The Colosseum: Retrospective, Summer 2009
The Colosseum takes us inside the world of the Gladiator (Brutal, Vengeful, Merciless, Furious, and otherwise), to interview some of the top Arena fighters in the battlegroups. Our goal is to bring a better understanding of the strategy, makeup, and work that goes into dueling it out for fame, fortune, and Frostwyrms. We're especially focused on the people who play these games, to further shed light on the world of the PvP player.
We're now officially under way in Season 7. And since this is only the first week of that season, it's a little tough to know who's going to end up on top. The subtle push-and-tug back and forth of so-called Cleave teams versus the traditional Rogue-Mage-Priest will probably be the most interesting battle in the 3v3 bracket, while it's simply far, far too early to tell who's going to dominate the 2v2 Arena.It being this early in, I wanted to take some time to take a look at the past few months of Arena interviews. We've been pretty fortunate to get a good variety of folks to talk to us, and it's always good to take some time to reflect on lessons of the past. This is how we learn, after all. Or, at least, until we can all download infallible knowledge directly to our brain.
Anyway, let's take a look back and who we talked to this summer.
Ickmon from Executus was a highly ranked Priest, who warmed my heart in a very particular way. The reason Ickmon plays a priest is simply because that was the first character he got to level 60. That's a very subtle reason in today's Arena, where it's accepted to re-roll to the most popular flavor of the month. While Priests are performing adequately in the current season, certainly it would have been advantageous during the Epoch of Holy Paladins to reroll. The fact that Ickmon stuck with his character means I give him kudos for every success his team has received.
Ickmon is especially interested in 5v5. Blizzard announced that 2v2 would be deprecated in future seasons, so that teams in those brackets would no longer be able to purchase shoulders or weapons using their 2v2 rating. Teams like Ickmon's hoped that this would create an influx into the 5v5 Arena. Unfortunately, it seems like most of the focus has instead shifted to 3v3.
Comotu of Executus, by comparison, came to his Paladin a little later in his playing life. He started in Azeroth as a Gnome Warrior. Frustrated over the years by what he felt was the Warriors' inadequacies, he rerolled a Paladin. According to Comotu, playing a Paladin "was like a Warrior on steroids (since I was never starved for rage)." Now, granted, Comotu's original Paladin was created by his father, but a class switch is a reroll is a class switch.
Beffyjunk the Boomkin was an interview that many of us had been desperately seeking. One of the rare, successful Balance Druids in the upper rank of Arena, Beffyjunk's insight was valuable to new, growing Arena Druids. Beffyjunk stressed the need for communication and innovation in the Arena. However, Beffyjunk also got laughs around Azeroth when he said (without much sense of irony), that "a simple piece of hardware such as a 15 button programmable mouse that glows in the dark is a great tool to have at your disposal."
Get it? It's a "simple" fifteen button mouse? At any rate, this was one of the first ringing endorsements for the SteelSeeries WoW Mouse that we've had here from actual players, so it's good to see das ubermaus treating some people right. I guess you can't go wrong with glow-in-the-dark equipment, anyway.
The real moral-of-the-story from Beffyjunk, though, was that persistence pays off. Beffyjunk felt that he really had to forge his own path in the Arena. He had to tirelessly work to find Arena partners who wouldn't mind that he didn't go Resto, and he had to create his own style of play. He had to constantly design new macros and tactics to make use of a Boomkin's toolbox, and then he had to execute that toolbox perfectly in order to succeed. It's a great moral for any less-than-ideal spec, and goes a long way toward supporting the idea that if you work hard enough, and with enough skill, unique setups can pay-off in the Arena.
Dynlor and Domustie are the two members of a Druid/Paladin/Rogue team. One of the uncommon high rated teams that use both a Paladin and a Druid in 3v3 without a Death Knight or Warrior, the secret to their success was one of outstanding longevity. Dynlor was a Protection-specced Paladin whose role was applying damage and pressure. Dynlor considered their team to be a "reactive comp," which meant applying a Protection Paladin's AE damage in such a way that they eventually chewed up the enemy's cooldowns. It was certainly an interesting, technical team, and one I hoped to see counter some of RMP's dominance.
For better or for worse, Season 6 just didn't seem as contentious or outlandish as previous seasons. While 3v3 was controlled by RMP and Cleave teams, that's not exactly news. The absolute dominance of Death Knights and Holy Paladins has been broken, and now we all forward to succeed.
