The Art of War(craft): A Resilient Argument Part I

Battles are now intended to last a little longer, Resilience greatly reducing the chances of frustrating (for the recipient, anyway) instagibs. Prior to Patch 2.0, the premiere PvP stats used to be Stamina and Spell & Attack Critical Strikes, which were abundant in PvP-obtained items. However, both item properties were often also useful in PvE, which made many PvP items desirable even outside of PvP. Conversely, the sheer strength of PvE raid items were dominant on the PvP front, in many cases overpowering Stamina. This changed with the introduction of Resilience, which drew a defining line between PvP and PvE gear. With the new mechanic, in order to PvP more effectively, one had to wade into the thick of battle and earn Honor or Arena points. All players will start off with no Resilience, and it takes a conscious effort to accumulate the gear for it. Before undertaking such an endeavor, let's take a look at other forms of damage mitigation that are more accessible in the beginning stages of acquiring Resilience gear.

Resilience takes up valuable item points which, in a PvE situation, might be better served for other stats such as raw Spell Damage or Attack Power. Where Resilience truly shines is in PvP, where damage mitigation is the name of the game. The current PvP environment has a slightly defensive mindset, where battles are designed to last longer. Each class has key talents and abilities that are designed to mitigate damage. When speccing for PvP, it might benefit some players to take those talents, particularly when only beginning to accumulate gear with Resilience. It might be good practice to be familiar with some forms of damage mitigation to start. Understanding how to soften your enemies' blows will ideally help you outlast your opponents or at least stay on your feet a tick or two longer.
Personally, I find that lasting longer during an encounter opens up more opportunities for creativity, forcing the use of more abilities and talents, item cooldowns, and consumables. That's when PvP becomes interesting and ultimately, for me, enjoyable. The legendary Japanese swordsman Miyamoto Musashi advocated the use of every available tool during an encounter, be it a chair or a bucket, and not just one's swords (or whatever weapon one might be wielding). So, how does one harden oneself for war?
Armor
Perhaps the most basic form of damage mitigation is armor. All classes have armor to varying degrees from their equipment, as well as some spells that increase it, such as a Priest's Inner Fire or a Warlock's Demon Armor. Some classes have talents that increase the armor bonus granted by items, such as Thick Hide for Druids and Toughness for Paladins and Shamans. There are also consumables and item enchantments that increase armor like Elixir of Superior Defense and the various lower-level armor kits crafted through Leatherworking. Armor only mitigates physical damage, granting no defense against spells or other magical effects.
Resistance
Resistance is the attribute that mitigates magical damage, divided into different schools. Used mainly for boss fights where certain schools of magic are dominant, such as Fire Resistance for Ragnaros, resistance isn't a particularly useful item property to stack in PvP, where opponents' attacks are from different schools. However, it used to be a strategy in Arenas where some players would swap into a specific set of Resistance gear upon finding out their matchup. The ability to swap gear during an Arena match has since been disabled, although many classes have abilities that mitigate spell damage, such as Mages' Dampen Magic or resistance auras such as a Hunter's Aspect of the Wild or a Paladin's Shadow Resistance Aura.
Absorption
One form of damage mitigation that can affect both physical and magical damage are absorb effects. Spells such as Priests' Power Word: Shield and a Warlock's Sacrifice absorb a set amount of damage from all sources while some school-specific spells or consumables such as various protection potions from Alchemy. Absorption, unlike most other forms of damage mitigation, is not a persistent effect in that it only works until a certain damage threshold is reached whereupon the effect must be recast or reapplied.
A talent for taking a hit
Of all the forms of damage mitigation mentioned above, none work quite the same way as Resilience. Certain classes have talents that mimic an aspect of Resilience, however, in that they provide a baseline reduction to damage taken from physical attacks or spells or reduces the chances of a critical strike. Druids have the Feral Talent Survival of the Fittest, which increases all attributes by 3% at max rank (3/3) and reduces the chance the Druid will be critically hit by melee attacks by 3%. Coupled with the Feral tree's high armor (Thick Hide 3/3 and specially Dire Bear Form), Druids are a damage soaking nightmare for melee classes.
