Addon Spotlight: PallyPower
Today I thought we'd look at an addon that many guilds require their paladins to use. To be honest, I'd never really understood why until I transitioned to 25-man content. Coordinating blessings with one other paladin (our Karazhan runs rarely had more than two paladins.) was never complicated, but when you've got three or more paladins, it can get messy and can waste valuable raid time.As my guild continues its efforts in The Eye and Serpent Shrine Cavern, I've found myself somewhat frustrated by paladins who don't use this one. Granted, I was that guy until recently, thinking that because ZOMG Buffs played nice with buff assignments via PallyPower, that I was good to go. Now suddenly I'm taking a more active role in buff assignments and realize that like Omen, Healbot and logging for WWS, the more players using a utility, the better.First and foremost, PallyPower is a buff assignment addon, one that happens to facilitate easy coordination between paladins buffing the same group. I've yet to prefer it over ZOMG Buffs during solo play, but that's another story for another day.
Once installed, PallyPower is set with no blessings assigned, so let's start getting familiar with how to assign blessings. Perhaps the first thing you'll notice is a red dot on your screen, this is the anchor for your buff grid. Once in a group, this grid will display information regarding buff status in your raid. Click this little button, once it's green, you'll be able to move it around the screen to place it where you want. Right-clicking will open the Buff Assignment interface.

This is where you can begin assigning buffs to each class, plus pets. You can left-click to cycle through your available buffs, use the scroll wheel on your mouse to cycle a bit faster and right-click to clear a buff assignment. You do this in the grid below each class's respective icon. You can also shift-mouse scroll or shift-left click to cycle through buffs for all classes simultaneously. Some other important pieces of information to notice are found on the left side of your Blessing Assignment interface.
You'll notice blessings icons under each paladin's name, these are the blessings that the paladin has available, the number denotes the rank of the blessing. You'll also notice that PallyPower displays how many Symbol of Kings each paladin has. Hopefully you're beginning to see the utility for this type of mod for raid leaders and paladin class leaders alike. Finally, note the checkbox for Free Assignments. This feature allows another person to assign blessings for you. This is a surefire way to make sure your raid is getting the blessings they should, per the raid leadership's direction. This doesn't have to be a paladin, a player flagged as the raid leader or assistant raid leader can do this if they have PallyPower installed.
To assign a single buff to a particular player, you click their name, found under their class icon, select yourself (or another paladin) and assign the blessing. This is important when you've got members of the same class fulfilling different roles. (Resto Druids and Boomkin may want different buffs for example)
Clicking the options buttons on the Buff Assignment interface will bring up a menu with a few more options, some of which are of particular note. This is where you Tankadins can select a Righteous Fury buff. You can also select Smart Buffs here, which will skip over certain buffs for individual classes. (I've yet to have a mage ask for Might or a rogue ask for Wisdom.) You can also change the keybinding for quick buffing here. Normally, a single key will cast regular blessings, while holding shift+your assigned key will cast greater blessings.
Once you're all set up and in a group, you'll notice some frames have appeared around the little red (or green if it's not locked) dot. These frames show the buff for each class and how long until their buffs expire. If you hover over any one class frame, each member of that class will pop up on the left side, showing individual buff durations, their range status (red is out of range) and whether or not they're dead. Left clicking will rebuff with Greater Blessings, while Right-clicking will buff with 10-minute Blessings. This works on both the class frames and the individual player frames, as well as in combat. There is a lot of information available, as well as ways to interact with this addon.
There is a great guide in the Ace Wiki, as well as a fairly comprehensive PallyPower video guide I found on YouTube. Between the resources available, you should be showing up for raid night ready to go, and hopefully avoiding blessing drama. (I swear most non-paladins have NO idea how Greater Blessings work.)
There are, however, a few features I would love to see in a future version. An on-screen warning for expiring buffs would be great, as well as mouse-wheel buffing. Support for Blessing of Sacrifice and Blessing of Freedom, like ZOMG Buffs, and support for Auras as well.
That's it paladins, a great tool for handing out buffs. Try it out, check out the guides and don't be the one paladin in your raid without PallyPower, honestly it annoys the hell out of the rest of us. Dismissed.
Filed under: Paladin, Analysis / Opinion, Tips, Add-Ons, Raiding, AddOn Spotlight, Buffs, Battlegrounds
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
Jeremy Jul 13th 2008 6:27PM
As a non-Paladin, I love having this installed; I can see who's doing which blessings and ask for one directly if they seem to not notice before a pull.
sarbian Jul 13th 2008 6:48PM
I dont understand why you switched from ZOMGBuff.
You can assign the blessing for all the raid paladin with zomg too, and you can send them to the other pal with a click ( compatible with Pallypower user ! ).
Alt Left click on the ZOMG icon around your minimap or in your fubar and the config interface will open.
Just push the generate button to do a quick assignment or edit the blessing and press broadcast.
Joe Jansen Jul 13th 2008 8:58PM
Your WWS link points to Healbot. It appears to be a copy-paste wtihout editing type error...
FYI
JDM Jul 13th 2008 8:04PM
I also prefer ZOMGBuffs over PallyPower. I just was never comfortable with PallyPower for the several months I used it. Then ZOMGBuffs was created, and I haven't looked back since. ZOMGBuffs is like PallyPower on steroids with more features, a much more comfortable interface/options and even better - it works on any class that can buff, not just Paladins (yeah, I have a lot of alts).
I really don't understand why anyone uses PallyPower anymore.
/myopinion
JDM Jul 13th 2008 8:11PM
After re-reading my comment, I wanted to clarify that I'm not dissing PallyPower as a bad addon. It does what it should and is fine to use... Only that ZOMGBuffs is ginormous leaping strides ahead of it in my book.
