Shifting Perspectives: Why (or why not) to play a Druid, part 2

Who will get the least out of playing a Druid?
The Druid is not a good class for people who want to perform one role and one role only, or whose primary enjoyment of the game arrives in the form of topping damage meters. It is also not a good class for people who are accustomed to having a lot of bank and bag space, as enjoyment of the class' much-vaunted versatility arrives at the cost of having to collect, gem, and enchant multiple gear sets. The expense for this is, as you might expect, considerable. Moreover, possession of a gear set doesn't remove the responsibility for having to learn how to play the corresponding spec effectively; unlike most other classes, each of the Druid's specs requires an entirely different playstyle and role within a group/raid. Consequently, people who can play all four Druid specs fluently are very rare, and it might be accurate to say that the Druid makes a better main than an alt.
Because the Druid is capable of playing each of the game's four roles, you should realistically expect to tank or heal at some point -- or at least get pestered about it. It's fine if you have no desire to do so, but be prepared for the inevitable requests.
Despite the improvements made to them, the animal forms lack the options available to the pure classes they mimic, and there's a roadblock artificially imposed on reaching the options you do have. A Protection Warrior would have to cycle through 3 or 4 bars to grab all of their abilities during a fight; a Bear can fit his/hers on a bit more than 1. This is the result of Blizzard considering Druids holistically rather than as separate classes whenever they shift.
What the hell does that mean?
It means if the Warrior and Druid both have 100 skills (not an accurate number, just work with me here), then the Warrior can put most of them on his/her bars; the only thing standing between him/her and another ability is a stance shift (or talents). The Druid, by contrast, will see 20 abilities available only to Bear, 20 available only to Cat, 10 from talents, 50 available to caster/moonkin/tree, etc. Blizzard still considers these all Druidic abilities, rather than "Bear" or "Cat" abilities, so the fact of the matter is that -- regardless of the form you currently occupy, most of your abilities are not immediately available to you. In order to use all of your helpful or emergency skills, you need to learn how to watch your mana bar (an OOM Druid is an optionless one) and get used to shifting quickly in order to get the skill you need. Thus the mana for shapeshifting is a sort of hidden cost imposed on top of the cost of the skill you want.

That doesn't sound so hot for PvP.
Druid PvP has historically been a feast-or-famine type deal, and it's probably no mistake that the spec that shifts the most (Feral) has been abysmal since day one. Restoration, as you might recall from the screaming matches on the forums in Seasons 3 and 4, did well in 2's during BC, but has gone back to the feast-or-famine model. Balance is your next-best option in arena, but it's a distant second.
You mentioned something concerning canaries. Do tell.
I find patterns in Druid spec changes to be interesting signs of the shifts in wider class/role popularity. Because we can play anything, a larger movement into one role or class often winds up having an effect on what Druids (voluntarily or otherwise) play in raids. As a fairly immediate example, with the rise of the Death Knight, the overhaul to the Protection Warrior tree, and the de-suckaging of tanking in general, players flooded into tank roles -- but within the month after Wrath hit, the Feral spec went from being a 50% share of the Druid population to around 33%. Why? Because someone else was tanking, they had fewer options than we do, and as a result, more of us wind up DPSing or healing.
This doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the viability (or non-viability) of a Druid spec at any given time; indeed, I would argue that Feral was in a pretty good place overall in December 2008, and it's in a pretty good place in July 2009 with the exception of a few concerns related to bear mechanics (more on this in a future article). But the increased availability of tanks/healers/DPS from another class and spec pushes committed Druids to respec and come as something else rather than rerolling or playing an alt. If you see a ton of Druids respeccing to cover a particular role, that usually means there's an absence of such players elsewhere. Food for thought.
In summary -- there are a lot of compelling reasons for playing a Druid, and a lot of equally compelling reasons not to. I think out of all players, people who already have a tank and healer alt at their disposal may get less out of leveling a character with those capabilities, and they will be more prone to feeling the irritations of the Druid's constant need to shift. Druids are also difficult to level initially, but become enormously fun to play in time.
Anyway. Before 3.2 hits, I would like to have a full guide to leveling a Druid up, complete with information and advice on glyphs, enchants, gems, rotations, talents, and more, so watch this space. With the proc bugs on the PTR build that went live the other week, I wasn't able to assemble an accurate list of numbers on Balance DPS, so I'm still keeping an eye on that, and I'll have more information when it becomes available.
