Totem Talk: Leveling as restoration

Want to be a sultan of swing healing? A champion of Chain Heal? Totem Talk: Restoration will show you how. Brought to you by Joe Perez, otherwise known as Lodur from World of Matticus and the For The Lore podcast.
Three years ago if you had mentioned to anyone you were going to level as a healing spec, they would have scoffed at you and called you ambitious or question your sanity. It was not a very common occurrence and if someone mentioned that was how they leveled, it was often asked how long it took. Two years ago it was slightly more common to see people leveling as a healing spec. With the amount of quests and gear available for each dungeon in Burning Crusade, healers were in hot demand to go forth with a heroic party and clear these zones out. Leveling was still slow going when compared to DPS, but you could do it. When Wrath of the Lich King came out things were a lot easier for healers than in previous content if they decided to level in their healing spec, but it was still slower than if you were a DPS spec. Instances still were healer friendly, but while questing there were several NPC that you just couldn't kill without being DPS. Now things have changed and it is easier than ever to level as a healer!
Three years ago if you had mentioned to anyone you were going to level as a healing spec, they would have scoffed at you and called you ambitious or question your sanity. It was not a very common occurrence and if someone mentioned that was how they leveled, it was often asked how long it took. Two years ago it was slightly more common to see people leveling as a healing spec. With the amount of quests and gear available for each dungeon in Burning Crusade, healers were in hot demand to go forth with a heroic party and clear these zones out. Leveling was still slow going when compared to DPS, but you could do it. When Wrath of the Lich King came out things were a lot easier for healers than in previous content if they decided to level in their healing spec, but it was still slower than if you were a DPS spec. Instances still were healer friendly, but while questing there were several NPC that you just couldn't kill without being DPS. Now things have changed and it is easier than ever to level as a healer!
At the end of Burning Crusade, we saw magical damage and healing evolve into spell power. At the time a lot of healers were upset at the change, but when WotLK was released, we began to understand why. Hybrids especially felt the ease of going into Northrend when you get your first kill quests and just pulling out the damage spells without ever changing specs. The mobs died, quests were completed and you were able to carry on at a relatively healthy pace. While you might not have kept pace with pure DPS classes, but you did not have to ask for help with quests and elites as often as you did in BC. With wrath came even more dungeons and more quests to go along with those dungeons, as a healer it was very possible to sit in trade chat in a city, or outside of any instance you wanted to run and advertise your services. Getting a dungeon group became even easier than before.
There are some things you need to know if you plan on leveling as a restoration shaman.
Questing
This is the staple mechanic of most games involving leveling, you should expect to spend at least a little time questing. Whether it is shooting boars with lightning or running messages between NPCs, a lot of good rewards and experience can be gained by questing. While you will mostly be doing the same quests as almost everyone else, shaman have some quests that you should invest a little time in completing. Da Voodoo is one of those quests every shaman whether alliance or horde should take some time and complete.
The quest is the third step in a three part chain beginning with Elemental Mastery. The quest starts with your shaman trainer at level 50 and it asks you to bring a sample of each element to Bath'rah the Windwatcher in Alterac Mountains. Collecting one of each element is easy enough and can be done by making a route of the circles of bindings in Arathi Highlands. After collecting a sample of all four elements, the troll shaman then asks you to bring him the reagents necessary to make a Spirit Totem. This is a kill quest and will lead you to the Western Plaguelands in order to find the necessary mobs. After obtaining the bear claws and spider eyes you return to the old shaman to begin Da Voodoo. The quest tasks you with going into the Sunken Temple to kill the six mini bosses and taking their feathers. After completing the task and gathering all the feathers you head back to the troll shaman for your reward. You have a choice of three items from this quest. Gloves, a staff or a trinket. If you plan on leveling as restoration the Enamored Water Spirit is worth it's weight in gold. Mana regen and downtime is always a concern, and this trinket will help with your mana regen while leveling quite a bit. To put it in perspective, Mana Spring, Rank 4 (level 56): 300 mana over 60 seconds, no cooldown, this trinket: 324 mana over 24 seconds, 3-minute cooldown. It does consume a trinket slot and when you use the item it will count as your water totem, but the benefit is noticeable especially when healing instances at lower levels. The trinket can see use well into your 70s.