The aptly-named Survival tree for Hunters possesses numerous talents for damage mitigation and defense (dodge, parry, etc.). For purposes of this article, we'll be going over persistent talents (e.g., Deflection) as opposed to activated abilities (e.g., Deterrence). The 5th tier Survival talent Survival Instincts reduces all damage taken by 4% at max rank (2/2) in addition to increasing the Hunter's Attack Power by the same percentage. Hunters also have Thick Hide in the Beast Mastery tree, which increases the armor bonus granted by items by 10% at max rank (3/3).Mages have excellent damage mitigation talents in the Arcane tree, such as Arcane Fortitude, which increases armor by 50% of the Mage's intellect. It's a negligible increase, but the D&D-reminiscent Prismatic Cloak complements Resilience by reducing all damage taken by 4%. The Frost talent Frost Warding increases the effectiveness of Frost and Ice Armor, while the higher tier talent Frozen Core further provides a thematic 6% damage reduction against Frost and Fire spells.
The hardy Paladin class has damage mitigation in all three trees, from the 7th tier Holy talent Blessed Life, which is an interesting complement to Resilience. Blessed Life grants a persistent 10% chance for all attacks to cause half damage, although proc-based abilities aren't as desirable as consistent damage reduction. In the Protection tree, there's Improved Righteous Fury, which reduces all damage taken by 6%. It's an activated ability, but Paladins who PvP should have it up most of the time, anyway, to provide a buffer against dispel abilities. The Protection tree isn't ideal for PvP, but the talents Blessing of Sanctuary and Ardent Defender, and even Spell Warding make Protection Paladins annoyingly difficult to take down. Finally, the Retribution tree offers Divine Purpose, which give further reduction against melee and ranged critical strikes.
Priests are the masters of damage absorption, with Discipline becoming highly desirable in Arena play because of Pain Suppression. The Discipline tree also improves on Power Word: Shield and Inner Fire, the former being a key spell to consistent damage mitigation in PvP. The Holy tree has the 2nd tier Spell Warding, which reduces all damage taken from spells by 10% at max rank (5/5). Shadow Priests have access to Shadow Resilience which -- like Resilience -- reduces the chance to be critically hit, albeit only by spells by 4%; and Shadowform, which grants an inherent 15% reduction to physical damage.
While not particularly inclined towards damage mitigation, Rogues are truly masters of, to put it uncreatively, cheating death. Sleight of Hand reduces the chance to be critically hit by melee or ranged attacks by 2%, which isn't much but only costs 2 talent points and is available low in the 2nd tier Subtlety tree. This coupled with the Assassination talent Deadened Nerves -- in addition to their defensive abilities -- make Rogues frighteningly enduring in melee. A particularly interesting Rogue talent is the apropos Cheat Death, which makes Subtlety Rogues virtually unkillable once every minute and, because of the 90% reduction to all damage taken, three seconds after. Because the baseline ability Cloak of Shadows also operates on a one-minute cooldown, opponents must basically kill a Subtlety Rogue between minutes.
Shamans have little by way of persistent damage mitigation, with only the thematic Elemental Warding providing a base 10% reduction to Fire, Frost, and Nature damage. The 41-point Restoration talent Earth Shield isn't technically damage reduction as damage will still go through before the healing effect procs. The enhancement tree has Toughness to increase armor, but otherwise, Shamans must rely on their plethora of totems for mitigation. Unfortunately, there are far more useful PvP totems in each element than those for mitigation. The little-used Windwall Totem, for example, shares the same element as the indispensable Grounding Totem; the Hemorrhage-stanching Stoneskin Totem is an Earth totem like Tremor and Earthbind. In this way, Shamans ironically have both versatility and limitation.
Demonology provides Warlocks with the dreaded 31-point talent Soul Link, an awesome spell that, coupled with high Resilience and, ahem, Demonic Resilience, makes Warlocks tremendously fearsome in PvP. Soul Link transfers 20% of all damage taken to the Warlock's pet while Demonic Resilience reduces all damage the demon takes by 15% in addition to a reduction in the chance the Warlock will be critically hit by melee attacks or spells. I can almost hear our resident Warlock and Arena expert Vims laughing maniacally at the whole concept.
Lastly, we have Warriors, who are loaded with defensive abilities and inherent damage mitigation, but little talent to show for it. I mean that literally, as the only persistent damage mitigation talent warriors have is Improved Defensive Stance, which conditionally reduces all spell damage taken by 6%... in Defensive Stance. Naturally, most of a Warrior's damage mitigation is available in Defensive Stance, such as Shield Wall. The irony lies in the fact that the Protection tree (and sometimes Defensive Stance) isn't always optimal for PvP. Fortunately, Warriors have inherently high Stamina and Armor, which can be complemented with a wide array of Resilience gear.
