Blood Pact: Educating myself on fel / emberstorm

I'd like to begin a new project for Blood Pact, which should prove both entertaining to play with, and interesting to write about, if this week is any indication. In an attempt to expand my perspective on the Warlock class -- thus expanding the perspective of this column -- I will test out a variety of different 'cookie cutter' specs, and detail my experiences playing with them. I've ever-so-inventively dubbed this project 'Operation: Respec.'
These won't be perfect tests of course. My contract with WoW Insider doesn't allow me to bill them my expenses, in or out of game. So any money spent on these tests will come straight out of my own digital pocket. I say this not to complain, but rather to explain why I won't be buying new gems, enchants, and gear for every test. Fortunately the stat requirements of the different Warlock specs are relatively similar. Mostly it's just crit rating and haste rating that get switched around, and for those I can at least switch between Spellstone and Firestone, as well as by using different statfood. Glyphs, unfortunately for my bankroll, have become rather essential to different play styles, so I will of course be switching between those within reason.
This week I tried out the much vaunted Fel / Emberstorm spec. I chose this one to start with primarily because it's the largest deviation from the norm for me. I've never been a fan of the demonology tree, and even less a fan of the felguard himself. In fact, I actually have spent some time as demonology since 3.0.2, but I purposely avoided getting the felguard. (I think it was 0 / 50 / 21 or something like that.)
Below is a breakdown of the relevant stats I had, after respecing F/E.
Health: 15846 (Improved by Statfood)
Mana: 16630
Spell Power: 2129
Spell Haste: 337 (10.28%) (Improved by Spellstone and by Statfood)
Spell Crit: 27.82%
Hit: Capped for destruction spells, but not for affliction spells.
For glyphs, the only one that seemed particularly important for the spec to work was Glyph of Felguard. My other two glyphs were Glyph of Immolate and Glyph of Curse of Agony, holdovers from my normal affliction build. Since these were the glyphs used by a Fel / Emberstorm lock who claimed to be able to get up to 5k DPS on Patchwerk, I figured it was as good a test set as any.
The tactic of this spec is to open up with some shadow dots so that Molten Core will proc. Most of the damage comes from sending your felguard in, and pounding your target with Immolate and Incinerate. Simple, and effective. Generally speaking, my rotation was to start with Curse of Agony and Corruption, which would cause my Felguard (on defensive) to charge in at the enemy, then I'd keep Immolate up while pounding the mob with Incinerate. I would occasionally stop to refresh Curse of Agony or Corruption, but the purpose of these dots isn't so much to do damage, as it is to proc Molten Core, so you don't need to watch them like a hawk the way you do when you're playing as affliction.
My preparations complete, I grabbed my buddies Mr Paladin tank, Ms Druid healer, Mr Death Knight DPS, and Mrs Hunter. The five of us then headed off to do some heroics. The Death Knight was particularly helpful, because he and I have been playfully competing in DPS for the last few weeks, so he provided a benchmark for me. We only had a few hours, but in that time we managed to clear Halls of Stone, Halls of Lightning, Utgarde Keep, and Utgarde Pinnacle. A decent sample group of instances, and enough variety in the encounters that I think I was able to get a pretty decent reading for the play style.
My first major impression was that this spec performs much better in live combat than it does against training dummies. I attribute this largely to the fact that the felguard's cleave ability actually had more than one target to deal damage to, bringing him up to about 700-800 DPS. There's no denying that this spec far outperforms affliction on trash mobs. Using the tactics listed above I was able to do several hundred more damage per second than I could usually pull off during a trash pull--and it was a great deal easier to do as well. Doing a respectable amount of trash DPS as affliction often feels like the most difficult thing about playing the spec.
Right around the time I got to some of the larger pulls in Halls of Lightning, however, I noticed that simply spamming Rain of Fire outperformed the single-target tactics that I had been using previously. In fact, I actually did manage to break the five-thousand DPS mark on a trash pull of about four mobs simply by spamming my Rain of Fire button over and over. After that I stuck to Rain of Fire on trash pulls for the rest of the night. After awhile I got to wondering if perhaps there was an even better spec, optimized for Rain of Fire spam. I filed that thought away for another time.