Use the Looking for Dungeon tool
The addition of this tool into the game was one of the most encouraging changes for a player wanting to level as restoration. The system itself can be used starting at level 15 and will pair you up with a group for instances appropriate for your level. This makes it very easy for you to experience the various instances and to begin to get a feel for what it is to be a healer. When you enter the queue as a healer even as a lower level character, you wont have to wait too long before a group is found for you and you are whisked away. The tool helps you out in a few ways. First it provides an environment for you to learn your role as a healer. While at lower levels this will be less dynamic as your healing spells will be limited, it gives you time to learn each new healing tool as you receive it. Second it provides you with bonus experience. Not only do you get the benefit of an instance full of experience, but it gives you a nice bonus when the zone is successfully completed. Third If you grind instances, you will actually be well geared since the instances contain a lot good loot for your level. To help and speed up your leveling, get the quests associated with the instances of your level. This will add to your experience, gold and gear. The tool also provides you bonus gear. After a successful group you will receive a Satchel of Helpful Goods. The contents of the bag constantly shift as you level but it can provide everything from cloaks and armor to trinkets and rings, each a blue quality item with random stats and enchantments. While it might not always be ideal for your class, often times it will be a nice upgrade for a little while. If it is not useful to you, the items can be sold to a vendor for some easy gold which is always welcome.
Expect downtime
From level 1 all they way to level 80 you should expect downtime. Whether you are questing or using the dungeon finder you are going to spend a lot of time sitting and drinking. The truth is even with talents a lot of our spells are not as mana efficient as some of your healing companions, and as a result early levels as a resto shaman will find you bleeding mana. Make sure you always have a at least a full stack of water of the appropriate level and restock whenever you are at an inn or town. You should also keep stacks of mana potions of the appropriate level in stock, especially if you plan on running instances as a healer. This goes a long way to help keep you in the thick of battle and earning experience rather than sitting and waiting for your blue bar to fill back up. This is especially true of the lower levels where your healing spells are very limited. As you gain levels though, mana efficiency will begin to improve and you will notice a steady decline in your downtime.
Use all of your tools
At level 1 you start the game with Lightning Bolt and Healing Wave, one damage spell and one healing spell much like any other healer. Unlike other healers though you have some unique tricks to help you while you level. Totems present some interesting solutions to some questing situations, for example Stoneclaw Totem. This totem is largely forgotten in the end game, but while leveling this little gem can make life so much easier. Rank 1 of the totem is obtained at level 8, and can be used very effectively as a shaman version of a smoke bomb. If you find yourself in a situation where you may need to run away, or if you need something to stop hitting you for a few seconds to cast a heal on yourself or to get that last cast of lightning bolt to kill the mob, this totem can buy you those precious seconds to get the job done. Your totems allow you a certain versatility while leveling that other classes do not have. It is easy to forget about them while leveling but you should try to use them as much as possible. As you level pay attention to the new spells and abilities you gain. You will find as a hybrid you can do more than just heal even if that is what you want to do. Searing Totem can be just as useful in a group as it is when soloing, don't be afraid to use it. Same goes for Lightning Bolt, if healing is light in the group feel free to toss some lightning to help DPS. Remember you have access to various resist totems as well and be ready to keep them on hand. You would be shocked at how helpful they can be in some of dungeons while leveling or when dealing with some quest mobs. You have a lot of unique tools in your belt, take time to get acquainted with them and be sure to use them all on your journey to 80
Filed under: Shaman, (Shaman) Totem Talk






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Samuel Mar 9th 2010 8:13PM
I levelled Resto and found it very easy. First there is the earth shield. This thing makes you virtually indestructable soloing. Then, as with all specs, you have your elementals to help you solo group quests.
If you are alliance, pick up the axe from the Stalvan line in Duskwood. This thing can receive BC enchants (like 30 int) and will last you well into Outland.
Syme Mar 10th 2010 11:36AM
I leveled resto in 2005. Earth Shield certainly would have made it easier. But it was fun, so I didn't mind that it took a while.
Basically, I was in an all-Tauren guild, and all the druids wanted to be feral. Even looking outside the guild, I could count the priests I'd seen for the first few months on one hand.
Sterdoker Mar 9th 2010 8:21PM
A small note on leveling as a healer, for any class:
Don't plan your leveling as "it's ok, I can queue for randoms". DON'T YOU EVER DO THAT.
