Tank Talk: Great power and great responsibility

Welcome to another installment of Tank Talk.
So far we've covered a lot of ground in this column. Allison covered the grim realities of tanking and the constant battle between making yourself easier to heal and generating threat, and Michael Gray covered why he loves tanking. So now it' s my turn to discuss tanking in raids, the why's and wherefores. I'm going to cover the social aspects of tanking in a raid, what you might be expected to do.
They might ask you to tell them what to do.
I got into tanking by accident. You see, my first character after an abortive paladin who barely made it to 30, was a warrior. I had no idea what the game really was, back then. (Some people will tell you I still don't.) All I knew was that I had a rage bar and when that went up, I could use certain abilities. It wasn't until I set foot in Scarlet Monastery for the first time that I started to understand that people had expectations from a warrior in a group. So I put on my shield, switched to defensive stance, and tried to meet them. Understand, I didn't have a single point in protection back then. Not only was it unnecessary, I didn't really like the tree as none of its talents seemed really aimed at killing anything, and that was what I thought warriors were all about, making war on things.
Time passed, and I found myself still called upon, when not swinging a big two hander at some undead or dual wielding these shiny new fist weapons I got (one of them dropped in Maraudon, which was the big new instance at the time), to come 'tank' for them. Everyone seemed to expect me to do it, so I did. I didn't know any better.
A funny thing happened as BRD became Molten Core became BWL became AQ40 became Naxxramas. I started spending talent points in protection (it was just to get Defiance, I told myself, I was still a DPS warrior) and I found myself tanking more and more of the content as people who had been tanking before me seemed to just stop showing up. The tanks, I noticed, seemed to be fading away or losing interest in the game, and there I was suddenly tossed from watching the fights to tanking them. My spec included more and more protection talents until I finally had to look at myself and say 'You're a tank now. Tanking is all you ever do. When was the last time you strapped on that hammer of yours? You're not a DPS warrior anymore. You're not going to be DPS on Faerlina tonight, you're going to tank her.'
And that was what I wanted to be. I hadn't even known what a tank was when I started playing a warrior... I just liked the class on the loading screen and fell in love wth Charge at level 10. Somehow this led me on the path I'm on now, where I whack great undead gits in the rotten nether regions until they yet again fail to drop any tanking gear.

Given time and experience, a tank will grow to love this sensation. There is something primal about waiting for the healing assignments to be given out, the DPS straightened out, the decision being made whether this attempt is for all the marbles or if we still need some repetitions to learn the fight. Will we be flasking? All of this goes on and you pay attention to it, but at the same time you're already beyond it. You're looking at the boss. It could be Vashj, Illidan or Kalecgos, that's not the important part. The important part, just as it was when it was Kel'Thuzad, or even Rag, is that you're already there in the fight. When the signal comes that everyone is ready, and you hear the voice on Vent saying "Okay, everyone, follow the tank" you're across the platform before the last syllable can drop. You're ready. You're more than ready, this is the moment you are there for. And when the boss finally dies at your feet for the first time, and you hear the howling of the raid in your ears, there is that one shining moment where you feel contented. At peace.
Of course, you immediately start thinking about how to kill the next boss. It's impossible not to, really. It's this strange blend of power and responsibility that can keep a tank logging on night in, night out even when he or she is feeling tired or just not at one hundred percent, that knowledge that as a tank, you owe the raid your best effort, your best attendance, to help make the raid possible. They trust you, they hand over lead to you, and it's your responsibility to do your best work, to help make raiding possible.
A strong tanking core transcends class. You pay attention to what classes you have to tank, of course. You use them to their strengths. If you need four tanks for Al'ar phase one but only three for phase two, you may ask one of your druids to switch to DPS or to help out tanking adds.If your raid is particularly strong on paladin tanks you may just gather up all the trash waves before Winterchill and AoE them down, using CC sparingly on particularly dangerous mobs. After a while, though, you'll notice that you don't really think of your fellow tanks by their class except for rare moments of envy when you wish you had Last Stand or Shield Wall or could tank packs as effectively: you've become tanks together, and tank is what you think of them as. Who do we have, what are they best at, worst at, what can they do most effectively for us? Tanks talk among each other about how to get things done.
