Reader UI of the Week: Your Addon/UI Columnist

As the new addon and user interface columnist, I've been given the task of not only finding and informing the WoW.com community about new, useful and awesome addons, but also the unique job of taking a look at the community's user interfaces and highlighting some of the awesome creativity and innovations that the community can share. I want this column to be very reader oriented - let's go on this amazing addon journey together!
Since WoW.com hasn't done a Reader UI of the Week in a while, in lieu of a submission I thought I would profile my own personal user interface and addon set up. A few people in the comments to my first AddOn Spotlight and in some e-mails I received wanted to see my UI to get a better feel for what I find to be aesthetically acceptable and necessary. I'll keep the list strictly to the addons that are core to my game experience and leave out the fringe addons for later columns. If you have any questions or need an addon recommendation, please send me an e-mail and hopefully we can find something that sates your addon desire. Without further ado, here is what I see:

Are you in awe, yet? Look at all those buttons! There's no way for me to miss a spell since I have everything available to me. The action bars are large enough for me to select spells easily. My Carbonite and SexyMap maps are nice and big to show me the way to my next quest! I don't know why I have Tankadin there, since this is obviously a warlock's UI, but better safe than sorry, I'd say!
I'm sorry. This ordeal hurts too much to continue. Please forgive me. Here is my real UI:

Amazing, right? It's like you're looking through my eyes. It's like Being John Malkovich, with just a little bit less John Cusack. Here's my philosophy -- the user interface is a piece of a larger experience that includes the game proper and the situations you are put into. I want to make my user interface as unobtrusive as possible while still having incredible amounts of functionality and information at my disposal.
The backbone of my user interface is made up of six categories of addons: Skada/Omen, kgPanels, Dominos, Shadowed Unit Frames, Chatter (or Prat) and SexyMap. At some point I will chronicle all of these mods in greater detail (or detail has already been given on AddOn Spotlight). For now, these are the addons that allow me to create my simplistic, unobtrusive user interface that gives me all of the information that I need while not sacrificing screen real estate. All of the links for the addons I will discuss are located at the bottom of the article.
Skada/Omen, kgPanels and Dominos
Saving on screen real estate is one of the hardest things to do, especially since most addons come in what feels like the "large size" as their defaults. Save space by shrinking down addons and using the scale feature. Also, note your scale number as it can be easier to input that number than sight-guessing using a slider to make all of the addons the same scale size.

kgPanels is a fantastic addon for spacing out your essential interface "areas." I like to have my interface compartmentalized so that my brain knows, based on the situation, where to be looking on my screen. Checking an ability cooldown? Look at the bars and my cooldown addon above them. Before I used kgPanels, I was addicted to a few Viewport addons that made the bottom of my screen black or textured, allowing me to position addons inside of the viewport for a cleaner look. Over time, however, that style began to irk me. kgPanels does what the viewport addons did, but in a more flexible, less constrained way.
kgPanels is completely customizable for use with player made borders or other presets found in your addons. In the screenshot below, you can see that I have given each of my addons the same simple black border in order to make everything look uniform.

ShadowedUF, Chatter and SexyMap
Simplistic unit frames are key to my set up. I'm personally a fan of Shadowed Unit Frames because of the wealth of information the bars can show while at the same time keeping real estate costs down. My bars are a little bigger than they have to be, mostly because I don't want to strain my eyes too much. Shadowed Unit Frames allows me to have an enemy cast bar, health and mana in the same simple window. Cascading down to the right of the Target's unit frame are Target of Target and Focus, which are not visible in the screenshot.
Chatter and Prat are the two chat addons that I usually recommend, mostly because of their simplicity. Chatter is the current addon that I am using. The buttons for chat are removed, the mouse's scroll wheel moves chat up or down, and the detached text input bar allows me to fit the Chatter window snugly into the corner of the main bottom bar. The learning curve on inputing text directly in front of me took a few hours of typing, but the result has been phenomenal and less intrusive than ever. Many players, including myself, consider the chat addon to be the most important addon. In the early days of WoW, the chat system was constrained and lacking in features - chat addons quickly made communication easier.
SexyMap is my map addon of choice. Many people are turned off by SexyMap because of the first preset that appears when the addon is first installed. I implore you to tinker around with the settings and shapes and create your own map. SexyMap is basically a platform for minimap development and allows wonderful flexibility when dealing with the size, shape, border textures and icons of your minimap.
The Bottom Line
I hope you all enjoyed that little peek into my mind when it comes to user interface development and creativity. I like using smaller, lightweight and customizable addons that fit together nicely and allow the whole package to come together seamlessly. My UI took me approximately two to three hours to perfect, mostly because I was just learning these addons and their configurations. There was at least a half hour of drawing boxes on a piece of paper to get everything just right, location wise.
But this column isn't about me! It's about you! So let's see all of those inventive, fun, and awesome user interfaces that you guys have come up with. Each week, I'd like to use a Reader's UI to learn an important lesson about user interface creation and, hopefully, help everyone have a better gameplay experience as their user interface and addons work for them and not just get in the way.
AddOns Discussed:
- Omen (Threat meters): Download at [Curse] or [WoWInterface]
- Skada (DPS/Healing/Threat meters): Download at [Curse] or [WoWInterface]
- kgPanels (UI Artwork): Download at [Curse] or [WoWInterface]
- Dominos (Action Bar Management): Download at [Curse] or [WoWInterface]
- ButtonFacade (Action Bar Button Artwork): Download at [Curse] or [WoWInterface]
- ShadowedUF (Unit Frames Addon): Download at [Curse] or [WoWInterface]
- Chatter (Chat Addon): Download at [Curse] or [WoWInterface]
- Prat 3.0 (Chat Addon): Download at [Curse] or [WoWInterface]
- SexyMap (Minimap Alternative): Download at [Curse]
Filed under: Add-Ons, Reader UI of the Week
Patch 5.4 patch notes
Virtual Realms feature revealed
The Proving Grounds are coming
The latest patch 5.4 news





