Totem Talk: Restoration addons and macros, Page 2
Like macros, addons have evolved over time. The scope of what they can and cannot do has changed many times over. There are several addons that you may find useful, while it will largely depend on preference. I will highlight some of the more popular ones, as well as macros I have found useful.
Totem management
One of the most important features of our class is our totems. Finding a way to manage them effectively has always been a task. Recently, Blizzard has upgraded the in game user interface for better totem management, allowing us to group them into three pre-determined sets and also allowing us to drop all four schools of totems at once, eliminating the need for bulky macros. Some people still have trouble with the default UI for totems and look to addons to make it more to their liking.
Totem Timers
Totem Timers has been long at the forefront of shaman totem management. It provides movable bars for all four schools of totems as well as timers for each. It also allows you to quickly swap between all three pre-made totem sets, as well as
swapping individual totems from each school with as much ease as mousing over the current totem.
In addition to giving fast access to all of your totems and providing timers, the addon also tracks who is within range of each totem, so you know if you need to reposition your totems. You can see this in the image to the left, indicated by the red number inside of the totem icon. Not only does it track people in range of your totems but it also tracks people in range of fellow shamans in the group. So if you are running with multiple shamans, you can tell who needs what buff.
In addition to tracking totems, it tracks your self-resurrection timer as well as how many Ankhs you have available, your water and lightning shield charges as well as the charges, target and duration of Earth Shield. It can also manage your weapon imbues. When your totems or shields are about to expire, it will also give you a warning through various outputs of your choosing. You can also set it to alert you before a timer has run its course. The addon also tracks cooldowns on your abilities such as Fire Elemental Totem and Fire Nova. The addon has a lot of customizable features and is my totem manager of choice.
Other popular totem managers include:
Whether you're using the default totem UI or an addon, the key is finding one that works for you.
In the same vein is another up-and-coming addon that is in a beta phase right now. TotemRadius adds rings to the mini-map to show you who is in the affected range of totems. Like Totem Timers, it does track other shamans in the raid as well, but this one gives you a visual cue for placing your totems.
Shield management
Knowing when Water Shield has worn off or when Earth Shield is about to expire is very important. Many shaman-specific mods will inform you of this. Almost any totem management addon you find will indicate to you when your shields are about to expire. If you want to use the default UI for your totems or are just looking for something simplistic to give you a heads up when your shields drop, ShieldsUp might be for you. To quote the site description:
It does just what it promises and does it very well in a compact package.
Bar mods
Another important set of mods is bar modification. While the default UI has provided us with ample space for our buttons, sometimes being able to modify when they are viewable or move them to better suit your playstyle can be very important. There are quite a few out there that will do this, so I will just highlight a couple.
Bartender is one of those mods that has been around for a long time. It is highly customizable and can be tailored to fit almost any playstyle. You can set conditionals to have only certain bars show in combat and out of combat, and you can adjust the look, grouping, size and reaction of any of the buttons and bars.
Dominos is another big name in the action bar addon game, and it allows a similar set of customizable options to Bartender. It is also the addon that comes packaged with the Razer Naga mouse.
When using action bar mods, you should also consider investing a little time in a cooldown tracking mod. OmniCC places the cooldowns of each ability in their action bar and is compatible with most action bar addons. Another mod I've found useful for cooldowns is OmniCC pulse, which flares the action bar button when a cooldown for a spell is over. It helps with a subtle visual cue to let you know your spell is off cooldown.
There are various action bar and ability cooldown addons. Spend some time poking around sites like Curse and Wowinterface and find ones that work for you and that you feel comfortable with.
Unit and raid frames
Moving your unit and raid frames can be a healer's greatest asset. One of the largest problems a healer has is healer tunnel vision. Often we get so consumed in our healing that we lose sight of our own health -- and as the saying goes, you can't heal when you're dead. One of the things that a lot of healers find useful is addons that bring the healer's health to a point of high visibility. Some prefer heads-up displays or HuDs such as Icehud or Archud, while others perfer to use unit frame addons like Pitbull or the various skins of oUF like Diablo Orbs to draw attention to their health.
Keeping an eye on your health is as important as keeping an eye on the raid's health. When tracking the raid's health, you can certainly use the default game UI, but some find the lack of information or options limiting. Most unit frame addons like Pitbull will supply you with raid frames. Again, there are many out there, so I'll only talk about a couple of them.
