Scattered Shots: Pets at level 10
Every week, Brian Karasek and David Bowers bring you help, tips and advice for the leveling Hunter in Scattered Shots. For those veterans looking for high end Hunter goodness, BRK is back on active duty. This post is part of the Hunter Leveling Guide.
You probably know by now that Big Red Kitty refers to himself as "we" in all his articles. For the longest time I thought this was just him being silly, but with his return to WoW Insider after a long hiatus, he explained that this is actually a kind of philosophical statement as to the oneness of hunter and pet.
You needn't worry that we (being Brian and I) will start trying to mimic him, but he really does have a good point. When a hunter reaches level 10 and gains his or her first pet, your pet becomes an extension of yourself, and an incredible source of power. The game suddenly gets very easy, and enemies start dying very fast. In effect, with a pet at your side, you become your own tank-damage-healing group all by yourself, able to finesse the control over your character and pet alike to achieve all sorts of neat stuff.
For a hunter, and especially a Beastmastery hunter, a pet is so much more than just a tag-along with some extra damage. It plays the first and primary role of keeping enemies away from you while you shoot at them from range when you are by yourself, and in a group it can have a number of utilities too. Each pet has its own particularities can have a big effect on how you play and what you can do in the game.
Most of these particularities don't matter for the beginning hunter, however. In fact, most of the pet types are only available to you much later on in the leveling process. At level ten, the most important factor in choosing your pet is just whatever looks nicest to you, unless you already have some experience as a hunter and you know of some particular pet ability (such as charge or furious howl) that matters to you.
A hunter's second-best friend
There's actually a lot of complexity involved in pets that can be somewhat daunting for a new hunter to grasp at first. To help you in this process, you will find that Mania, the lady behind Mania's Arcania and Petopia, will become your second-best friend (after your pet itself, of course), and can teach you everything you need to know about choosing pets and taking care of them. Mania's series of articles called "Choosing Your First Pet" takes you through all the starting areas for each race and highlights the best choices for you, clearly explaining the pros and cons of each pet. "Name That Pet" is also a handy feature of hers that can provide a lot of inspiration on your pet's name.
You can go to Mania for all the details, but I'll just briefly lay out the essentials you need to know in order to make proper use of your pet from the very beginning.
Your pet has feelings too
First of all, your pet has a range of emotions from "happy" to "unhappy" which will affect how much damage it does, as well as how many abilities you can train it with. Your pet starts out very unhappy, and if you let it stay that way it'll run away before too long. You'll need the right kind of food for your pet to eat, using the "Feed Pet" ability. Get used to feeding your pet regularly is a good habit. I keep Feed Pet on my action bar right next to where my bags open up, along with the pet food of choice right next to it, so that I have whatever food I might need readily available in a small area of the screen. Some hunters swear by various macros or addons for pet-feeding however.
Pet school is in session and you are the teacher
As you keep your pet happy and travel around killing things together, your pet's loyalty will increase, giving it more training points and allowing you to teach it new stuff! The only ability which does not require any training points is Growl, which keeps enemies attacking your pet instead of yourself, and which you can learn from the pet trainer near the hunter trainers in your capital city. This pet trainer can also teach you various passive abilities which can increase your pet's stamina, armor, and other things too.
In addition, it's a good idea to check out Petopia to see which active abilities are available to your pet of choice and set about a plan to acquire them. In order to do so, you have to find out first of all which abilities you want, and then which animals can be trained with that ability included. Put your regular pet in the stable for a bit while you go out to tame the animal that has the ability you need, then fight with that new animal till you discover yourself having learned the abilities that animal can use. In some cases (especially if an ability has a cooldown), you may find that this can take a while, but be patient and have faith that you will learn the ability eventually. Sometimes it can go really fast and just take a few moments.
Further recources
To help you out with this, you'll need access to information. Mania's recources are great for making choices about what pet you want and what their abilities mean for you, but it can be a pain to leave the game and check some website just to find new abilities or upgrades to existing abilities once you know what you need. Do do this from within the game, you will find the addon "Fizzwidget's Hunter Helper" very useful. It enables you to search all pet abilities by name, and it tells you where you can go in the world to find the ability you want.
You'll also find it handy to make simple macros to facilitate your control over your pet's behavior: "/petattack" -- commanding the pet to attack your current target, "/petfollow" --commanding the pet to stop fighting and follow you, and "/assist pet" -- to switch your target to whatever the pet is attacking.
