The Light and How to Swing It: Gearing a new holy paladin at 80, part 1

I feel like raiding in Wrath of the Lich King has started towards a slight lull in the past week or two. Many high-end guilds are stuck at 11/12 heroic kills in ICC, looking across the gaping chasm that is the Lich King fight on heroic, focusing on the few guilds who have managed to topple Arthas for good. I also find that most of the casual guilds have also settled into their niches, killing those Icecrown bosses that they have the time or raw numbers to defeat and being content with that. With only Ruby Sanctum to look forward to in terms of remaining raids and graduation season already started, I can already feel the post-expansion exodus ready to begin.
Guilds begin losing members faster than they can be replaced, and recruiting becomes a daily burden instead of a monthly chore. While all of this may sound like bad news, there is some hope in this transition period between the final tier of Wrath and the first tier of Cataclysm. Players will be using the free time to level alts, and I have already seen a deluge of newly minted toons appear in my guild this month. With any luck, there are future holy paladins in this mix, and in a few weeks' time, we'll have new brothers and sisters in arms. However, before they're truly ready to take up the mantle of keeping a tank alive through 3 stacks of Festergut's Inhaled Blight?, they're going to need some sweet gear to give them the throughput and longevity to pull it off.
The secret to gearing a holy paladin
I'm going to share with you my favorite trick when helping my friends and guildmates work on gearing their newly 80 holy paladins. You already have enough throughput. That's it. The scaling of Holy Light in a post-Blessing of Light world coupled with the ability of Beacon of Light to double our potency ensures that we'll never be caught without the HPS to keep our party alive. The spellpower that we pick up passively on all healing gear will be more than enough to boost our heals to an appropriate level. While other healers are forced to focus on mixing between regeneration and throughput, we're able to put all of our efforts into maximizing our mana pool. Due to the holy paladin love affair with intellect, we even have a super simple strategy for making sure we can chain-cast Holy Light for days.
Similarly to how tanks like advertise their total HP when trying to flaunt their skills, and how a PUG leader may only care about your GearScore, holy paladins are often weighted based on the sheer amount of mana we have in our pool. Because of spells like Divine Plea, Seal of Wisdom, and Replenishment, which all scale off of the total amount of mana we have, we can focus on stacking our intellect and letting Holy Light do all of the heavy lifting.
Where to start
The easiest way to start working on your holy paladin's gear is to start healing via the dungeon finder and simply picking up any spellpower gear that you find along the way. I recommend buying several Brilliant Autumn's Glow or Brilliant Sun Crystal gems and having them ready to put into any new gear that you acquire. While you might get lucky with a few chance drops in the random dungeons, I like to focus on the guaranteed gear that comes from the various factions' reputation awards and Emblems of Triumph. You should ensure you're friendly with every major Northrend faction, and that you wear their tabard while running dungeons. We'll be shooting for gear with haste on it first, which will allow us to decrease our Time Until Healed value. TUH is the key weakness of a holy paladin in a situation where multiple targets are taking damage, and so by trying to pick up haste gear first, we'll be able ensure that even the lowly rogues stay alive.
Argent Crusade
The first faction you'll want to work on is the Argent Crusade. Because the AC is very pro-paladin, they've got items of interest to a fledgling holy paladin at every single reputation level. Once you're honored, you'll be able to acquire the Standard Issue Legguards, which are very solid healing pants featuring both haste and a socket. While there is a mail helm you can acquire at revered, you're better off saving your gold until you're exalted and buying the Helm of Purified Thoughts. That's not all, though, the Argent Crusade vendor will also offer you a Signet of Hopeful Light, which means that there are actually two awesome epic items that you'll get for working for Tirion's crew.
Kirin Tor
Obviously, since the holy spec falls into the caster archetype, the two caster factions of the Kirin Tor and Wyrmrest Accord will be two of our favorite reputations to grind. At honored, they'll help us fill a very difficult cloak slot with the solid Shroud of Dedicated Research. At revered, they do have a nice belt, but again, we'll want to wait until exalted and pick up the Ghostflicker Waistband instead. However, as a perk for waiting for exalted, they'll also sell us the Robes of Crackling Flame, which are perfectly itemized for a newly 80 paladin.