Patch 3.2 will bring about a new 5, 10, and 25 man instance to WoW, and usher in a new 40-man battleground called the Isle of Conquest. WoW.com will have you covered every step of the way, from extensive PTR coverage through the official live release. Check out WoW.com's Guide to Patch 3.2 for all the latest!Filed under: Druid, (Druid) Shifting Perspectives
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 7)
FalkonG4 Jul 9th 2009 9:35PM
Beautifuly written. Great Job.
A lot of my Friends are Druids and they enjoy it as much as you, and I've played them on the PTR, I know what you mean.
Druid's are a pretty good class, and I'm happy to say that I've started to level one. Currently level 20, but I plan to keep leveling it all the way to 80. Currently Feral.
Any advice?
tatsumasa Jul 10th 2009 1:29AM
yes. get used to how you look in cat form now because it will be EXACTLY the same for the next 60 levels no matter how much you tell blizzard that you'd like some sort of distinction. and if you ask for it on the forums you will get flamed for being ungrateful for the new form models and told that the devs should pend their time on more important things.
Kylenne Jul 9th 2009 9:40PM
God I wish you wrote the lock column. This was another really informative and helpful article. Aside from Warrior, Druid is the only class left I have yet to really try. When I first came to WoW from FFXI, my then-partner was a bear tank and suggested the class to me since I was a RDM/WHM on FFXI and I tend to go for the Jack-of-all-Trades archetype. I ended up going for a Mage as my first toon, but I tell you, watching a Druid that knows wtf s/he is doing in all three roles is freaking AMAZING. My ex was one of those rare players, and has inspired me a number of times to try it. Problem is, I've never been able to get one past about level 15 though...after three attempts, I just got bored out of my mind and gave up before I even got to kitty form.
The new forms coupled with the mount changes are really making me want to give this one more shot in 3.2, though (I never thought I'd be saying this, ever, but Tauren cat is the coolness). Hopefully the fourth time will be the charm.
Cetha Jul 9th 2009 10:55PM
the first 20 lvls of druid levelling are awful...painful...there are not words to describe the agony. However once you get cat form the world changes to glory. Keep pushing those 5 more levels and you'll see.
nwoods13 Jul 26th 2009 9:13PM
lol ive leveled a druid to 20 and have loved every second of it. and youre making me look forward to the rest of it. thank you
Friday_Knight Jul 10th 2009 3:28AM
As Cetha said the first 20 levels are a special kind of torture. You shoot your stupid little green hadoukens and lazers for 10 levels, then spend 10 more bouncing between that and smacking stuff around in bear form, then level 20 comes over the horizon like a glorious sunrise. Cat form is where things start to get fun. You start to have options.
"I don't feel like fighting that." Guess I'll just stealth and sneak past it.
"Oh noes I over pulled!" Pile some hots on yourself and hop into bear form and swipe til everything is dead.
Once you've got cat form you never have to stop moving. You pop out of it once in a while to heal yourself then get right back into the fray. Give the class till about level 30 or 40 before you make a decision on it. You'll be happy you did.
Eisengel Jul 10th 2009 3:41AM
I actually started losing interest in leveling my Druid because it's just too easy. I'm specced tanky feral at level 78 and I have to really try to die. You can easily deal with groups of 5 to 10 same-level mobs. As I was leveling I also hit some downtime around level 35 or so. I was running around in Tanaris killing mobs 4 and 5 levels higher than me.
As for balanced in PvP... the Resto Druid still reigns. You can interrupt and stun a Disc Priest... but those HoTs on a tree just keep tickin...
Robert M Jul 10th 2009 8:29AM
"my then-partner was a bear tank"
LAMO, would you want any other kind? Luckily, I know mine wouldn't...
Kylenne Jul 10th 2009 12:22PM
@Robert:
Well, as MT for our guild I would say he was a bear for the majority of the time, but (like every Druid) he respec'd a lot depending on what was needed. That sometimes led to comical things like him forgetting he WASN'T feral and then trying to run one of my alts through SM Armory pulling the whole instance as a bear-with-tree-talents. It worked, btw. XD
Loopy Garou Jul 10th 2009 3:38PM
Leveling a druid is easy. That's the only point in this excellent article I disagree with. True, the first 20 levels are a little tougher (and more boring), but really how hard is it to level any toon 20? It doesn't take long, in any case, you just push through it. And once you have cat form, it's cake.
