Spiritual Guidance: Disciplined raid healing

Every Sunday Spiritual Guidance offers Holy and Discipline priests advice on how to wield the holy light and groove to the disco night. Your hostess Dawn Moore will provide the music.
I decided to take a break from gems this week to discuss a style of priest healing that is becoming popular among raiders: discipline raid healing. Though the concepts behind it are extremely simple to understand and execute, this style of play seems to have slipped under the radar of many players despite its amazing potential. Tag along with me after the jump and I'll fill you in on the basics and benefits of disc raid healing. Holy priests, I'm talking to you, too.
I decided to take a break from gems this week to discuss a style of priest healing that is becoming popular among raiders: discipline raid healing. Though the concepts behind it are extremely simple to understand and execute, this style of play seems to have slipped under the radar of many players despite its amazing potential. Tag along with me after the jump and I'll fill you in on the basics and benefits of disc raid healing. Holy priests, I'm talking to you, too.
Unfortunately for the average discipline priest, there were quick and inappropriate assessments made early in Wrath of the Lich King which tagged discipline as a "tank healing" spec. While I do agree that discipline's burst response and damage mitigation lend themselves extremely well to healing a tank, there is a great deal of potential that will go untapped if a discipline priest never ventures outside of a little bit of cross healing. Take note – discipline priest are single target healers, not tank healers!
Disclaimer: In the hardest of progression content, I do not encourage cross healing! Remember: "Honor and shame from no condition rise; act well your part, there all the honor lies." Alexander Pope, An Essay on Man. Do your job, and trust your fellow healers to do theirs. Staying on your target will make it easier to identify where a healing problem is, and that's the first step to correcting it. If you're in farm content, however, go nuts – actually, go shadow.
So, what is discipline raid healing? Chances are, if you're a discipline priest, you've already found yourself doing it now and again. Remember when you prepared for XT-002 Deconstructor's Tantrums in Ulduar by casting Power Word: Shield on as many people as you could? Or perhaps on the Twin Val'kyr in Trial of the Crusader you bubbled everyone in sight because the raid damage was so high? That's the basics of it, except you do it full time instead of just occasionally.
The effectiveness of discipline raid healing is obvious: prevent the damage from happening and there will be less or nothing to heal. It works best in fights with lots of burst raid damage, where the mitigation can soften the blows, and make everything easier to manage for your healers (Festergut, when he exhales, or Algalon's star explosions - Check out that last link at 4 minutes in, to see disc raid healing in action). This will not only allow everyone more room for error, it will be dramatically easier to execute since it is a form of preemptive healing, instead of reactive healing. It's so easy!
You will also never overheal with a bubble. That doesn't mean you should shield superfluously, though! Every shield that is completely consumed is 100% effective healing, so as long as you have your shield up, you will monopolize the initial healing done on a target that takes damage. Let me say that again, only simpler: You will top healing meters. Not Recount of course, but if you run your logs through a parsing client such as World of Logs you will get something that looks like this.


Now before you guys scream how meters aren't that important, let me say a few things. First of all, being a conventional discipline priest can lead to mental trauma. I'm serious. They're still working on the studies, but experts speculate that 9 out of 10 discipline priests will have an existential crisis before they get to 264 level content. This can lead to serious bouts of holy and or shadow. Circle of Healing binges are the number one leading cause of death for discipline priests.
Okay, I'm not serious, but you have to admit, for a class that has to suck up the whole meter argument, it's pretty cool to see just how capable they are at playing with the druids. That said, let me recite my philosophy on meters: effective healing isn't the same as good healing. The mechanics of certain healing classes allow them to perform the way they do on meters. Meters and logs are tools to assess players, but they are just one dimension of assessment. A clutch tank-saving heal doesn't get counted any more than a heal topping off a hunter pet.
Now lets get back on topic: There is more to disc raid healing than just throwing up Power Word: Shield. Knowing every aspect of a boss encounter is absolutely key to optimizing this style of play (and it's even more essential if you want to work this trick with Rapture into your play style as a raid healer). If you were to throw up a shield on every target in say... Deathbringer Saurfang, you'd find that the majority of your bubbles are wasted. Instead, if you shield targets with Boiling Blood or Mark of the Fallen Champion, or that stupid druid that won't kite or use Barkskin when he pulls healing aggro every time Blood Beasts spawn (you know the guy), you'll find your contribution is quite effective. So make sure you research your fights and download boss timers if you have trouble reading that orange RP text that periodically shows up on your screen.