I'm generally a patient guy, but trust me, it will test your sanity. Expect to face what I can only describe as (unintentional?) psychological pvp within your own faction.
If you have a friend playing a tank, however, it get's MUCH better.
Pfooti Mar 9th 2010 8:31PM
Yeah, I found it a lot easier to queue randoms as a tank than a healer. Really, if the tank is solid, the whole run is a cakewalk. But after suffering through warriors who couldn't find their thunderclap button, I try to avoid LFG pre-80.
Calybos Mar 9th 2010 8:35PM
I agree 100%.
Random PUGs are what convinced me, at level 72, to abandon my Discipline priest and swear off healing for good. It's not worth it.
Just solo your way around with quests, and maybe--MAYBE--do some healing with a few good friends.
Oriflame Mar 9th 2010 8:53PM
I have not had the random pug experience pre-80 while healing be quite that bad. Yes, the players often don't know what they are doing, but they have seldom been jerks. Its a little slower, but if you have some patience it can be a lot of fun.
BubblePriest Mar 9th 2010 8:54PM
My main character leveled by healing pugs (before random dungeons came out). I'm currently leveling a resto druid by running randoms. It can be done, and I find it exponentially more fun than questing.
I will concede that you have to be very proactive about keeping yourself alive. Too many healers rush in and try to save the group when the tank or dps do something stupid. Remember, you're the only one who can rez. If they're doing something that's going to result in a wipe, hang back and stay out of combat. They'll doubtless complain about it, but you can rez them and continue on your merry way.
Mandrill Mar 10th 2010 7:07AM
Eh, PuGs aren't so horrible for a healer. I've been levelling a Resto Shammy and a Prot Palli together (all PuGs, no quests from level 25 to 50 so far) and I find the common PuG nightmares to be much more tedious as a tank.
Niallus Mar 10th 2010 7:08AM
I hated healing random pugs while levelling until my brother started to play warcraft. He'd seen me on my orc warrior, and desperately wanted one for himself. So he rolled a tank. I went into a random pug with him as tank, me as healer, knowing he was going to be terrible. His first character, dungeon, and as a tank no less.
He surprised me. Never lost aggro the whole dungeon, waited for me to drink without needing to be asked, pulled lots but didn't go mad.
Absolute pleasure, we now on play those characters through random pugs, and is a great way for us to stay in touch while i am at university.
So yeah, get yourself a tank friend for maximum fun!
Mutak Mar 10th 2010 9:33AM
Meh. I've been leveling my resto shaman exclusively through random dungeon finder pugs and i've only been in 1 group that was absolutely terrible (but we still finished the dungeon).
I've had a few groups with people who had no patience with others - those groups do the worst. If you're here talking about how bad pugs are and how terrible your experiences have been with them, then you might want to think about the fact that you are the common thread running through all those pugs. Your attitude might be the real problem.
PodPeople Mar 10th 2010 11:02AM
I have to disagree, doing PuGs is the best way to go. I think it's the best way to learn how to better yourself in healing. if you can heal a bad PuG, then you know you're a good healer. yes it's nicer to have a group of friends and they all know how to play their roles, or at least a tank friend that's good at tanking. but then would you really be learning how to save a group when the Sh!t hits the fan? not likely.
nikdaheratik Mar 10th 2010 1:49PM
The problem isn't just the tank, it's the general amount of stoopid. If you have a DK tank, for example, there's a 80% chance that they have very little tanking gear, and a lousy spec. Seriously, I have ran into 5-6 of them that are specced dual-wield frost without picking up Frost Strike, or any of the tanking talents there. And you have to explain them that diseases are important.
But you get a warrior or a druid tank and you're golden.
And then there's the DPS that think "well it's no biggy if I pick up aggro, I'll just DPS harder!". I mean, you have feign death, vanish, iceblock, frost nova, fade, etc and all they do is just try to make the mob madder at them.
Then you get someone who is on their 2nd alt or something and they know how to at least keep the mob busy if they're forced to solo it because the tank sucks.
On the bright side, I've been through this all before during BC, so it's no biggy. Just tell them to stop being stupid and attack the same target and it's usually okay by the end of the run. Or the tank dies alot because he completely sucks and you just gotta find another one.
