The magical alchemy of mouseovers plus a Razer Naga

Healers have one of the more ambiguous roles in the World of Warcraft. DPS players mostly thrive by topping the damage meters, using the most optimal rotations, glyphs, etc. Tanks enjoy a form of tunnel vision where their task is ever so straightforward and clear. A healer, however, must keep watch on a whole group of individuals, react to their choices and keep the game itself from defeating them.
The worst kind of healer will select one, two or possibly three go-to spells to spam often and early. This player will use healing meters as a measure of success and frequently use them to lay the blame on others when things don't work out. The best kind of healer uses a wide array of abilities at exactly the time required. He conserves mana, keeps everyone alive and even contributes to the raid's overall DPS when possible. The best kind of healer isn't simply the reason you lived; rather, they're the reason things went smoothly.
Many healers rely on mods as they strive for this goal. Healbot, for example, creates a special frame for click-casting. It assigns certain spells to certain mouse buttons by default, making healing a breeze. The chief limitation of Healbot, however, is the link to physical buttons on a mouse and the lack of native support for more than five of them. Without keyboard mods, a Healbot healer is restricted to no more than five heals that are ready at a moment's notice. This player will also need a fair bit of practice to get beyond the defaults of "left click, little heal; right click, big heal." Memory plays a role, as Healbot does little to notify you visually of which keys do which action, especially once you've sized the bars down to the point that you can view the entire raid.
Another extremely popular setup is some combination of a solid raid frame, like Grid, and a more configurable click-to-cast mod, such as Clique. Healers can then establish that certain mouse buttons cast certain spells whenever the mouse is over the player of their choosing. As with Healbot, this kind of setup works best when you remember which spell you put on which button. It feels a bit more sophisticated than Healbot, and chances are you'll want some other raid frames anyway, so it does feel relatively natural to shift in this direction.
Meanwhile, at the bottom of your screen ...
All the while, sitting down there unassumingly are your action bars. These gives you the visual clues that most mods lack as to what is on cooldown and which key corresponds to which button. This bar works after patch day and every day, right out of the box. You can place spells on a bar directly, or you can step things up a bit and employ various macros by placing these directly on a bar. Reassigning a spell or macro is as easy as drag and drop.
The only drawback with this approach is that it will often turn you into a "clicker," and the lag introduced from first clicking on your desired target and then finding and clicking on the appropriate button can definitely add up. This is particularly inconvenient when the game has opted to place fire under your own feet as well as those you need to reach out and save. You begin to feel a bit as if you're playing a pipe organ, and your attention gets split between a very busy screen and the job you've volunteered to do.
A different type of mouse
The fine folks at Razer have developed a product that solves a bit of this issue in a couple of different ways. The Razer Naga is a typical five-button mouse with a not-so-typical, cell-phone-style keypad underneath your right thumb. Razer provides a mod along with the mouse that can reshape your action bar to match the layout of these keys, giving you a visual reminder as to which button has which spell or macro. Their mod can also automatically rebind each and every action bar to a mod-key, such as Shift, Ctrl or Alt, and number combination. You can reshape those action bars as well, and you can position them anywhere on the screen that you wish. Again, you have a solid visual guide as to what exactly Shift 7 will do, for example.
Combining this device with the action bar setup alluded to above can cut your lag considerably and will likely bring more of your spells and macros within reach. You're still in a bit of an unnatural position, however, clicking on the player with your mouse button and pressing the desired spell on the keypad.
Putting it all together
The step that bridges this gap has actually been around for a very long time: the mouseover macro. A mouseover macro will look a little something like this:
#showtooltip
/cast [target=mouseover,help] Lifebloom; [help] Lifebloom; Lifebloom
This macro looks like Lifebloom, and it reads that way when you mouse over it. If pressed while targeting someone or without a target at all, it will cast exactly as if you pressed the spell button. If pressed while your mouse pointer is over either a player or an eligible unit frame, however, it will cast the spell on that target instead. After some swift copy-pasting and a little diligence, you can configure each of your targetable spells in this way.
Going back to our Naga setup from earlier, you can now simply hover your mouse over the target in need and press one of the 12 buttons under your thumb. We have now achieved point-and-cast with all the spells and macros your action bars will hold -- without sacrificing visibility.
With a configuration such as this, a healer doesn't need two or three go-to spells; he can use them all, and at a moment's notice. The wide array of abilities that we healers have can finally be fully employed to allow us to raise above being simple fillers of green bars and become invaluable assets to those we support.
It really is a beautiful thing.
Filed under: Add-Ons, Guest Posts






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 5)
Orrdeath Jun 10th 2010 2:02PM
I play with that mouse, it's game changing!
Galestrom Jun 10th 2010 3:05PM
I do love this mouse... sadly, I can't replace my G5 with it. Fact is, I've become too used to the side-to-side buttons on the scroll wheel, which I'm using to strafe.