Grid has been around for a very, very long time. This addon allows you a large amount of control over the information that is displayed, as well as the visual presentation. The addon allows you to see players' health (or health deficit), incoming healing amounts from other healers (as well as yourself), mana and energy and various debuffs. On top of this, you can add various debuffs and buffs to the display. This can be extremely helpful when trying to keep track of debuffs and debuffs such as Valithria Dreamwalker's Emerald Vigor. You can even program it to track stacks of Earth Shield and to show how much time is left on Riptide on targets. A full guide to the addon and its various components can be found here. Grid is my pick for raid unit frames.
Another contender for superiority is VuhDo. This is another extremely powerful raid frame addon that not only allows you to track the raid as well as buffs, debuffs, health and energy, but also has the added functionality to program healing spells to various mouse clicks and modifiers to accompany those mouse clicks. This functions similar to the way Clique works. This added functionality has made this addon a favorite among healers from every class. Like Grid, this is highly customizable; a full guide to setup and options can be found here.
While these do take some time to set up, the payoff is well worth it. Whether you choose to use the default UI raid frames or one of the various mods such as Pitbull, Grid or VuhDo, take some time to find one you feel comfortable with. The amount of information they give you as a healer is insanely valuable, and it helps to keep those you need to heal in easy-to-reach groupings.
Do you have any addons that you've found particularly useful? Feel free to leave them in comments or email them directly to me. I will make sure they get posted and that credit is given.
That is it for this week, folks. Until next time.
Show your totemic mastery by reading Totem Talk, whether reading Mike Sacco's Elemental edition, Joe Perez's coverage of Restoration or Rich Maloy's Enhancement edition, we have you covered.
Totem management
One of the most important features of our class is our totems. Finding a way to manage them effectively has always been a task. Recently, Blizzard has upgraded the in game user interface for better totem management, allowing us to group them into three pre-determined sets and also allowing us to drop all four schools of totems at once, eliminating the need for bulky macros. Some people still have trouble with the default UI for totems and look to addons to make it more to their liking.
Totem Timers
Totem Timers has been long at the forefront of shaman totem management. It provides movable bars for all four schools of totems as well as timers for each. It also allows you to quickly swap between all three pre-made totem sets, as well as
swapping individual totems from each school with as much ease as mousing over the current totem. In addition to giving fast access to all of your totems and providing timers, the addon also tracks who is within range of each totem, so you know if you need to reposition your totems. You can see this in the image to the left, indicated by the red number inside of the totem icon. Not only does it track people in range of your totems but it also tracks people in range of fellow shamans in the group. So if you are running with multiple shamans, you can tell who needs what buff.
In addition to tracking totems, it tracks your self-resurrection timer as well as how many Ankhs you have available, your water and lightning shield charges as well as the charges, target and duration of Earth Shield. It can also manage your weapon imbues. When your totems or shields are about to expire, it will also give you a warning through various outputs of your choosing. You can also set it to alert you before a timer has run its course. The addon also tracks cooldowns on your abilities such as Fire Elemental Totem and Fire Nova. The addon has a lot of customizable features and is my totem manager of choice.
Other popular totem managers include:
Whether you're using the default totem UI or an addon, the key is finding one that works for you.
In the same vein is another up-and-coming addon that is in a beta phase right now. TotemRadius adds rings to the mini-map to show you who is in the affected range of totems. Like Totem Timers, it does track other shamans in the raid as well, but this one gives you a visual cue for placing your totems.
Shield management
Knowing when Water Shield has worn off or when Earth Shield is about to expire is very important. Many shaman-specific mods will inform you of this. Almost any totem management addon you find will indicate to you when your shields are about to expire. If you want to use the default UI for your totems or are just looking for something simplistic to give you a heads up when your shields drop, ShieldsUp might be for you. To quote the site description:
It features an easy-to-read text display that shows the number of charges remaining on each active shield, as well as the name of the last person you cast Earth Shield on. Other features include a visual indication when another shaman overwrites your Earth Shield, text and audio alerts when one of your shields expires or is removed, and a condensed display while solo (or for shamans without Earth Shield).
It does just what it promises and does it very well in a compact package.
Bar mods
Another important set of mods is bar modification. While the default UI has provided us with ample space for our buttons, sometimes being able to modify when they are viewable or move them to better suit your playstyle can be very important. There are quite a few out there that will do this, so I will just highlight a couple.
Bartender is one of those mods that has been around for a long time. It is highly customizable and can be tailored to fit almost any playstyle. You can set conditionals to have only certain bars show in combat and out of combat, and you can adjust the look, grouping, size and reaction of any of the buttons and bars.

Dominos is another big name in the action bar addon game, and it allows a similar set of customizable options to Bartender. It is also the addon that comes packaged with the Razer Naga mouse.