I've noticed that even the tanks who are the most lighthearted, the ones most likely to crack jokes over vent or say ridiculous or even profane things in guild chat (my own guild is one that is rather thoroughly irreverent at times, and I find myself telling awful jokes quite often while we head towards whoever the next boss is) understand the importance of presenting a positive face for whatever we're doing. Whether it's a trash clear, a wipe recovery, or finally calling it after a night of wiping due to bad luck on Infernals, tanks come to understand that what they say and do in a raid affects more than themselves.
I recently got into a personality conflict with a new recruit to the guild. He was an excellent DPS player.. focused, could watch his threat most of the time and put out solid damage. Unfortunately, he was extremely abrasive, arrogant, loud, and derisive of anyone who did less damage than him or who in his opinion didn't know the fights as well as he did. The problem was simple enough: He was disrupting the raids. It didn't matter how good his performance was when in the process he alienated people to the degree that they'd rather not log on if he was going to be there and as a tank you have to be sensitive not just to what's going on in front of you, but what's going on around you. If a player is making your healers so angry that they're busy chatting about not healing him instead of actually healing you, this is a problem. And it's a problem you as a tank usually have the power to solve, indirectly if not directly. If a tank asks the raid leader (or is the raid leader) to remove a player from the raid because he is being disruptive, or even just says "Can you ask Cagematch to shut up, he's distracting my healers and that's why I keep dying" it will probably happen. If you ask the raid to choose between a proven tank and an unproven DPS, they'll probably pick the tank.
This is an aspect of tanking you must be very careful about using. Only use the power of your position sparingly and ask for reasonable things: it's better to ask "so, what happened there?" and let the raid work out what happened for itself than it is to just say "X sucks, throw him out of the raid or I'm gone." You're not a god, you're just a tank. The reason the raid gives you some authority is to make your job easier, not so you can lord it over them. As a tank you need to respect your raid, as it respects you. It doesn't have to be an episode of Masterpiece Theatre with you exchanging curtsies with them, but everyone in that raid should be considered essential until they prove themselves otherwise.
The fact that they will look to you, trust you to take point on the bosses, follow your marking order when killing trash, listen to your suggestions when discussing how to approach the next boss, let you adjust their strategy on the fly when a pull goes bad... this isn't an opportunity to power trip. This is them trusting you to do your job, and it's a trust you have to respect and return. Let the sheepers sheep to interrupt that insane super whirlwind, trust the rogues to interrupt if they're assigned to it, give people the credit they're giving you. Tanking is an inherently group activity, it requires the help of the entire raid to succeed. It can often feel like you're fighting two enemies, the mob you're tanking and the raid's tendency to pull them off of you, I'm well aware of how frustrating it can be to have a mob ripped away before you even got a chance to start building threat. Just as staying upright is a symbiotic relationship between your deliberately making yourself as hard to kill as you can manage and your healers working hard to capitalize on the choices you made to mitigate or avoid damage, your holding aggro derives from the combined efforts of yourself to generate as much threat as you possibly can and the raid making sure they stay below you.
In both cases, you need them to do what you do. They need you for the same reason. Yes, as a tank you have power over the raid, but it's power granted to you by their consent that you use it for the shared aims of the raid: if you abuse this power or shirk the responsibility of using it properly, they will take it away from you, and there's nothing you can do about it. Think of yourself as the raid's shield. There's nothing stopping them from getting a new one, if for whatever reason you become unusable.
Filed under: Druid, Paladin, Warrior, Analysis / Opinion, Instances, Tank Talk






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
Jay Jun 26th 2008 6:21PM
I must say the exact same thing happened to me, I made a warrior because it sounded like I would just be hitting monsters with a big sword. It wasn't until later I found out that 90% of the people I grouped with expected me to be a tank otherwise they weren't interested.
Only trouble is I'm a bad leader, I usually offtank, I find it easier tanking orders than giving them.