Reader Comments (Page 2 of 5)
Richard Feb 9th 2010 7:17PM
2 things:
1. We need some enlarged images.
2. Can you publish your addons/settings somewhere for us? I know wow interface allows people to publish UI packages.
L Feb 9th 2010 7:25PM
100% agree, without raid or party frames, or healbot, dot/hot timers, combo point trackers, pet bars, etc. it is easy to have a minimalistic UI, I would love to see what your UI looks like in raid or an example of a good minimalistic raid UI (particularly for healing) I'm always looking for ways to make mine less crowded :)
L Feb 9th 2010 7:25PM
yeah I hit reply to the wrong comment, my bad was talking to the comment below
Sedirex Feb 9th 2010 7:18PM
Copypasting from a post I made on a different UI of the Week a while ago:
I'm sick of seeing UIs featured here that are nothing but the player sitting in Dalaran. What makes UIs cluttered is things like raid frames or DBM or SCT that appear in combat. Anyone could hide their action buttons out of combat and call it minimalist. The best UIs have things appear in logical places and look like they belong there. Unless this player really spends all his time flying in Crystalsong, this is a waste of a feature.
Avhi Feb 9th 2010 9:27PM
While he says it in kinda a harsh manner, I have to agree with Sedirex's opinion and aggravation. First: healing UIs tend to be more cluttered, and it is all the more important that we are at no point unable to reach a critical part of our UI. One of your DMB bars popped up underneath your chat log while on Lord Jax? Hope some other healer can see how close little Timmy is to blowing up your raid (I use this example because I have had it happen). And DBM is the most clutter-tastic Addon ever. Guaranteed to throw 14 timers, 2 bars, and 5 important messages up on your screen in at least 3 different location. In 5 years of playing WoW, I have to say my hate for a need for this addon has grown to ridiculous proportions.
I, too, am ready to see UI's of people in raid who are in the process of interacting with something other than the tree vendor in Dalaran. WTB screens of raid healers on boss fights.
MasterAsh Feb 10th 2010 12:21AM
Heh, I've never touched DBM; BigWigs all the way. And before an update a few patches ago, the default settings never got in my way. (After that update, getting everything back to where I was used to seeing it was simple.)
Shiro_Shishi Feb 10th 2010 3:38AM
But these pics are from Silvermoon City...
Descender|LE Feb 10th 2010 9:07AM
@Sedirex and Ahvi:
What about a healing UI in use in a 40-man battleground? That oughta show you how much a UI is cluttered, right?
I'm a minimalist, and I love having things hidden that I don't need. Action bar paging, transparent actionbars that don't show up until moused over, Omen and Recount hidden until I'm either 1) in combat, or 2) toggle them, and even Sexymap turned into a minimal square with all the buttons hidden until mouseover, and even then most of them are caught by Titanpanel so you don't have to see them. Though clever use of say... an off-center Grid that uses some pretty small squares and mouseover macros, you can REALLY shrink down how much of your UI you have to see to heal effectively.
My favorite mouseover macros (I find them more reliable than Clique or Vuhdo since my four healing spells as a Pally are all on buttons very close to my movement keys) are this:
#showtooltip
/cast [target=mouseover,help,nodead][help,nodead][]
I use this for Flash of Light, Holy Light, Holy Shock, and even Cleanse to quickly heal and remove debuffs (I use the Cleanse one to help remove debuffs even while tanking). It will FIRST check to see if you have a mouseover target. This can be either them in the playing field, or their grid icon/party frame. If your mouseover target is a friendly (the 'help' part) and not dead (nodead), it casts your spell on them. If you have no mouseover target, or your mouseover target is an enemy or dead, it casts it on your current target. If you have no target, either mouseover or otherwise, or both of those targets are unfriendly, it casts on you.
EXTREMELY helpful, requires just a little bit of setup for your healing spells (I've used it on my Disc Priest for Flash Heal, Dispel Magic, Penance, Power Word: Shield, you name it) which can generally be done with Copy/paste, and removes the need for any kind of click-cast addon which removes some memory usage. And so long as your party/raid frames are big enough that you can see your targets, but still small and out of the way, even your Healing UI can be minimalistic.
(On an unrelated note, you can also use that mouseover macro for harming spells. Change "help" to "harm". I use it for mouseover Devastate on my Prot Warrior).
alcapawn Feb 11th 2010 5:54AM
It's been quiet a while since I played my resto shaman but when I raided with him I think I found a pretty decent way to unclutter a healing ui.
Here's a shot from a Sartharion-run, I know it's not showing DBM or SCT but it's in a raid setting and should give you a hint of what it can do. http://imgur.com/7urdu