When using action bar mods, you should also consider investing a little time in a cooldown tracking mod. OmniCC places the cooldowns of each ability in their action bar and is compatible with most action bar addons. Another mod I've found useful for cooldowns is OmniCC pulse, which flares the action bar button when a cooldown for a spell is over. It helps with a subtle visual cue to let you know your spell is off cooldown.
There are various action bar and ability cooldown addons. Spend some time poking around sites like Curse and Wowinterface and find ones that work for you and that you feel comfortable with.
Unit and raid frames
Moving your unit and raid frames can be a healer's greatest asset. One of the largest problems a healer has is healer tunnel vision. Often we get so consumed in our healing that we lose sight of our own health -- and as the saying goes, you can't heal when you're dead. One of the things that a lot of healers find useful is addons that bring the healer's health to a point of high visibility. Some prefer heads-up displays or HuDs such as Icehud or Archud, while others perfer to use unit frame addons like Pitbull or the various skins of oUF like Diablo Orbs to draw attention to their health.

Keeping an eye on your health is as important as keeping an eye on the raid's health. When tracking the raid's health, you can certainly use the default game UI, but some find the lack of information or options limiting. Most unit frame addons like Pitbull will supply you with raid frames. Again, there are many out there, so I'll only talk about a couple of them.
Grid has been around for a very, very long time. This addon allows you a large amount of control over the information that is displayed, as well as the visual presentation. The addon allows you to see players' health (or health deficit), incoming healing amounts from other healers (as well as yourself), mana and energy and various debuffs. On top of this, you can add various debuffs and buffs to the display. This can be extremely helpful when trying to keep track of debuffs and debuffs such as Valithria Dreamwalker's Emerald Vigor. You can even program it to track stacks of Earth Shield and to show how much time is left on Riptide on targets. A full guide to the addon and its various components can be found here. Grid is my pick for raid unit frames.

Another contender for superiority is VuhDo. This is another extremely powerful raid frame addon that not only allows you to track the raid as well as buffs, debuffs, health and energy, but also has the added functionality to program healing spells to various mouse clicks and modifiers to accompany those mouse clicks. This functions similar to the way Clique works. This added functionality has made this addon a favorite among healers from every class. Like Grid, this is highly customizable; a full guide to setup and options can be found here.
While these do take some time to set up, the payoff is well worth it. Whether you choose to use the default UI raid frames or one of the various mods such as Pitbull, Grid or VuhDo, take some time to find one you feel comfortable with. The amount of information they give you as a healer is insanely valuable, and it helps to keep those you need to heal in easy-to-reach groupings.
Do you have any addons that you've found particularly useful? Feel free to leave them in comments or email them directly to me. I will make sure they get posted and that credit is given.
That is it for this week, folks. Until next time.






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Zuktaw Apr 6th 2010 3:12PM
I started using healbot when I ventured into healing on my druid & have set it up to heal on my shaman as well. Something I think it's missing (and every healing addon as far as I can tell) is whether or not the targets are in range. It'd be nice to have one that noted in/out of range.
I love healbot, I've got it configured to greater/chain/lesser heal w/o modifications & earthshield/riptide with shift
I use decursive for purging
Pyromelter Apr 6th 2010 3:28PM
Pretty sure that grid has a default setting where characters in range are lit up, and out of range are greyed out. Haven't been able to figure that out on pitbull however. But anyway, when i watch raid vids of people with grid, you can see the units on the raid frames become colored/greyed based on distance.
Miri Apr 6th 2010 3:30PM
This is how I have my shammy set up as well.
My UI has a totem "bar" that I can watch for totem time (same for DK runes) that sits right above my character bar, so it doesn't clutter the screen. UI also has a totem sorter built in. I just flip through my 3 "configured" totem bars, and then I can flip through the various totems as well.
Healbot has all my healing spells (and shields) bound to it--and I use decursive for cleansing...
Microtonal Apr 6th 2010 3:40PM
Healbot does indeed have an option to gray out targets that are out of range.
Pyromelter Apr 6th 2010 3:41PM
Funny thing about decursive, since my mage is a main, when i hit 80 I downloaded it... and absolutely hated it. Seemed too cumbersome, unwieldy, and just excessive. Pitbull defaults are set such that if someone gets a debuff you can remove, it will create an aura around the unit (in the case of a mage, if someone has a curse, their unit frame will have a bright purple glow). So i just bound my Remove Curse button to Mouse 4 using Clique, and that's how I remove curses. I do similar things with my shaman with poison removals, bound to Mouse 4, so when someone gets poisoned, they look all green and poisony, and I just hit that mouse button to remove that aura.
