isn't in my faction."
Casual player and misanthrop at EU-The Venture Co server.
ABOUT ME
Ask me if you dare
“Bah ha, virgins who think being on the morally ambivalent faction makes them badass. Typical Whorde.”
It is my “Naxxramas” Priest Tier 7 set transmog (because mostly these items are obtainable @ lvl80 Naxx raid). The Crown s extremly hard to get being on the loot list of Kel’Thuzad.
Item set link at wowhead: here.
My main hand weapon is a lvl85 dungeon drop: “Scepter of Azshara” {heroic only}
My offhand weapon is a low level quest revard from Bloodmyst Isle: “Nolkai’s Lantern“ Recommended to roleplayers, definitely for the textured and interesting aura/atmosphere it creates. Don’t think of wandering through those darkened woods or shadowed ruins without one.
Perfectly matching belt is the “Agonal Sash”. You won’t even notice to wear anything on your beloved robe! (Also obtainable @Naxxramas.)
My priest is wearing:”Cloak of the Illidari Council”. It is a Black Temple (lvl 70 raid) loot dropped by High Nethermancer Zerevor.
My personal priest transmogrification: “Glowing red fantasy”
Items:
The primary way in which we consume such truths is through the news. And there’s a lot wrong with our modern news system. The vast majority of successful outlets are built more on getting readers’ attention than finding truths in a story. This easily leads hyperbolic headlines (like this article’s headline) and to a simulation of reality, even when talking about a virtual reality. Case in point is the article that appeared on the front page of Yahoo, syndicated from ABC News: “Prosecutors: Killer Played World of Warcraft 7 Hours Per Day.”
He has said that the reason he played Call of Duty, was to learn how to aim (and he used guns and aiming systems that were similiar to how you shoot in CoD, from what I understand). I believe the main reason he chose to play an MMO (he’s also stated that picking WoW was by chance) was to keep himself from other people and social contact in the real world. Obviously, he must’ve enjoyed it, since it seems he had end-game raiding gear, was a Guild Master for a period, and had “Justicar” etc.
Some stores in Norway actually quit selling CoD and WoW after it came out that he’d played those two games actively, blaming them for what happened to him, in a way.
I’m looking forward to the 10 week trial to end, and I hope he gets what he wants, which is prison. While there’s no death penalty in Norway, and the life sentence is 21 years, he’s not ever coming out of there.
“You may not be cut out to be a healer if …
1. You spend more time DPSing than healing. You can’t help it. You just end up playing a DPS role with your off spec. In fact, you play that role more often than your main spec! Your DPS numbers are off the charts, and you’re carrying that raid team of yours on your back. In fact, you’re so good, people are surprised that you even have a healing spec.
Maybe you even like playing your DPS spec more often than healing. If that’s the case, then the life of a healer just isn’t for you.
2. You aren’t very quick. You tend to freeze up when it comes to fast decision making. You don’t know how to choose between two groups or two different players. Choosing any kind of raid cooldown on your own without someone yelling at you about it is unworkable; it’s already too late, and your comrades are dead.
In short, you’re just not fast enough mentally or physically. While you can get by without being razor sharp, once you hit the harder progression encounters, you will be a factor holding back your raid.
3. You’re unhappy. There’s something to be said about personal satisfaction. If you’re not happy where you are or doing what you’re doing, you’re better off leaving and moving until you find a place that you’re OK with. You’re paying around 15 bucks a month to play this game. Paladin healing not fun? Try priest or even druid healing. What ends up happening is that you have fun playing the rule, but you chose the wrong class.
Maybe you like dropping the big bomb heals, and you switch to a holy paladin. Alternatively, you discover that your preference is in relying on tons of little HoT spells and blanketing the raid with stability, so you opt for a resto druid. Perhaps you have an affinity for beams of healing, and you go for shaman. Or you just want to play the best healing class ever and rock a priest.
Whatever works for you, right?
4. Your skin isn’t thick enough. Healers bear the brunt of most criticism. If things go south, you are the first players that get looked at first if the answer isn’t immediately obvious. If you are the type of player who takes feedback too seriously, to the point of breaking down in tears, then healing isn’t for you. Being able to separate the personal from the professional is a virtual requirement.
Understand that your teammates aren’t hating on you. On the contrary, I’d say in most cases, they’re cool with you as a person. But you absolutely need to be able to distinguish between personal attacks and criticism about your playing ability. If you misconstrue the two, then you’re not going to have any fun at all.
5. You’re too mentally fatigued. Healing is pretty darn stressing. There’s some serious focus needed at the upper end of progression. Generally, it’s not a role where you’re locked into one player and rotating between one to two spells the whole time. It isn’t like DPS, where your efforts are zeroed in on one boss. As a raid healer, there are multiple targets you need to look after.
What healer responsibilities consist of:
Dispelling the right player
Moving to avoid void zones and other nasty environmental effects
Keeping the main tanks alive
Threat management against loose mobs (or dodging them)
Handling unexpected situations (e.g., covering for dead healers)
All that stuff adds up! Don’t underestimate the trouble it’ll put you through.6. You have zero patience. I get frustrated quickly when I see someone doing something (that I perceive to be) easy. As a healer, you’re not directly making an impact against the bosses’ health. The amount of time you spend involved in each encounter is directly affected by the DPS of your overall raid. No matter how hard or how little you heal, you cannot speed up the encounter.
Naturally, there are encounters like Valithria back in Icecrown Citadel, but that’s more of an exception than the rule.
There are going to be times where you will feel helpless due to your inability to really change that. To be fair, healers do come equipped with some DPS spells. With the exception of select discipline priests and resto shaman, you’re not going to be using your DPS capabilities that often.
In the end …
Healing really isn’t for everyone. You have to figure out what’s going to be fun for you. No sense leveling all the way to the end just to discover that you wasted your whole time committing to a character that you’re just not into.
If you’re leveling a healer, I highly encourage you to duck into dungeons periodically as you’re leveling. It’s not enough to simulate raiding or PvP healing, but you’ll get the basic ideas of what you’ll be doing at the endgame level. If you hate healing while leveling, chances are you’re going to hate healing at max level.
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