There's so much to learn about pets in the game, but this should suffice for a beginner just getting started, and also help lead to valuable resources which will prove invaluable later on. If you're a new hunter and you have any questions about pets, feel free to ask below; and if you're an experienced hunter who wished he or she knew something about pets from the outset, please share your wisdom in a comment as well.
You probably know by now that Big Red Kitty refers to himself as "we" in all his articles. For the longest time I thought this was just him being silly, but with his return to WoW Insider after a long hiatus, he explained that this is actually a kind of philosophical statement as to the oneness of hunter and pet.
You needn't worry that we (being Brian and I) will start trying to mimic him, but he really does have a good point. When a hunter reaches level 10 and gains his or her first pet, your pet becomes an extension of yourself, and an incredible source of power. The game suddenly gets very easy, and enemies start dying very fast. In effect, with a pet at your side, you become your own tank-damage-healing group all by yourself, able to finesse the control over your character and pet alike to achieve all sorts of neat stuff.
For a hunter, and especially a Beastmastery hunter, a pet is so much more than just a tag-along with some extra damage. It plays the first and primary role of keeping enemies away from you while you shoot at them from range when you are by yourself, and in a group it can have a number of utilities too. Each pet has its own particularities can have a big effect on how you play and what you can do in the game.
Most of these particularities don't matter for the beginning hunter, however. In fact, most of the pet types are only available to you much later on in the leveling process. At level ten, the most important factor in choosing your pet is just whatever looks nicest to you, unless you already have some experience as a hunter and you know of some particular pet ability (such as charge or furious howl) that matters to you.
A hunter's second-best friend
There's actually a lot of complexity involved in pets that can be somewhat daunting for a new hunter to grasp at first. To help you in this process, you will find that Mania, the lady behind Mania's Arcania and Petopia, will become your second-best friend (after your pet itself, of course), and can teach you everything you need to know about choosing pets and taking care of them. Mania's series of articles called "Choosing Your First Pet" takes you through all the starting areas for each race and highlights the best choices for you, clearly explaining the pros and cons of each pet. "Name That Pet" is also a handy feature of hers that can provide a lot of inspiration on your pet's name.
You can go to Mania for all the details, but I'll just briefly lay out the essentials you need to know in order to make proper use of your pet from the very beginning.
Your pet has feelings too
First of all, your pet has a range of emotions from "happy" to "unhappy" which will affect how much damage it does, as well as how many abilities you can train it with. Your pet starts out very unhappy, and if you let it stay that way it'll run away before too long. You'll need the right kind of food for your pet to eat, using the "Feed Pet" ability. Get used to feeding your pet regularly is a good habit. I keep Feed Pet on my action bar right next to where my bags open up, along with the pet food of choice right next to it, so that I have whatever food I might need readily available in a small area of the screen. Some hunters swear by various macros or addons for pet-feeding however.
Pet school is in session and you are the teacher
As you keep your pet happy and travel around killing things together, your pet's loyalty will increase, giving it more training points and allowing you to teach it new stuff! The only ability which does not require any training points is Growl, which keeps enemies attacking your pet instead of yourself, and which you can learn from the pet trainer near the hunter trainers in your capital city. This pet trainer can also teach you various passive abilities which can increase your pet's stamina, armor, and other things too.
In addition, it's a good idea to check out Petopia to see which active abilities are available to your pet of choice and set about a plan to acquire them. In order to do so, you have to find out first of all which abilities you want, and then which animals can be trained with that ability included. Put your regular pet in the stable for a bit while you go out to tame the animal that has the ability you need, then fight with that new animal till you discover yourself having learned the abilities that animal can use. In some cases (especially if an ability has a cooldown), you may find that this can take a while, but be patient and have faith that you will learn the ability eventually. Sometimes it can go really fast and just take a few moments.
Further recources
To help you out with this, you'll need access to information. Mania's recources are great for making choices about what pet you want and what their abilities mean for you, but it can be a pain to leave the game and check some website just to find new abilities or upgrades to existing abilities once you know what you need. Do do this from within the game, you will find the addon "Fizzwidget's Hunter Helper" very useful. It enables you to search all pet abilities by name, and it tells you where you can go in the world to find the ability you want.
You'll also find it handy to make simple macros to facilitate your control over your pet's behavior: "/petattack" -- commanding the pet to attack your current target, "/petfollow" --commanding the pet to stop fighting and follow you, and "/assist pet" -- to switch your target to whatever the pet is attacking.