I believe grid is also similarly configured out-of-the-box. Clique + grid/pitbull/whatever seems to be much better IMO than decursive, if for no other reason than it means you just need one less addon.
BigBadGooz Apr 6th 2010 3:42PM
Healbot isn't a great program IMHO but I would use other things
Abhoth Apr 6th 2010 3:49PM
I absolutely love Healbot. I've got everything I can possibly have tied into it. Mine is set up so that targets within range are dull, targets taking damage are bright, and targets out of range are blacked out. I can't quite remember exactly where you have to go for those options with the latest version of Healbot, but just remember that sometimes things that don't look like it are buttons in the options. I even use Healbot on my non-healer toons; on my warrior it is there for Vigilance and Intervene, Misdirect for my hunter, Tricks of the Trade for my rogue, Bubbles and Righteous Defense on my paladin. For the dps toons it's just kind of nifty to have, but for tanks it makes some things downright amazing. I've been trying to find a way to program in assist on right click and taunt their target for those people who don't know how to manage their threat or attack the tanks' targets but haven't found a way for it to work yet.
Dicon Apr 6th 2010 6:26PM
@ Abhoth
"I've been trying to find a way to program in assist on right click and taunt their target for those people who don't know how to manage their threat or attack the tanks' targets but haven't found a way for it to work yet"
Did you try setting it up as a macro and then assigning it to the macro section in the spell options, i haven't tryed it but sure this would work for you
epic Apr 7th 2010 7:06PM
old healbot is not new healbot...unless you are actively evaluating it then you're gonna miss a ton of updates..out of the box and on the fly customization with healbot is much easier and easy to fix if something goes wrong...grid's menu alone is the only reason i relegate grid/clique to 25 mans where i need snappy performance and efficient use of space but in 10s and 5s where the demands are not so stringent healbot shines...and i'm sure if i put a lil more effort into i could configure healbot into a very grid like appearance but i like and appreciate the differences...also helping new healers configure healbot is a snap with the share feature...as to vuhdo while i do love the amount of options and customization availible and also its ease of use compared to grid it almost grinds me to a halt in 25s...that is probably more my issue then that of the addon itself but i suggest trying it if does not affect your performance to the degree it does for me it really well designed and has options for days
Pallycat Apr 6th 2010 3:18PM
I've been toying with my resto shaman alt a bit. I've a disc priest and resto druid that I've been using Grid on since BC, but I can't find how to add Earth Shield tracker to it. Am I blind or do I need yet another plugin?
Joe Perez Apr 6th 2010 3:22PM
if you go into options under auras, buffs, new buff you have to type in Earth Shield there. Then you can go to frame layout and set where you want the buff to show. If you want this week I can make a video on how to set up buffs and debuffs in grid. Would that be something you're interested in?
Valdorin Apr 6th 2010 3:32PM
A grid customisation guide would be great. And not just for shaman
Eyhk Apr 6th 2010 3:45PM
@Valdorin
Do a search, they mentioned a simple youtube video on how to configure Grid some time ago. Or you can search Youtube as well.
Valdorin Apr 6th 2010 4:04PM
@ehyk
oh i've got my grid set up. I was merely pointing out it would be a good article, as many people seem to find it tough to get to grips with initially
Duulket Apr 6th 2010 10:57PM
@Joe
I would love a video guide to setting up grid for healing especially on my shaman.
Sorcefire Apr 6th 2010 3:27PM
Grid is a godsend for unit frames, but it bothers me that so many users dot take the time to explore the many options it has.
I see people running with the default layout, appearance, and notices. It has SO many more options which show a ton of information and, if you are into UI design, make it easy to integrate.
katyanna Apr 6th 2010 3:58PM
I went from Grid to Vuhdo and I have to say Vuhdo's options are way more self explanatory and easy to get to than Grid's. I was skeptical at first but Vuhdo is SO user friendly so you CAN access everything it has to offer. It's the ONLY add on I have for healing other than Decursive and it's all I need.
Pallycat Apr 6th 2010 3:31PM
Thanks, I looked into the options and I found out how to do it!
Zuktaw Apr 6th 2010 3:33PM
@pyromelter Cool, I'll check grid out...come to think of it, I should look further into healbot & see if that's an option first, LOL
RG Apr 6th 2010 3:40PM
On my healbot, which I have not made many changes to other than set the skin to raid, it greys out people who are not in range.