Onward to resilience
With a passing familiarity with most of the forms of damage mitigation, we can now turn our attention to gear. As mentioned above, there are no talents or spells that grant Resilience. It is a purely item property and all classes and races begin with 0 Resilience. In addition to equipment, there are gems and a few consumables and enchantments that grant Resilience. Next week, we'll go over the effects of Resilience and how much damage mitigation it provides, as well as the required Resilience rating to fully optimize on PvP gear. We'll also look at the sources of Resilience gear -- as you might have guessed, Blizzard's insistence on mixing PvP and PvE have led to some curious gear dropping from the most unlikely places. Until then, I highly recommend visiting the Battlegrounds. I hear the weather's lovely these days.
Zach Yonzon writes the weekly PvP column The Art of War(craft) between getting CC'd by his ??-elite two and a half-month old daughter Zoe Fable and doing daily quests to reach Exalted reputation with his beautiful wife Berenice Aila.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, PvP, Guides, The Art of War(craft) (PvP)
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Reader Comments (Page 3 of 3)
Clem Jan 22nd 2008 10:04AM
It looks like we’re getting a lot of sour grapes here, on both sides of the issue.
The big picture:
- Wow is now two games in one, PVP and PVE
- You need differing gear and specs for the two games
- You can play both games with one set of gear and spec, but you will not excel in either
- It is a burden on a player who wants to do both games
- Casual players are hurt most, they don’t have the time to get the best gear for both games
- The BGs used to be rolled by raiders, now resilience geared-players rolled the BGs. No big change there.
- Clothies can’t take down plate wearers as fast, but plate wearers can still blast through clothies fairly quickly
- CC abilities are more important than before
Overall, a net loss for the game, in my humble opinion.
.
jr Jan 22nd 2008 10:30AM
Resilience was not an "improvement" it made pvp unfun or a full time job.
Green Armadillo Jan 22nd 2008 11:27AM
This stuff is interesting, but it's next week's topic that I'm really interested in. I'm at the point in my gear progression where I've gotten all of the PVP items that are everyday, fulltime upgrades for me. I'll be very interested to hear how to manage the trade-offs between Resilience, Stamina/HP, and old-school DPS that I'll be looking at if I decide to go on to collect a PVP set for use on the side.
clozer Jan 22nd 2008 11:44AM
"Don’t get me wrong, being able to down illidan is a great accomplishment, but does that mean you should be able to dominate the pvp scene? They deserve to be 2 SEPARATE functions."
Sorry bro, I just don't agree with you on that.
What allured me into this game in the first place was how you got these great items through teamwork. Now all you have are people parading around the cities with dupe knockoffs of tier gear. Which IMO is kind of insulting to those that put the time and knowledge into learning fights to get those sweet T5/T6 items. Seeing a full Bloodfang Set on a rogue pre bc, hell even now, is one of those times where you know it took the person some serious dedication, teamwork, and talent. It meant something. It stood for something. Now that they've made end game epics abundant, where people are simply paying gold for gladiator titles (Mal'Ganis), wearing the gear simply doesn't carry that great weight anymore. We all look the same. Purples aren't any more special than blues. Resilience, the welfare PvP system, has completely ruined the experience for me.
Dont get me wrong, there were old things with TBC pvp system that had to worked on and fixed. But I truly believe Blizzard went overboard and ended up too far than were they should have.
And as for the person I quoted with the abrasive tone...
If you want to go play a single player game that requires reward without team skill I'd recommend guitar hero 3.
Dan Jan 22nd 2008 12:29PM
> What allured me into this game in the first place was
> how you got these great items through teamwork. Now
> all you have are people parading around the cities with
> dupe knockoffs of tier gear. Which IMO is kind of
> insulting to those that put the time and knowledge
> into learning fights to get those sweet T5/T6 items.
> Seeing a full Bloodfang Set on a rogue pre bc, hell
> even now, is one of those times where you know it took
> the person some serious dedication, teamwork, and
> talent. It meant something. It stood for something.
I hope I'm not making a wrong assumption here, but while the poster you quoted was talking about PvE gear dominating PvP, your entire quote here can be summed up by "My PvE gear ought to look better than your PvP gear (or at least distinctive in and of itself.)"
Sure, Bliz took the easy way out by making S1 look like T4, S2 like T5 and S3 like T6. That is your complaint and it is valid.
I don't care what they make the gladiator gear look like, but I'll be damned if I'd continue playing in the same atmosphere we had at level 60 with T3 geared people wiping the floor with me in 4.3 sec flat. As long as I can get gear to be competitive in PvP through PvP (screw those new PvE to PvP cloaks) I don't care what it looks like.
I want to do what I enjoy (PvP) and get better at it by doing it. You can do what you enjoy (PvE) and get better at it by doing it.