Cargoship Jun 26th 2008 6:36PM
For me my first character was a level 10 pally. My thinking was that if I could do some dmg and heal myself, I would be unstoppable. Then sadly, I found out pallys could not use guns and quickly switched to a warrior... (Yea so what if I used to be a big n00b? =p)
Jay Jun 26th 2008 6:57PM
I used to just wear the gear which had the most armor points, talk about noobish lol
Eternalpayn Jun 26th 2008 11:40PM
Jay, I did too. I didn't know what stats were until like level 15 when someone pointed it out.
annerjb Jun 26th 2008 6:32PM
kudos nice article awesome read that makes me feel even better to start tanking kara.
dathrohan Jun 26th 2008 6:35PM
Great article, enjoyed while reading it, keep it up :) Our main tank should read this ;)
Vetrexus Jun 26th 2008 6:46PM
That's deep, I'm a pally healer turned tank, but I'm a really slow learner. Back in my healing days I didn't know that + healing was helpfu until 62! So I just took all the ___ of intellect items i could find
Rob Jun 26th 2008 6:51PM
Wonderful article. As my druid hit 70 I am wondering what to do with her. I made the clefthoof set early on, that was pretty easy. Then I made the Windhawk set, and got myself a decent heal set. But this article has me thinking that I really hate healing, I only do it because of the inability to get a group. To me there is nothing more satisifying than to get a boss that will one shot anyone except you, pissed enough at you and not the people trying to kill it, and stay alive while the party kills it. That's power, and a whole ball of fun.
zaratustra Jun 26th 2008 6:52PM
I still wont group up with you Punto. (No tanking for you, silly gnome)
grravie Jun 26th 2008 6:53PM
me too, i rolled a warrior on day 1, thinking that i would just wail on everything. as i gained levels my guild asked me more and more often to tank. i learned how to tank through trial and error, but the more i did it the more i loved it. when bc was released i remained prospec as i made the run to 70, cause i was more often tanking than leveling.
Eternalpayn Jun 26th 2008 7:09PM
Charge is level 1, not 10. Unless you didn't notice the trainer until then? In which case, I'm impressed you made it that far.
Great article though, I enjoyed it.
grravie Jun 26th 2008 7:30PM
when the game first started you didnt get charge till 10
Breck Jun 26th 2008 8:13PM
And it's level 4 now, not 1.
Alkahn Jun 26th 2008 7:15PM
Just to add to this, it's important to see if you're cut out to lead before you take on that mantle in addition to tanking. It's good if you understand kill order and marking for a myriad of reasons, but if you wear your emotions on your sleeves, the best thing to do is leave the mic muted and let the raid leader handle it.
Just because you're the tank doesn't automatically make you the leader, it just puts you in a position to excel at leading certain *elements* of a raid. Tanking can be an awkward vantage point to lead larger raids, but is the ideal vantage point to see certain elements to paint the picture for the raid leader, and definitely the best way to 'pace' a run.
I've raid lead as the main tank and as a shadow priest, and there's no comparison. Leading is vastly easier on the spriest, but pacing the run is easier on the warrior.
Good read.
Kuroyume Jun 26th 2008 7:17PM
i went through the reverse process... i rolled a warrior to tank and i ended up hitting things behind the knees with a two hander...
Gideon Jun 26th 2008 7:52PM
Excellent article.
zulious@yahoo.com Jun 28th 2008 12:25PM
Two years ago I joined this forsaken game...
I rolled warrior because of all the movies like Troy, or Gladiator. You never see a warlock or paladin in those movies...
When I hit level 30 I was invited into a SM group. So were in the instance and ready to go when someone asked where is your sheild and I replied like a newb "Why would I want a sheild I do more dps duel weilding."
Anyways I got a sheild... fell in love with tanking and now here I am two years later in BT and Sunwelll...
OH AND ORCS FTW!
zulious@yahoo.com Jun 28th 2008 12:25PM
Two years ago I joined this forsaken game...
I rolled warrior because of all the movies like Troy, or Gladiator. You never see a warlock or paladin in those movies...
When I hit level 30 I was invited into a SM group. So were in the instance and ready to go when someone asked where is your sheild and I replied like a newb "Why would I want a sheild I do more dps duel weilding."
Anyways I got a sheild... fell in love with tanking and now here I am two years later in BT and Sunwelll...
OH AND ORCS FTW!
wowi Jun 29th 2008 6:52PM
Good balance. I've raided in all three roles and it is remarkable how differently it makes you see situations. Sometimes I even catch myself saying things that would make my mouth foam in a different mindset!
If I could make a wish and make one point to the tanking community, it would be that DPS is a lot more complex than an on/off switch. It requires focus, ramp up and down time, cooperation and a decent amount of skill. All roles do, of course, but tanks appreciate their healers more for some reason ;)
Linfear Jun 26th 2008 11:03PM
I like this article. Tanks ftw.