However, as affliction Warlocks are fond of repeating over and over again: trash DPS doesn't matter. So what this, or any, spec really comes down to is how it performs on bosses. Here again I was surprised by how well it did manage to perform, but I would be lying if I said it measured up to the damage I do as affliction. Which isn't to say that it performed badly, not at all. In fact I would say that I never strayed further than a few hundred DPS away from my usual fare. And there were certainly fights where Fel / Emberstorm really shined. The Tribunal of Ages event in Halls of Stone is obviously a nightmare as affliction, and Fel / Emberstorm handled it with ease. It also did remarkably well on all the bosses in Utgarde Keep, which tend to die too fast for an affliction lock to really get into a good rotation. Same deal with the second 'boss' in Utgarde Pinnacle.
Thinking I had enough data for this post, I gleefully speced back to good ol' DoT-heavy affliction, which I tend to cling to these days, knowing my beloved complexity will be gone once 3.1 arrives. The next day, though, I was in for a lovely surprise. A few people dropped out of my Saturday Naxx run, and replacements needed to be PuGed. It got down to needing only one ranged DPS, and since I like to have as many gear types represented as possible, I wasted a bunch of time looking for a Hunter.
Finding none, with our 3 o' clock raid time approaching quickly, I asked if anybody in the group knew a ranged DPS that could be relied upon. My best tree Druid piped up, and informed me that he'd run into a Warlock recently who might be interested in the job. Never one to back away from the opportunity to compare myself to another warlock, I asked for their name so I could armory them.
"Heyyy," thought I, "this Warlock's gear is remarkably similar to my own!"
"Heeyyyy!" I thought again, "His spec! It's Fel / Emberstorm!"
A jubilant grin spread across my face as I typed out the invitation. It was a golden opportunity, gentle readers, to get a direct comparison between the two specs, and I was eager to see the results. A few minutes talking with them confirmed that they understood the mechanics of their spec; using shadow spells to proc molten core, and hammering the foe with fire damage and the felguard (though they switched to sacrificing their imp on one or two bossfights.)
The group started with spider wing, and the F/E Warlock jumped to an early lead, using rain of fire to absolutely obliterate the trash pulls. On one pull I actually saw the F/E warlock achieve over nine thousand DPS. I'm not making bad references to internet memes here, I'm being serious. He did it by using rain of fire on a double pull right before the Grand Widow.
As impressive as the F/E Warlock's trash DPS was (leaving me grounded firmly in 5th place on every single pull) he really didn't seem to bring the heat during boss fights. This isn't to say his DPS output was bad -- because it certainly wasn't. In fact, that Warlock has already signed up to raid with me again next week, much to my delight. But I consistently found myself at least a few hundred DPS ahead of him after every single boss fight. (save Gothik the Harvester, where F/E's Rain of Fire is obviously superior to affliction's) To be fair, he missed the ledge when we started Thaddius, and he spent most of the Sapphiron fight dead, so neither of those really count.
So is this a condemnation of Fel / Emberstorm? Goodness no. The damage output of the F/E warlock was certainly far more than adequate for boss fights. No reasonable group could complain about how much DPS he was putting out. What's more, the relative simplicity and ease of the F/E play style means that it's considerably less frustrating to play than affliction can be at times -- and certainly far easier to pick up and play. Fel / Emberstorm will probably never be my primary spec, but the felguard seemed like a pretty cool guy, I might make this my secondary spec once dual specs come out, so I can visit him.