Good hunting in Season 7.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion, The Colosseum







Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
BillyBob Sep 9th 2009 3:51PM
WOW!!! You covered some PVP action on WoW.com!!!
THANK YOU THANK YOU!
Lemons Sep 9th 2009 4:02PM
"Dynlor was a Protection-specced Paladin whose role was applying damage and pressure."
Yea...fck prot pallys and fck that comp. For a while prot pallys had an insane amount of damage in addition to their godly survivability...there's nothing special or technical about that team...they were just exploiting.
They didn't need a DK cause the prot was doing all the damage...the rogue was probably just there to be a stun monkey so the prot could run in and wreck whoever was unlucky enough to be in the rogue's stunlock. If you were trying to feature an awesome and innovative comp you failed...that comp is just another FotM...one I'm glad to see has passed.
S7 seems promising so far...but I say that every season only to get repeatedly reemed by another FotM setup (DK/Druid anyone?)...so I'll hold off judgment for a few more weeks.
jerzz80 Sep 9th 2009 5:01PM
Lemmons, you and the author of Encrypted text are great.
Im a rogue, and actually quit playing WOW and have since returned because of the improvements being made in PVP and the arena. Without Arena and PVP, WOW just doesnt do anything for me. Im the type of guy that would rather spend my time losing 50 arena matches rather then go into a raid.
So far in season 7, Im just happy to see more people playing, looking for teams, having discussions in trade chat.
Resilience appears to be back, which is huge. I run with a resto druid and I cannot tell you how much resilience (and imp. bark skin) have changed our arena lives. It lets the healers heal again. Its lets craftyness and improvization shine brighter. Mortal Strike matters again. I love it.
The rating system is so much better and applicable to the WOW way of how things work. Work and dedication will be progressively rewarded.
crunk Sep 9th 2009 4:29PM
Ah, another reason why I don't play Arena. Arena is just too dominated by these 3 class specifics, and it shuts other classes out of the game.
As a BG PvPer though, I'm looking forward to the BG Rating system, and what that brings to the table.
I know it will piss off the Arena junkies, but oh well heh. Such is WoW.
Altarius Sep 9th 2009 4:54PM
I don't understand what you mean by "Arena is just too dominated by these 3 class specifics, and it shuts other classes out of the game," because from my Arena experience almost any class is viable for 3v3 if your good at it. For Example RLS teams are good (Rogue Lock Shaman) and there is the beast cleave team (Enhance Shaman, BM Hunter, and Holy pally) also the popular RMP. The only class that is not represented the most in 3's is the Druids (which totally pwn at 2's anyway). And have you ever gone up against a DK, Warrior, Holy Pally/druid team? if the players are good they can be brutal.
But that's just my input on it...
Altarius Sep 9th 2009 4:48PM
Just a question if anyone can answer it for me... but can you buy the 1800 rated weapons with a 2's rating still? because it doesn't say at the bottom of it *requires 3v3 or 5v5 rating of 2100 like the other tier does. Little confused on that one.
Debricashi Sep 9th 2009 6:42PM
Yes, you can. Only the t2 weapons require 3s or 5s. That said, the t2 weapons are the real ones, so it really doesn't matter.
That's why 3s is the "real" arena bracket now. 2s are still fun and rewarding if you aren't going to break 2k rating anyway though.
Agelamer Sep 9th 2009 4:59PM
Do you play on Executus or something?
3/5 people are from Executus Alliance, though I think Beffy has gone horde. If you really wanna interview PvPers from Executus, try talking to TSG or Pookz.
Drow Sep 9th 2009 5:32PM
Everytime I see this article's title pop-up, I get excited that it's something about the new raid instance, or a change, or strats for Heroic mode, then it ends up just being around some PvP room, heh.
ash Sep 9th 2009 5:43PM
I'm wondering if there's any word on them allowing us to get previous arena season's weapons with honor and/or arena points. Right now the only thing I see available is Relentless weapons. I am kind of asking for a more selfish reason as I really dug the design of the two handed mace from last couple seasons, but I was wondering if you had any insight overall. It seems that, considering the ilevel of gear is getting so high that allowing players to gear that is one or two ilevel tiers behind wouldn't upset things that much.
Anyway, nice column, keep up the good work.