Biskit333 Mar 9th 2010 8:22PM
I have been leveling as resto since 15 (now 45). I've pretty much just hung out in Org or TB while waiting for queues, although I'm sure questing in the waits would be more efficient. I wanted a break from questing, and I had never played a healer, so it was a good fit. I am planning to do some questing in Hellfire and Borean to get some upgrades before trying the more difficult expansion dungeons, but other than that it is healing full steam ahead!
Foxfire Mar 9th 2010 8:29PM
Off-class, but I levelled as a full restoration druid about four years ago, maybe five. Total playtime to 60 was about 19 days, with a full 51 pt talent tree.
I did have a lot of fun getting there though :D
Alex Mar 9th 2010 8:36PM
This is really kind of funny. I just started a resto shaman a couple of days okay (on Monday the 1st to be exact) and two blogs that I read happened to post about resto shaman leveling. The other blog (www.restoshamanflow.com, I think wow.com has linked there in the past) even started a whole leveling series, and already has posts about gear, race and the first 9 levels. Anyway, both of these sources are very nice, and gave me a couple of tips to use in the upcoming levels - I'm level 29 right now - but, I have a couple of things that I'd like to add.
First of all, about money. Don't expect to make money leveling. I had the benefit of having an old character on the server that was able to provide me with some starting gold. And I'm sure that most of you are planning on sending some heirloom items to your new character. But for those of you who cannot do these thing, you will find your self strapped for cash often. You won't have the source of income that questing provides, and your repair and training bills will slowly add up, leaving you with little extra money to buy less necessary things.
Secondly, the gear. Unless you have a higher level character providing you with some gear, whether it be heirloom or not, you will find yourself wearing mostly cloth. Most leather gear that you find will not have the spells that you need in order to heal, requiring you to scrap together an outfit from gear meant for other classes. I've heard that this improves at level 40, when we get mail. But I can't say from experience. Also don't expect the rewards for using the Looking for Dungeon tool will be any better. I've found that most of what I get is completely useless to me as a healer.
Anyway, I hope that everyone has a great time leveling their new shamans.
Alex Mar 9th 2010 8:40PM
I don't know why I typed okay instead of ago. And I'm sorry that there isn't any space between paragraphs
Dboy Mar 9th 2010 9:24PM
I disagree about the money point.
If gold is an issue, grab yourself two gathering professions at the earliest opportunity and auction house away.
On my server, if you sell your herbs/leather/ore at the right time, you can make about 30g a stack for even the early level farmed materials.
If that isn't enough to sustain your levelling experience, then you're doing something wrong.
Philosoraptor Mar 9th 2010 9:22PM
As far as being in want of gold while leveling, the best solution is a smart choice of professions. If you do not have a higher level character's income on that server then the absolute best decision you could make is to level with two gathering professions and avoid crafting professions like the plague.
Leveling crafting professions will eat into your pocketbook faster than anything else, even if you level with the corresponding gathering profession. You should instead pick two gathering professions and just gather while waiting for the dungeon queue. Mining is by far the most lucrative, with Herbalism ahead of skinning by a fair margin (especially since skinning requires a lot of killing, which we are avoiding by leveling in dungeons in the first place).
I followed this strategy when I started fresh on another server after a year hiatus between 2.3 and not too long before 3.1. Just gathering all the herbs and ore I saw while questing netted me enough gold to easily pay for epic flying well before hitting 70 and buy myself a bunch of BoE epics at 80.
As always, your milage may vary, but I highly recommend this profession strategy. If you want to have a crafting profession it is best to wait until 80, when gold is easier to come by, and look up a power-leveling guide. If you do already have an 80 to send your new toon gold, you can do whatever you want with your professions, but I implore you consider the benefits of gathering while leveling. As an aside for classes other than healers, the Herbalism perk Lifebloom is a godsend while leveling.
Happy WoWing!
Alex Mar 9th 2010 9:32PM
Sorry, I should have clarified. I don't believe that you can't make money while leveling, in fact I normally never have any issues with buying things such as mounts, cold weather flying or whatever else. What I meant is that if you level exclusively using the looking for dungeon tool, you won't find nearly enough items to makes gold. And you can't gather leather, herbs or ore while sitting in a city waiting to make it to the front of the queue.
Although now that I think about it, maybe I'll get mining and travel around Durotar gathering copper to sell while I wait for a dungeon...
Cetha Mar 9th 2010 10:07PM
skinning is great for levelling up through instances. there are A LOT Of instances with mobs you can skin in them, and most people aren't skinners, so it levels itself.