If this mouse ever adopted that small feature, I'd be all over it. Right now I'm using the n52te gamepad from Belkin. Between that and the G5, I'm pretty much using my keyboard to chat -- that's it. =)
snowleopard233 Jun 10th 2010 3:32PM
The naga really is an awesome mouse. I’ve been able to heal so much more competently with it and haven’t had to do anything crazy like redesign my UI. If anyone’s thinking of getting one of those crappy steel series WoW mice, forget it. This thing is primo.
Bonksy Jun 10th 2010 6:43PM
The WoW Mouse from Steelseries has those buttons by the mouse wheel, Galestrom.
Been using it for about six months, really worth looking at for a mouse with a ton of butons, I know I couldn't go back to a 5-button mouse now.
Zalvi24 Jun 10th 2010 8:30PM
this mouse is so sick and sexy, i couldnt stop licking it for 30 minutes after i got it
ladeezluvlarry71 Jun 11th 2010 4:09AM
I was nervous that I wouldn't end up using all those buttons, but wow! In a day, I was using them exclusively without a second thought. Using just shift as a modifier, I can hit 24 hotkeys just as easily as I used to hit 3.
My main is dps and it's awesome for that, but mouseover macros + naga + healing is amazing. Amazing!
Overhead Jun 10th 2010 2:12PM
This is the exact setup I use for healing, and it's incredible. Everything critical is bound to one of my hands without any type of moving. If only I had more macro slots per character...
Zedd Jun 10th 2010 8:25PM
Check out BindPad you can bind keys and macros into it without needing action bars at all
But on the topic of Macros, you can make "BindPad" macros that can be however long you want, and have an unlimited amount.
Hal Jun 10th 2010 2:05PM
So, who paid this Seed writer? WoW.com or Razer?
Bob Jun 10th 2010 2:11PM
Try it. It may change your mind.
Hal Jun 10th 2010 2:17PM
Actually, I already use the SteelSeries WoW mouse. I've had it for a few months now, and I'm still trying to teach my fingers to use all those different buttons.
But more to the point, I was merely curious about the nature of the article. It reads like an extended advertisement, or at least a review.
Tebla Jun 10th 2010 2:39PM
@Hal: I have been using the WoW mouse for almost a year and a half now. I have slowly added macros and abilities until I use every button on it. I absolutely love it and can't imaging playing without it now.
I am pretty sure that the Razer would be the same way. More buttons ftw. Although I think the Steel Series are better placed, but that's just me.
vinniedcleaner Jun 10th 2010 2:48PM
Yea, isn't it amazing what is considered an exact fit?
Pfooti Jun 10th 2010 3:03PM
Yeah, I've been using a razer since about last October, when I wrote my own version of this article - http://www.castrandom.com/2009/10/greatest-mouse-in-world-razer-naga.html
But the Naga really is a game-changer of an interface object. Scoffers might scoff at the pricetag, but $50 is easily what you'd expect to pay for a decent mouse anyway, so $85 isn't all that unreasonable, especially considering how intuitive it becomes. It's especially great for healing - as a mediocre priest, I regularly cast flash, renew, PoM, shield, greater, circle, PoH, guardian spirit, abolish disease, dispel magic, and binding heal with some regularity. Yeah, I could fit that onto a 5-button mouse with shift- modifiers, but it's a lot easier to get it on a 12-button one without, and save the shift-modifiers for less-critical stuff.
Jorges Jun 10th 2010 4:09PM
I've been using the SteelSeries mouse since December and it's a marvel. My feral druid loves it and my Holy pally can't live without it. Kitty DPS is much more manageable with it and with the use of mouseover macros + cliqué, I don't need addons like healbot or grid for my pally. I have a bar on bartender with all the macros and skills I want to map to the mouse, and since the game natively supports it, I just bind the buttons using bartender's interface. It's really that easy.
Btw:
#showtooltip
/cast [@mouseover,help] [] Lifebloom
This macro has exactly the same function as the macro in the article. But it saves a lot of space :)
Jack Miles Jun 10th 2010 2:06PM
Wow...
AoL snaps their fingers and you print an ad for the Naga...
It is a nice mouse though....
Galestrom Jun 10th 2010 3:06PM
There's a joke in there somewhere about tin foil hats and blood circulation to the brain, but I can't remember for the life of me what it is...
Oh well.
Kaylad Jun 10th 2010 2:12PM
Pity they'll never produce one sized for a 10 year old. Damned things are much too big for my hands.
saintcabbage Jun 10th 2010 2:15PM
This mouse is about as small as they come, took some adjustment coming from an oversized Logitech. It's all muscle memory and reaction time.
Overhead Jun 11th 2010 9:38AM
The mouse looks huge in pictures. In practice, it's tiny. My only complaint - they really could've made it 20% larger. I very occasionally fat finger buttons in a panic (I'll pain sup myself instead of holy novaing to get that rogue I just saw out of stealth), but it's pretty uncommon.. It'll fit anyone but those with giant hands - mine are on the large side, and it works great.