Wyrmrest Accord
The Wyrmrest Accord should be the last faction you focus on, and by the time you're getting around to working your way to WA exalted, you may be getting into some of the higher level gear from triumph emblems. At honored, you'll be able to score some seriously sweet bracers, with a yellow socket that will match the intellect gem you'll want to put in there. Once revered, the vendor will sell you the perfect helm enchant for holy paladins: the Arcanum of Blissful Mending. If you have another toon that is already revered with WA, this item is Bind on Account, so feel free to just mail yourself one from your main. Sometimes luck may be against you, and if you haven't scored a decent healing weapon yet, the WA will sell you the Gavel of the Brewing Storm at revered, though chances are you'll have picked up a superior weapon before that. Finally, at exalted, you can buy the Grips of Fierce Pronouncements and the Sandals of Crimson Fury, adding two more epic items to your mix of starter healer gear.
Craftable gear and Bind on Equip items
I wouldn't worry too much about trying to have any gear crafted for you, unless there is a particular slot of yours which is very weak and you can't find anything to replace it. The same would go for any BoE items you may see on the auction house: I wouldn't bother spending any money on your gear unless you have the gold to spend or you see a simply amazing deal on a high level piece. There's no point in buying item level 200 gear when you could be replacing it in a day with a triumph emblem piece. Speaking of Emblems of Triumph, next week I will be covering part 2 of this guide to gearing your holy paladin, by going over all of the items you can buy with your emblems and what order you should buy them in to maximize your effectiveness as a healer.
Filed under: Paladin, (Paladin) The Light and How to Swing It
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
Rob May 17th 2010 9:39AM
Sean, are you defense capped? Undergeared tanks are a challenge to healers, but some people that are well geared like the challenge. And most are lazy and don't know how to actually keep up a undergeared tank. But I love undergeared tanks on my druids. But yeah, not defense capped is bad.
The good news as a tank is that if you get vote kicked, then it's just a matter of seconds to find another group. I know it's hard starting out, my DK was there at 20k health/20k armor, but he was defense capped at least.
cedric.roland May 17th 2010 3:14AM
For the record, should you be a Jewelcrafter, grab the sapphire owl faster than possible.
It's relatively cheap, and has an INSANE amount of Intellect, two gems slots, and a decent on use to seal the deal.
Hal May 17th 2010 6:31AM
You didn't mention them here; will part two include the newer heroics, ToC and ICC? I still use the mace from H ToC, although I do see a lot of holy paladins running around with Seethe for lack of a better ilvl 232 option.
Soulbento May 17th 2010 7:33AM
I don't think recommending ilvl200 and below to fresh paladins, they're a waste of gold. They can be skipped completely if you run ToC 5 over and over till you can handle heroics. Once you can handle heroic ToC 5 you should be blowing through most of the heroics on the list. Badges, badges, badges these are your keys to ilvl245+ gear and are stupid easy to collect. You can easily break 5k+ gear score without setting foot in a raid, once you're at that point you can handle a lot of encounters and start collecting some real useful gear. Do VoA every chance you can get. This is what I did months ago when I was still subscribing, on my fresh prot/holy paladin. I did dungeon after dungeon, spamming trade and LFG for groups, long before this dungeon finder God send. I can imagine it being much harder as ret, but as a tank or healer the groups come easy, ESPECIALLY as a healer. It's so easy to grind badges and rep because dungeon finder pops you in a group within 10 seconds every time. I quit till Cataclysm though, after ToC 25 I figured I had the gear to get to 85 comfortably. I only enjoy that first 6 months of the expansion really, after that it starts to feel like a chore more and more till I take a break. The time I spent pugging on my lock till he had The Turning Tide and full t7.5 back when that was 'the shit' (ie best spellpower weapon in the game) was my favorite time in Wrath.
STARF May 17th 2010 10:16AM
lalallalallalalalla not listening to another light and how to swing it, they must delete these posts every week just so they can write another one the next.
WOOT FERAL DRUIDS ROCK!!!
Sean May 17th 2010 11:08AM
I have 21k hp with my commanding shout up self buffed 551 Defense i bought the titansteel sheild and been gearing up in reg before i started heroics