spell I've ever used in pve, and in fact I didn't even realize I had it till someone pointed it out. But in pvp, denying your opponent mana can win you the match. Drain a warlock's mana pool and either they have to try wanding you to death or they life tap and make themselves that much easier to kill.
The nice thing about the Arena Tournament is that the gear is equalized. Everyone gets fully kited out in pvp gear, with access to all glyphs, trinkets, gems, and enchants. In regular pvp, it's gear+skill that determines the outcome. If you don't have enough resilience, it doesn't really matter how good you are, you're going to be one or two shot. So, if you want to get into arena pvp now, I'd say run BGs, gear up a bit, and then find an Arena team. And even if you're not interested in competitive pvp, pvping is a great way to learn more about your class. Heck, it might even make you a better raider, since you get a much better sense of your class's oh shit buttons and it teaches you to think on your feet.
A blog by a WoW player, who is slightly priest-obsessed and also rather ADD. Oooh, shiny, was I saying something? Topics will vary wildly, but I do my best to make sure some sort of useful info shows up occasionally.
Showing posts with label pvp. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pvp. Show all posts
Thursday, July 1, 2010
Wednesday, March 31, 2010
Melfina's simple guide to having fun in PVP for beginners
If you're thinking about dipping your toe into BGs with the new random finder, DO IT! And use this helpful, if extremely basic, guide to make your BG experience fun!
Step 1: Accept you're probably going to die. Make bestest friends with the Resurrection Angel, and move on.
Step 2: The first time you enter any BG you will likely have NO idea what's going on or what to do. This is okay. Following the crowd is not a bad strategy. It's not ideal, but it's not bad. Once you've seen all the BGs at least once, I would highly HIGHLY recommend finding a good guide for each and reading it. Heck, you can do that before you even set foot in any BGs, but that doesn't work well for me personally. It doesn't make a lot of sense till I see them.
Step 3: Put any idiot QQing on ignore. You know, the people who start before the game has even started and keep saying how Alliance/Horde sucks, how this group sucks, how this or that person is an idiot for a piece of green gear. Yeah, IGNORE. They never have something useful to say about what's happening in the battle, so save your sanity.
Step 4: Rogues are evil, as are kitty druids. EVIL! Just saying. Especially if you're a caster, a rogue can shut you down so thoroughly that you go from full health to dead before you get a cast off. If you're playing a rogue or kitty, go forth and have fun (but if you see a baby shammy named Eiunn, please leave her alone. She's developing a kitty druid phobia from being ganked so often by kitties. They were even graveyard-stalking her!)
Step 5: Kill the enemy or heal your allies or both. If you're not a horribly mobile class, I would suggest finding something to guard (like a tower in Eye or Stables in Arathi). You won't get as much honor this way, mind, but it's generally far less overwhelming.
Step 6: Avoid flag-running and vehicles the first time. It is really annoying when someone picks up a flag and has no idea what to do with it, and ditto with a vehicle. Ranged and healers might want to grab a ride on a vehicle though, because healing/pew-pewing is much easier from cover.
step 7: Losses happen, as do wins. The queue for a new random in my battlegroup is darn near instant right now, so go try again. And either way you get honor and with enough honor you can get nifty nifty mounts. Plus epic gems and pvp gear to make you harder to kill! And given the honor boost (Garetia got 5k for an Arathi this morning), it's a pretty quick grind.
Step 1: Accept you're probably going to die. Make bestest friends with the Resurrection Angel, and move on.
Step 2: The first time you enter any BG you will likely have NO idea what's going on or what to do. This is okay. Following the crowd is not a bad strategy. It's not ideal, but it's not bad. Once you've seen all the BGs at least once, I would highly HIGHLY recommend finding a good guide for each and reading it. Heck, you can do that before you even set foot in any BGs, but that doesn't work well for me personally. It doesn't make a lot of sense till I see them.
Step 3: Put any idiot QQing on ignore. You know, the people who start before the game has even started and keep saying how Alliance/Horde sucks, how this group sucks, how this or that person is an idiot for a piece of green gear. Yeah, IGNORE. They never have something useful to say about what's happening in the battle, so save your sanity.
Step 4: Rogues are evil, as are kitty druids. EVIL! Just saying. Especially if you're a caster, a rogue can shut you down so thoroughly that you go from full health to dead before you get a cast off. If you're playing a rogue or kitty, go forth and have fun (but if you see a baby shammy named Eiunn, please leave her alone. She's developing a kitty druid phobia from being ganked so often by kitties. They were even graveyard-stalking her!)
Step 5: Kill the enemy or heal your allies or both. If you're not a horribly mobile class, I would suggest finding something to guard (like a tower in Eye or Stables in Arathi). You won't get as much honor this way, mind, but it's generally far less overwhelming.
Step 6: Avoid flag-running and vehicles the first time. It is really annoying when someone picks up a flag and has no idea what to do with it, and ditto with a vehicle. Ranged and healers might want to grab a ride on a vehicle though, because healing/pew-pewing is much easier from cover.
step 7: Losses happen, as do wins. The queue for a new random in my battlegroup is darn near instant right now, so go try again. And either way you get honor and with enough honor you can get nifty nifty mounts. Plus epic gems and pvp gear to make you harder to kill! And given the honor boost (Garetia got 5k for an Arathi this morning), it's a pretty quick grind.
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