I basically made sure to have ALL my necessary skills keybound and memorized, and with some complementary clique I could hide my actionbars altogether. That frees up a whole lot of space and gave me more room for the unitframe-cluster. Which is basically me to the left, target to the right, focus on top left and raid in the middle.
I think it looks pretty nice, and there's really not a ton of stuff all over the place. I think most people could really do without actionbars, it's not like we're clicking away at them most of the time anyway, and if you are, you probably shouldn't be.
HHUK Feb 9th 2010 7:19PM
Make it available, fully pre-setup and I might even use it on my Paladin. ;)
byoonie Feb 9th 2010 7:27PM
I would love to see what your UI looks like in combat (buffs, debuffs, floating combat text, etc). As for right now, your UI looks amazing!
Zyxt Feb 10th 2010 4:18PM
Would you be willing to upload your "UI pack" to Curse in case someone wanted to download it? I know I'd like to try your UI on for size.
Kek Feb 9th 2010 7:33PM
Yeah, count me in as another who would love to try your UI. I've gotten addon crazy as of late and my screen is a complete mess.
Razorlution Feb 9th 2010 7:32PM
You have just made me re-do my entire set-up...and for that...I am HAPPY!!! Great Work!!
Pyromelter Feb 9th 2010 7:51PM
The biggest thing with UI's is how well they perform in raids and battlegrounds. A UI that does not show you in combat, in a raid or a battleground, it really is pointless. If you are just sitting in silvermoon, you might as well go with the standard UI. It's nice to see a UI out of combat while solo as a base point for comparison. But what are you using to track your cooldowns? Watcher? ForteXorcist? OmniCC? How do you track your class-specific buffs (as opposed to genreal buffs which i see you track with Elkanos - a fine choice i might add)? What about procs, how are you tracking art of war assuming you have a ret spec? Are you using a Scrolling combat text? I see you have protection spells up there... so sure, omen is great for a tank. But what about threatplates? Omen (as far as I know) only tracks the mob you are currently targeting, whereas tidyplates/threatplates can give you a visual cue to every mob on your screen.
I always look at so-called "clean" UI's with skepticism. Expect many of the rest of the people who are UI junkies to do the same, and please include any UI with combat in-raid and/or in-battleground/arena scenarios. Thanks
Vulchanus Feb 9th 2010 8:36PM
Totally unecessary the way you commented his post...
Sounds to me like a troller...
Mike Feb 9th 2010 8:09PM
Peronsally, I like watching my actionbars to see cooldowns. Oh, and the buff box shows me pretty clearly when procs are active, and combat text actually tells me right when they proc. As for threat, party member frames glow a nice brilliant yellow, and occasionally red, when they build aggro, telling me exactly who needs to be saved.
Please, if you're going to be sceptical about what addons he's not using, at least talk about addons that don't replicate already existing functions.
Pyromelter Feb 9th 2010 8:28PM
Nothing wrong with watching your action bars for cooldowns. Except that when your action bars are at the bottom of the screen, and you are a tank, and you have to have a lot of raid awareness...
The buff bars that he has are similar to what I run, and they are just fine and dandy making sure you have all the right buffs. But are you going to scan a huge list of in-combat buffs to tell you when art of war procs, or killing machine, or missile barrage/brain freeze/hot streak, or slice n dice, or any number of class specific buffs/procs? What about debuffs on the boss, your judgements, thunderclap, bleed effects, on and on...
There are plenty of addons that overlap functions that are highly useful. Needtoknow, classtimer, forteXorcist, and dottimer are 4 that come to mind. Sure you can track your buffs/debuffs on the unit frames and basic buff list, but some debuffs are much more important than others.
In any case, the point about my post was not just to say "use a SS in combat," it was specifically requesting that UI's be displayed not only in combat, but in a raid, bg, or arena, with appropriate descriptions of how you track the things you need to track. Nothing wrong with using omnicc on your action bars to track your cooldowns, but as far as I can tell, he doesn't have any method to tracking anything except the buff frames and the threat meter.
Thyrial Feb 9th 2010 8:47PM
Considering he uses Dominos I will venture a guess that he also uses Inline Aura which displays various proc/buff information on your action bars. (I say that because Dominos had it built in at one point and most people using it became used to the functionality) For example for DKs it shows time left on diseases in the Icy Touch/Plague Strike buttons, displays time left on Art of War in the FoL/Exo buttons. I personally love it because not only does it give me a ton of valuable information but it takes absolutely zero screen space.
Vulchanus Feb 9th 2010 7:54PM
I liked your UI and I also use SUF, would you mind to make a detailed post on how to mess up with SUF configuration?
I mean, I find hard to move the frames through the screen as I couldn't find a way to move them with my mouse... Good post btw...