OutlandishTrendz Jul 13th 2008 8:45PM
Should put PallyPowerInfo in the Spotlight as well.
http://files.wowace.com/PallyPowerInfo/PallyPowerInfo.zip
Monitor blessings from your paladins (with PallyPower)
arcady0 Jul 13th 2008 11:37PM
Here's the thread from maintankadin with the video on how to use pallypower:
http://www.failsafedesign.com/maintankadin/viewtopic.php?t=8048
Keya Jul 14th 2008 4:27AM
I think PP wastes way to much screen realestate. You really only need the SmartBuff part, yet you cannot turn the grid off without some lua / macro. Moreover I cannot understand it's extrem inability to cast in combat - oc it cannot change the target, yet it seems to be unable to refresh a buff even if the last targeted person is close enough. It's behavior ooc is not much better, I have repeatedly have situations in which it would not buff because the targeted member of that class was the one lagging behind, running from the instance's entry, etc.
I personally favor WCRebuff in 5 mans and 10 mans, but oc that's not an option in 25 mans.
Argent Jul 14th 2008 4:36AM
blame blizzard for the ooc/in-combat stuff. personally, i found zomgbuffs to be FAR worse in that particular regard -- with PP you *CAN* rebuff in combat pretty easily if you know what you're doing. and all that 'wasted screen real estate' comes in VERY handy at that point.
Xenomorph Jul 14th 2008 7:20AM
I've tried PallyPower but to be honest, ZOMGBuffs brings more to the table and has a very intuitive raid blessings manager interface.
It has the option to set buff priority for all the different roles for classes (no more hybrids giving you a headache) and can generate buffing assignments by just clicking one button (it generates 10-minute blessings if needed too).
It can assign blessings based on talents (checks talents to see who can provide improved BoW, improved BoM, BoK, BoSanctuary).
bill Jul 14th 2008 9:46AM
Pally power is the greatest addon ever. Bar none, not even close. As a pally, buffing is 50% of what we do. THis allows the RL (or any one, pally or not) to control buffs and assign single target buffs. It also clearly shows who is responsible for what buffs (so when salv isn't thrown up, you know how foots the repair bill for the raid). Fantastic addon
Darque Jul 14th 2008 11:30AM
Quite honestly, I love Pally Power, and wish the rest of the pallies in my guild would use it. It seems a huge waste of time trying to coordinate buffs at the beginning of the raid.
Unfortunately, only two other paladins have pally power, and neither of them participates in the 25-man raids yet. Out of the five pallies that 25-man, I'm the only one with PallyPower (and the only one that isn't constantly pestered for re-buffs, because I watch the timer and appy as needed).
Jellodyne Jul 14th 2008 12:25PM
When I found ZOMGBuffs, I knew that it was time to dump my beloved PallyPower. More features, more power, works accross all classes, aura support. Then I raided a couple of times with ZOMGBuffs, and ZOMG it was made of fail. Great it 'learns' what buffs you want to do, except it gets them wrong, and you have to spend 10 minutes trying to convince it to do them right, and then you do it manually. I'm back to PallyPower, and couldn't be happier. Yeah, it doesn't do all that other stuff, but what it does it does perfectly.
As for you Pallys who apparently don't use anything, so... you're doing salv on the rogues, mages and warlocks and kings on the warrior and druids, but throw a lesser wisdom on the resto druid, and remember to keep that up. Oh, do you have improved wisdom? Yeah, forget that. By the time we sort out who's doing what, after one of us overwrites the others buffs half a dozen times, the first set of buffs are wearing off. If you don't have PP, I don't want you in my raid.
Buckshot Jul 14th 2008 2:40PM
What makes either of these better than smart buff? I just set if for which class gets what, and let it go. click when needed.
Brendel Jul 14th 2008 7:35PM
I agree with Ghadz above. This addon is useful for knowing what my buff assignments are but as far as actually buffing raid members, there are always half a dozen or so that miss a buff regardless of range. It takes up a lot of real estate on my screen and the layout options are limited. I use it only because I have to...
Rastas Jul 15th 2008 7:46AM
I've never seen the use of having an addon to do what I can sensibly do by myself.
A little exaple here:
I was in a semi-pug Gruul the other day, and the tankadin wanted me to download PP. As my computer is not exactly a top-end machine, I knew I wouldn't have the time to go download the addon, install it and get back online before they were already at Maulgar (as it takes few minutes for me to get from WoW to windows if I've been online for hour or more). So I just ignored his comment and manually buffed everyone as I always have. I don't know if the third pally in the group had the addon or not, but I was the first to get my buffing done, and all in the old-fashioned way. And I even use Blizzard's default raid-ui, and not some fancy addon :p
I know there are some slow buffers out there, and that nothing is more tiresome than people whispering "can you give me this, not that", while you have already given them a buff, and someone else is slacking. But I know, that with or without this addon, it's always the thing between the keyboard and the chair that's at fault.
Daddywarbuck of Farstriders Jul 17th 2008 2:41PM
PP is useful because you can lay out the buffs for everyone in the raid. You made every work pretty hard by manually buffing. In the situation you were in though, for time alone I wouldn't install it. However you should install, (but disable it if you want) for now, as its an important thing to have in a raid.
That said it has its own issue where its useless for multi-role classes and its got a stupid pet feature that kills warlocks among other things
Rastas Jul 17th 2008 4:54PM
Hmm, I actually installed it. And it doesn't work. I can get it to do greater blessings for the life of me. Kinda sucks. But then again, just ran Kara just fine without it :p
mashby Jul 21st 2008 4:36PM
Personally, I've been quite happy with Healbot Continued both for healing, cleansing and buff management. It's one tool and one interface and I just don't see enough of a benefit to adding another UI just for buffs.