Petition Bliz to make the gear in WotLK not be carbon copies between PvE and PvP, I'll support you 100%. But include the desire to wtfpwn PvPers with your PvE gear and I'll fight you tooth and nail.
Clem Jan 22nd 2008 1:30PM
Sigh.
The ‘domination’ just switched cast members, that’s all. Now those with lots of resilience own those without. For all my Kara gear, I get owned in the BGs.
The fact is that the cast has changed, the stage hasn’t. An elite group still owns a non-geared group in PVP. That players who want to raid and pvp now have greater burdens if they want to excel, nothing has changed.
I still haven’t seen a really good reason for WOW to be two separate games (PVE and PVP). I see a business reason for Blizzard: Time Sink.
Gryphon Jan 22nd 2008 2:07PM
Some of you have no idea what the gear gap was like preBC if you were a casual player. It was practically insurmountable if you could only play 10-15 hours a week. The difference between blues and purples preBC was insane. Blizzard has done what a majority of their subscriber base had pleaded for preBC...opened a significant portion of endgame content (both PvP and PvE) to it's casual players (i.e. those who play less than 15 hours a week). Cry about time invested vs. reward all you want...for Blizzard it was a business decision, and obviously one that worked well given the increase in subscribers since BC was released.
Malachi154 Jan 22nd 2008 2:46PM
Clem said: I still haven’t seen a really good reason for WOW to be two separate games (PVE and PVP). I see a business reason for Blizzard: Time Sink.
Not everyone has the time or the desire to raid. It is that simple. PVP is geared toward the casual player, and Blizzard thought that we might enjoy sporting some epics. You have your carrots to keep playing (Tier 6), we have ours (S3).
Ikarus Jan 22nd 2008 3:35PM
I have a question. Still figuring out this whole resilience thing. I have a 70 shadow priest. while fine tunning my spec for PvP i was told i shouldn't bother picking up 5 points in... ( i forget the name of the talent), that increases the crit chance of mind blast and SW:D by 15% because of the whole resilience thing. is this the right choice?
Louk Jan 22nd 2008 9:16PM
www.shadowpriest.com
thebvp Jan 22nd 2008 5:55PM
5 mans = BGs
Raiding = Arena
I think people confuse this a lot. Both “entry level activities” are spec/gear independent (for the most part), while you’re going to have to put a little bit of time and effort in if you want to be competitive in either endgame activity.
It’s weird, I can manage heroics on my disc/holy priest if I chug pots and swap out some of my gear, but at times I feel like I would be [i]more[/i] useful in bgs with a pve build. I can defend flags, mana burn, and dispel, but I go oom every 2 seconds and am not well suited for epic AV zergfests.
Is this fair? Absolutely.
I see no reason why the pvp should be inferior to pve. It requires just as much skill as raiding, but those skills are different. If you waltzed into the arena in your full raid gear and thought you could hit a 2000 rating overnight, you were in for a rude awakening.
Let me put it this way: Blizzard needed to make pvp a “separate, but equal” system of progression. The two playstyles came into way too much conflict, pre-BC. As often as it was to see a premades in full 40 man raiding sets roll new players just trying to get their full blue pvp set, you’d see that one guy who ground to high warlord get into a raiding guild and then bork the dkp system. He’d cherry pick whatever drops he wanted while you would lose even though you dedicated more than twice as much time to your guild.
Their solution? Resilience. Give pvp gear obnoxious crit stats, but allow pvp gear to negate crits. This way, you could also add an element of progression to pvp. Unfortunately, it had the side effect of nerfing some very fun crit-dependent specs like destruction for warlocks (/tear).
Promithius Jan 23rd 2008 1:07PM
I'm sorry but we are talking about epic loot here..... What about losing 10 games a week for long enough is worthy of your walking around town in your new purples? At least raiders have earned it, they have worked for it and deserve the pride of walking around in there shiny new sets. You peep's in your welfare epics, spouting out crap like "I should get epics and good gear without putting in any real work" nauseate me. Whats next blizzard is gonna come out with a new set of cards for the DMF called the EBT deck. Just wait around till they come to town and all you have to do is fly there and they hand you all new epics, after all that flight is really long and treacherous.
Honestly, do you feel good about this gear, do you really think that the pve players give you any respect? You guys kinda remind me of people that buy knock off sunglasses from the stores in the middle of the mall.
Its disgusting what resilience has done to PVP, it has managed to make certain spec's and even classes totally obsolete in bg's, something that pre BC pvp never did.
So enjoy yourselves you children of the welfare epics, but know that I have no respect for your gear no matter how much you tout.