Filed under: Warlock, (Warlock) Blood Pact






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
El_Fajitas Mar 9th 2009 2:17PM
This may just make me level up my warlock again. Who knows! He's stuck at 70 and just haven't brought him from his parking spot in outland.... :(
Tom Mar 9th 2009 2:20PM
yeah my bf lock might just come out of retirement for this spec, I always used to love rain of fire
Kellerune Mar 9th 2009 2:18PM
I haven't touched my warlock since Wrath came out. I'm working on a prot warrior instead after my hunter dinged 80. I haven't kept up to date on lock stuff, but this article was a good read for someone to just get a feel for what spec he wants (when I go back). Keep 'em coming!
malaika Mar 9th 2009 2:21PM
Thanks for trying out the Felguard before dissing it. I recently dinged 80 with my SL/FG lock. The demo spec really improves survivability while raiding and in instances as well. I'm waiting for 3.1 to drop before I respec and look forward to more articles like this.
Rylka Mar 9th 2009 2:21PM
Thanks for the article. As an fellow Affliction who has wondered occasionally about dabbling in other specs, it was nice to read over.
A Rain of Fire centered spec sounds interesting to me too.
[As an aside, while it might dig a bit into you real world pocket, you might consider signing up for the current tournament if you want to compare specs with attendant gear swtiches. That would give you access to the tournament realms and essentially free gear/enchants/respeccs/etc... It's not perfect ($20 real world and no MOBs/instances to try things out against) but otherwise it could be a nice test space.]
Nick W. Mar 9th 2009 4:10PM
As much as I'd love to try and provide as broad a perspective as I can for this column, I will never write about PVP. I simply could not do it intelligently. I've been in a grand total of 3 arena matches in my entire WoW career, I stalwartly hold that resiliance ruined PVP and refuse to seek it out, and I only recently got my 1,000th HK.
There's nothing I could write about PVP that would be worth reading
Rylka Mar 9th 2009 9:22PM
Oh I wasn't suggesting you PLAY there, just that they are set up to let you switch gear/echants/gems/specs/etc. at will for free for the duration of the tournament which might prove useful for trying out fully geared and tweaked versions of each spec being tested. Though as I mentioned, the downside is that there are no non-player targets to try them out on, not even targeting dummies...
I do play WG off and on (to get those leveling shoulders for all my alts), but otherwise I don't PVP either. : )
Thanks again.
Mordiss Mar 9th 2009 2:23PM
Nick,
Nice article and nice concept here. I think you hit the nail on the head with the fg/emberstorm spec. I run with it because it consistently does solid damage in a variety of situations. It has nothing to do with ease of play or frustration. I think I speak for many locks when I say I'd rather be affliction and have all the wonderful toys that locks are famous for. Doing slow, evil, twisted face-melting damage is why I rolled a lock in the first place! Currently affliction is just too inconsistent Imho.
Tolki Mar 9th 2009 5:46PM
Agreed in full. I was Affliction back in Kara, with my wittle Frozen Shadowweave and my phased Imp (god that sounds so foreign now), and I rocked DPS. I hated switching to 21/40 because I got better gear, but I learned to love being a sniper too. My only gripe with Affliction is inconsistency, and it's what keeps me away.
gearwhizz Mar 9th 2009 2:24PM
Really nice article, can't wait to see what you make of Destruction.
Shevaresh Mar 9th 2009 2:26PM
As someone who plays FG/Emberstorm and routinely tops or comes close to topping the DPS charts, including 4.3k DPS on 10-man Patch - You're doing something a little off.
First, Glyphs:
-Curse of Agony
-Felguard
-Varies based on personal opinion - personally, I like the Healthstone glyph. In any case, NOT the immolate glyph; from my experience it's a DPS loss, between initial damage crits and the stacking with talent.
Rotation:
CoA - Immolate - Incinerate spam. Yes, it's that simple mostly. Don't change to drain soul until the last second; even 4x drain soul isn't worth it.
Pet should be on passive, with cleave and intercept auto-cast. Send it after the boss/whatever as soon as you can without it dying.
Macro /petpassive onto a hotkey; you can use it to recall your pet to avoid flame waves/voids/etc.
Keep your pet up - Raid buffed, a felguard can pull around 1k DPS by itself on a single target. If it dies, it loses the buffs.