Jingo Jul 9th 2009 9:45PM
liked my druid for ages but gave him up for a shaman.
think it came down to being able to see the weapons I was using. as a druid no matter what you're doing you're in another form and gear never changes the appearance. so after looking at a bear/tree for years I just got bored with it.
Silversol Jul 10th 2009 4:37AM
I once bear tanked in BC with a fishing pole.... and didn't know it.
duanehuval Jul 10th 2009 8:15AM
@silversol: Thanks for making me bust out laughing. The image of a ferocious bear with a fishing pole strapped to his back is just too much.
Joey Jul 10th 2009 11:10AM
Yeah it's funny how stuff like that happens when you can't see your gear. I once quested for an entire afternoon without a weapon.
Blearyeyes Jul 9th 2009 9:53PM
Nice article. As somebody who has just rolled a Druid alt (still in my teens at this point) I am looking forward to the Druid levelling guide. Until now I have had to make do with Big Bear Butt's guides which only go from level 1-5 and level 6-10, so a full levelling guide is long overdue! There are certainly some exciting changes coming for Druids in the next big patch, which is great!
RoPete33 Jul 10th 2009 3:07AM
Not many Shammies? My guild on Bronzebeard we have so many shammies lol. But back on topic I rolled a druid and am really liking it. I'm about to ding 50 and loving my boomchicken a lot. Pretty quick leveling too, you're a caster but you have the same armor as you do in bear form so you're durable enough to take some hits esp with barkskin. Probably gonna dual spec at 50 and pick up resto...
Gamer am I Jul 9th 2009 10:01PM
I was hoping to play a jack-of-all-trades class from the minute I started playing WoW. Ironically, the druid was the last class I tried, since I went by the in-game descriptions and not the more practical descriptions in the manual or online. To this day, I am glad I stuck with it. I was about level 47 when BC hit, so I was lucky enough to reach end-game in a time when we didn't suck as tanks. With dual specs, I can now be a tank or healer and still have all of my solo-utility. I love my class. I wear my druid t-shirt with pride.
"Epic flight form is the best thing in the game, particularly if you're an Herbalist."
Truer words have NEVER been spoken. I almost love epic flight form more than the class itself... almost.
"If you see a ton of Druids respeccing to cover a particular role, that usually means there's an absence of such players elsewhere. Food for thought."
Very perceptive Allison. This is why I love your column. Keep writing!
alpha5099 Jul 9th 2009 10:02PM
Druid was the very first class I ever played. Years ago, before my friend successfully talked me into playing WoW, I tried out a female Tauren druid on a trial account. I don't I even got to 10 on her. No idea where she is now; I don't remember what that trial account was registered under and I had no conception of realms at the time. I rolled another female Tauren druid, who I only got to 22, once I started playing again.
If I weren't playing now playing Alliance on a different PvP realm, I might roll another druid, but I don't really like nelfs. I'm also a little concerned about joining the fotm crowd and rolling a druid. Maybe some day I'll go back to playing Horde and make a druid main.
Of course, my main's a shaman and I'm currently leveling a prot warrior, so there might not be much reason for me to have a druid as I have the roles covered. But I do love their lore, although I wish it had more Tauren flavor (I believe 'em when they say they were the first druids; frickin' stupid nelfs).
Zeplar Jul 9th 2009 10:02PM
Oh right at the moment we are fine at topping damage meters. My feral druid, in mostly naxx-25 gear with a couple naxx-10 and one ulduar-10 piece, puts out over 6k DPS in 25-mans (i.e. fully buffed).
That's since Primal Gore was introduced. Before that, I was topping meters as Moonkin (although this was before the general public was well-geared, I haven't played Moonkin at all in the last 3 months). Now feral's getting nerfed, but Moonkin's getting a nice buff... and there's a moonkin in my guild that already does close to 6k DPS.
vocenoctum Jul 9th 2009 10:02PM
I avoided a druid for a while due to not wanting a Night Elf, but then when I finished my warrior/priest/warlock trio to 80, I figured why not!
So I rolled boomkin, and it was great fun. Easy to use while still requiring some knowledge of what you were doing.
I dualspec'd kitty, but it just feels too random for me. I did spur me into leveling my rogue though. (Now at 73)
I haven't played Boomkin in a bit, should dust it off. Some of the most fun I had was almost-wipes, with a holy priest as healer. Tank died, I b-rez'd while the boss killed the holy priest and we both healed the tank back up (the priest in spirit form) to finish the encounter. Sure, you should NEED to do this, but it's nice to know it can be done.