There's so much to learn about pets in the game, but this should suffice for a beginner just getting started, and also help lead to valuable resources which will prove invaluable later on. If you're a new hunter and you have any questions about pets, feel free to ask below; and if you're an experienced hunter who wished he or she knew something about pets from the outset, please share your wisdom in a comment as well.
Filed under: Hunter, Add-Ons, Leveling, Guides, (Hunter) Scattered Shots
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
Urdla Feb 22nd 2008 5:15AM
Yes, i'm with Kunukai on that. More boars are needed. But the new setting is so boar-friendly, that there will be no problem placing them there. Maybe there will be a wooly white boar to tame?! About boars an aggro: I often play in ccop with my partner's rogue and she never gets the aggro away from my little armored sweetheart "Gluthauer". Even if she crits like hell :)
JR Feb 22nd 2008 8:11AM
"I keep Feed Pet on my action bar right next to where my bags open up, along with the pet food of choice right next to it, so that I have whatever food I might need readily available in a small area of the screen."
Actually you don't need the Feed Pet icon. Simply drag and drop the food to your pet's portrait and it'll get fed.
"I have a question actually. Is there a disadvantage in terms of training points if I take a pet of a higher level?"
No. Pets gain training points every time they level and every time they gain loyalty, up to a maximum of 350 TPs, according to this formula:
(level) * (loyalty - 1)
If you apply this formula to a recently tamed level 70 pet, you will see that the pet will reach the maximum 350 TPs by simply gaining loyalty, so the fact the this pet can't level up anymore doesn't affect you. In other words, you can pick a new pet at level cap and it will be as efficient as a pet you picked at level 10.
Doffencrag Feb 22nd 2008 9:26AM
I love the boar. I myself have the black-skinned armored RFK boar, which I use for leveling and grinding. It does, however, have an alarming tendency to break freezing traps, so I swap him out for my cat when doing instances and BGs (or wherever I like to drop freezing traps).
What is it with boars and breaking freezing traps?
ThorinII Feb 22nd 2008 1:54PM
My main is a 63 hunter, I have a 19 twink hunter, (both alliance on pve servers) and I just started a horde hunter on a pvp server.
Hunters ROCK!
Doffencrag Feb 22nd 2008 2:41PM
Training points is a pet statistic. That is, each pet you have will have its own set of training points. If you have a lvl 12 boar and a lvl 12 tiger, they will have the same number of training points.
You spend training points to teach your pet certain skills, like Growl (bad example - Growl actually doesn't cost training points), resistances, etc. These trainable skills are picked up from pet trainers.
You can also spend training points to teach your pet certain species-specific skills, like Prowl (for Cat-type pets), Charge (for boar-type pets), and so forth. These are learned "automatically" by finding a beast that has these skills in the wild, taming them, and keeping them until they "teach" these to you.
I highly recommend you look up Petopia (http://petopia.brashendeavors.net/) and read up on Pet Skills and the Articles they have there. It's a very informative site, and an excellent resource for all hunters.
Hope that helped!
Doffencrag Feb 22nd 2008 2:43PM
This was supposed to be a reply to #3, but I think due to the time it took to type this out, it got bumped off into its own thread. Sigh.
Lori Feb 23rd 2008 1:51PM
Thank you for the info. Guess I'll try taming a Boar now.
Bob Oct 24th 2008 6:23AM
im new 2 hunter so if the pet ur trying 2 tame is aggro how do u tame it??
Flyhard Nov 17th 2008 11:20AM
My favourite Tactics for taming is placing a icetrap between me and the beast. If the Pet then storms at you, it will be delayed in the trap. Also, please be aware that this guide is out-of-date as WotLK has completely changed the pet-skills. Also, pets don't run away anymore if you don't feed them....
Dreyden Apr 15th 2009 12:38AM
Er, I'm not sure if I'm late on commenting on this by A LOT, but I was under the impression that a Gorilla from STV was by and far the best pet? AoE taunt, hellofalotta armor, etc.
Dreyden Apr 15th 2009 12:41AM
Then I look and see that the comment before mine was on November 17th of last year. /Sigh.
Clay May 5th 2009 9:35PM
I've been playing wow 4 a while, and ive tested out every class including the death knight. Ive tested out every species except the dreanai. Ive gotta say, i prefer the hunters over the rest of em, specifically blood elf hunters, yeah you heard me Im horde. NE way, moving on... Hunters are my favorite class, mostly because of the whole pets thing, they come in pretty handy when most of yer freinds are logged off, and yer tryin ta finish a fairly difficult quest.