If your pet does die, you will [probably] want to resummon it. Unless Fel Domination is up, if the fight is less than 20 seconds to finish, you want to keep DPSing solo. If you have longer, ALWAYS resummon the pet. If Fel dom is up, resummon for maximum DPS, every time. This is based on the assumption that pet DPS = 1/4 to 1/3 of player DPS; summon time of 5.5 seconds.
paul.marsico Mar 9th 2009 2:26PM
This build is OK. It's just about the only playable direct-damage build a warlock can have.
The biggest issue with it right now is that you can't really pick up Fel Synergy so your Felguard will faceplant unless he gets heals or you lose DPS time to funneling.
When I first dinged 80 I used a variant of this build that used an imp instead of a Felguard. Slightly less DPS. Way, way, way less annoying to manage your pet.
But as the writer points out:
Trash DPS means nothing. The affliction warlock is downright evil.
No Demo/Destro Hybrid is pulling 7000 DPS on Patchwerk.
Ahoni Mar 9th 2009 3:57PM
In Naxx there is really only 1 fight where the Felguard regularly dies, and thats KT. I have not had an issue with him on any other fight. Some fights (Gothik) he's real useful to have around.
Scott Mar 9th 2009 2:26PM
While I'm an Afflic lock at heart, stats coming back from 3.1 show the Fel/Ember spec winning out over us Afflic locks.
wow2k6 Mar 9th 2009 2:31PM
Yeah, that spec is really amazing!
I use it for every encounter ingame and there are barely any bossfights I don't end up No.1
On Patchwerk I usually dish out around 6k DPS, sometimes more, sometimes less depending on RNG luck and the only one who beats me is a Affliction warlock (who I've beaten too when I was Affliction) because he can use his Doomguard...but my overall Boss damage is far higher with Felguard/Emberstorm
Some might say it's difficult to use the Felguard on Fights like Sarth 3D but if you fail at pet control you should better play mage...it's really easy!
There is no need to sacrifice your pet or even use your Imp for any fight in the content available at the moment.
Rain of Fire is pretty amazing, you can dot one or two mobs with CoA before using it, because it also benefits from Molton Core which increases its damage by 10% which can increase your damage significantly when you deal with trashpacks that last longer than 2 Rain of Fires.
What is really interesting is that this spec is going to get buffed pretty much...
Acording to SimCraft it gains 800dps, which is 15% more than on Live and even beats Affliction with Doomguard!
Check out Elitistjerks for more information:
http://elitistjerks.com/f80/t48311-simulationcraft_post_3_1_specs/
DrowVampyre Mar 9th 2009 7:17PM
Wish I could play a mage instead...yes, I'm the stupid warlock that didn't realize I suck in an epic fashion at pet management and, moreover, hate dealing with it until I started doing dungeons...at 80. You have no idea how many times I've lamented my class choice now, but grinding a mage to 80 now just seems...ugh...working on a priest instead so as to bring more than just damage.
Roland Mar 9th 2009 2:30PM
41/30 is brutally effective, and I'm guessing the only reason Afflic outperforms it is because you are way geared. If someone is just starting heroics, it is by far the way to go.
Also, "They're spec! It's Fel / Emberstorm!" is wrong...twice. "Their" is the possessive form, but since you're referring to one warlock, it would be "His or her," not "their" and definitely not "they're."
Nick W. Mar 9th 2009 3:10PM
/blink
/facepalm
I can't believe I let that slip past me. I'll fix that when I get home in a few hours.
Proud2bawesome Mar 9th 2009 8:38PM
i greatly enjoyed reading this article and am SO glad that you're not just talking about the glory of affliction warlocks and giving new specs a chance, but i'm most greatly interested in seeing some love for destruction warlocks.
i've always played a destro spec, but i was always the oddball out where i always tried to min/max the fire side of destro. seeing so many buffs to the fire side of destro, i'd LOVE to see you do a operation:respec on a fire destruction spec. mainly so i can finally see or hear other opinions
Cyanea Mar 9th 2009 2:46PM
This is the kind of article Warlocks have been needing for quite a while here. Thanks for a well written, entertaining article. I too am diehard Affliction, but am looking for something new to do with my own warlock in the limbo before 3.1. I think I'm going to try it out.