Of course, because of the Weakened Soul debuff, you will find yourself without things to shield at times. So what do you do? Well just as you would as holy or conventional disc, always keep your Prayer of Mending on cool down. Then, depending on the damage, you can either dish out Renews for more preemptive healing or help spot heal any targets whose health bars are straggling with a tick or two of Penance, and hopefully a proc from Divine Aegis. Just remember that you're supposed to be shielding the raid, not spot healing people who need topping off. If you continuously break from keeping your bubbles and Renews up, you're not really keeping to your task. Raid healers are better equipped to deal with those bits of damage, so let them. You can spend that extra time setting up for the next wave of damage. 25 GCDs is a lot to go through.
In adopting this play style of watching the raid, you may be tempted to use your AoE heals. I strongly suggest against this. Remember that one of discipline's beauties is its mobility and fast response time - Prayer of Healing is the exact opposite. If you absolutely feel Prayer of Healing is essential, try to combine it with Power Infusion and then Inner Focus, to cut down on the mana cost and cast time. It's better to just stick to the shielding and Renew, though.
As for talents and gear, there really isn't anything special that needs to be done. The standard cookie cutter discipline build works just fine. If you anticipate going raid heals full time, stack spell power gems in every single slot, so you can get as much bonus absorption granted to your Power Word: Shield as possible. If you have mana problems try using the trick with Rapture I linked earlier, and make sure you're using your regen cool downs as effectively as you can.
Before I wrap this up I want to make a final addition about courtesy: I don't believe there is any problem with running two discipline priests, but communication is key. Borrowed Time and Rapture are both very important talents for a discipline priest to be allowed to use, and you shouldn't deny another priest the chance to utilize them. If you're raid healing as disc while running with a tank healing disc priest, make sure you talk to him so you'll know who not to shield. In general, never shield the tanks or the other disc priest, unless she specifically says that that's okay before the fight. While you're at it, double check with your holy priest as well - He might be intending to use Body and Soul to buy himself more time between movements.
Good luck with trying out this play style. As simple as it is, it does require some 'sticking to it' to be effective. Disc raid healing will be extremely advantageous for success in future progression, and if you are disciplined in your approach, you will reap the benefits.
Filed under: Priest, (Priest) Spiritual Guidance
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 4)
Sky Jan 17th 2010 8:43PM
i have 988 haste on my shammy
Chris Anthony Jan 17th 2010 8:50PM
@Sky, shamans don't get the benefit of Borrowed Time. ;)
Sky Jan 17th 2010 9:05PM
I hate you
Adeany Jan 17th 2010 9:16PM
@Chris, do you spec into Enlightenment? 'Cause I think that reduces the amount of haste you need to 4%. But I'm assuming full 25-man buffs and maybe you chose to exclude those.
@Sky, resto Shamans generally don't need to worry about GCD capping, 'cause, as Chris mentioned, they don't get talents like Borrowed Time. In addition, Healing Wave and Chain Heal are relatively slow spells, and even with extremely high levels of haste (a shaman in my guild has over 3000 haste when his trinkets proc) these spells will take longer than the GCD to cast. As a result, stacking more haste is always better, because cast times will always decrease.
But for a Disc priest with moderately high haste, a Flash Heal with Borrowed Time is easily shorter than 1 second, so the GCD isn't over by the time the heal has finished casting, adding 0.1 or 0.2 seconds of downtime where the player is literally unable to do anything. I'm not sure what the general solution for this is, though. Start using Greater Heal?
Chris Anthony Jan 17th 2010 9:55PM
@Adeany, I'm reluctant to assume anything but what I can bring with me. :) Enlightenment and Borrowed Time leave 13.2% haste to be made up from buffs and gear, which is a little under 433 Haste Rating.
John Jan 17th 2010 7:34PM
IMO Disc = tank healer is ok for 10-mans or a group on the edge of overgearing the content you're doing.
Holy Paladin is the only way to keep tanks alive in many situations - even with the chill of the throne & the attempt by blizz in ICC to reduce reliance on constant spam of largest heal on tanks.
Hopefully this won't be true in Cataclysm.
Kaphik Jan 17th 2010 7:43PM
I cannot disagree more. I tank heal both of our tanks on our ICC 10 man progression with a Disc priest. We're certainly not overgearing that instance yet.
John Jan 17th 2010 8:24PM
:)
note I wrote that disc works for tank healing either 10-man or close to overgeared content. So you don't actually disagree with me.
I heal our 10-man as disc as well. I have tried holy for rotface since I have body & soul and people can use the "speed bubbles" to kite their oozes.
However, try and be a tank's main heal ToGC-25 as disc. Gormok's impale, or enraged dreadscale, or anub freezing slash simply demand too much healing.
Sky Jan 17th 2010 8:47PM
gotta agree with john here, Holy Pallies are definitely the way to go with the icecrown bosses. The beauty of being a priest though is that you are never out of commission. Two of your three specs are healing specs and if disc is inferior to holy pallies then you could always go holy. It's kinda like pure dps classes, where about 90% of their raiding population go with the spec du jour (arcane, marksman). Same with priests, just go with the flow and respec holy.
Kaphik Jan 17th 2010 10:27PM
Again, I'll disagree, I was a MT healer on ToC 25 when it was released, sharing the duties for healing the three tanks with a paladin. I've never had trouble keeping tanks up.
I'm doing fine, no need to "go with the flow", thanks. :D
Angus Jan 17th 2010 11:40PM
You'd be wrong.
I'm reminded every time I raid with our Disc priest how effective they are at keeping tanks up. In a 10 man she's all we need for tank heals usually. In 25 man her and 1 Holy Paladin are about as effective as 3 Holy Paladins at healing 3 tanks.
Most people underestimate the shields far too much. They give you the cushion needed to use Holy Light without a spike dropping a tank.
Danders Jan 17th 2010 7:38PM
I just tried this out with my lvl74 doing random 5 mans. It worked like a beauty. I never got below 13k mana out of 16k total. And it made healing much more fun and easier. All I had to do was focus on tanks and keep PW:S up. Doing this for 25mans seems like it might be a little frustrating though if you are the only disc priest.
Alanid Jan 17th 2010 7:41PM
Damn... makes me wanna roll a priest
bakatsuji Jan 17th 2010 8:35PM
Ive been disc since sarth and been loving it ever since.
I keep holy as my second spec for different situations, like with twins i find the actual healing to be easier and more effective, in a 25 scenario its tougher to keep a bubble on 25 people to absorb the constant damage
I usually gem sp/int or crit and aim for about 33-35% holy crit, after that is when i start stacking sp. i dont worry about haste too much because of the borrowed time talent.
bakatsuji Jan 17th 2010 9:21PM
I forgot to mention, that in 5 man randoms i simply run through with the tank and lolholynova through the whole thing. divine aegis procs and i shit bubbles on everyone nearby, i do aoe damage and keep the dps from slacking.... and sadly most of the time i do more damage.
im a battle priest
Dawn Moore Jan 17th 2010 9:41PM
I do the exact same thing. =)
Angus Jan 17th 2010 11:45PM
Just finished a run with a priest that healed ALL of HoL with just Holy Nova. Loken was a joke with that. Something's wrong when the priest is 3rd on DPS in Disc...
Tridus Jan 17th 2010 8:42PM
Disc Priest + Resto Druid is a really effective 10 man healing team, they compliment each other very well.
Adeany Jan 17th 2010 9:03PM
"They're still working on the studies, but experts speculate that 9 out of 10 discipline priests will have an existential crisis before they get to 264 level content. This can lead to serious bouts of holy and or shadow. Circle of Healing binges are the number one leading cause of death for discipline priests."
This made me lol.
Disc priests are awesome, meter whores should stop hating.
Mike Jan 17th 2010 9:31PM
My raid leader insisted I switch to holy, because of the adage that Disc is for healing MT's, Now I have something to show him that says different. I will, however, be adding PW Shield to an easier to use button combo on Healbot.