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.
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 5)
rabidtangerines Jun 10th 2010 2:15PM
Too many buttons for me..It was a stretch for me just to get used to my new 5 button mouse. Plus it doesn't take a rocket scientist to remember what you've assigned to buttons with clique..ie shift-right click = wild growth yaaaaaaay.
c0.ff.ee Jun 10th 2010 4:31PM
I simply can't imagine using a key-modifier for an instant cast...
All my unmodified mouse-clicks via Clique are mapped to instants (rejuvenation, Lifebloom, Wild Growth). Shift clicks are longer heals (regrowth, nourish and because it was a nice fit, swiftmend). Ctrl and Alt clicks have the less frequent abilities (cleanses, rezzes, buffs etc.)
Anyhow, I am in agreeance with a lot of the posters. Yes it is a good mouse. No this article should not have been posted here. I value sites that remain brand-neutral. Obviously the site is a Blizzard fansite, but when it comes to things liek your mouse, your video card, choice in ISP, best gaming router etc. these things should be in reviews, with comparisons to other products, not articles. Write the article about the mouseover macro, and clique or how to use healbot more effectively, and you have me sold. Keep the brands and "zOMG. Best. Mouse. Ever." fanboi stuff to the review pages.
Keith Barriere Jun 10th 2010 2:17PM
I've been looking at purchasing this mouse for a while now. I haven't heard much about the add-on included with it.
Now, with the "limited" number of macros you can have on a toon, does the Naga add-on allow you to macro to the buttons or are you still limited by the Blizzard UI? Does the Addon just allow you to put spells on the bars/buttons or can you modify each bar/button individually?
adrys Jun 10th 2010 5:01PM
Basically the buttons on the side just count as the number keys that you would normally use to cast spells. But since they are all literally right under your thumb, it no longer feels like you have to reach across the keyboard for buttons 6 through =. Because of this not only does it make action bar 1 easier to use and navigate, All you have to do is just set the keybinds of control or alt or shift, etc. for each other action bar, and you have every spell and ability you need right on your mouse, which means you can react faster and play better. It's incredible really. I got it two weeks ago and I can never play an MMO without it now.
kooda Jun 10th 2010 2:19PM
I like my Roccat Kone.
Tremelizzer Jun 10th 2010 2:20PM
I want new mouse >_< My current Microsoft (non-gaming mouse with 5 buttons) is almost broken already, even though I've had it only for six months :R Wheel does not work properly.
busuan Jun 10th 2010 2:22PM
IMO, this mouse suggests one critical flaw of current WoW: the over-complicated while utterly unstructured UI, or bad ergonomics.
emperorshishire Jun 10th 2010 2:22PM
I've used this mouse for a couple of months now, and I have to say, it's amazing. Got a friend to buy one on my recommendation too. The only gripe I have about the mouse is that the buttons on the side are actually a number pad, like on your keyboard. Regardless, this mouse makes healing so much better. I can heal trivial encounters one-handed, without paying attention. I can heal progression content faster, better, and more accurately. Now I just need more macro slots, so I can finish filling the mouse buttons up :P. Too many spells, not enough macro buttons.
For added complexity/usability, give the macros modifier actions (i.e., alt-click, or shift-click) You can fit a total of 48 actions on a mouse, not counting the regular buttons.
Mortur Jun 10th 2010 2:23PM
I use a naga. It replaces the 1 thru = buttons on your keyboard, or it replaces your numpad.
I use this - along with a G13 gameboard, Bartender addon (not the naga replacement), and Healbot. My G13 are setup to use a second toolbar with all my normal 1 through = commands on it, and the first toolbar is my Naga's button list.
using macros that use that mouseover and Healbot - i have a full arsinal of commands by only pressing a single button.
That said - it took a long time to get used to and configured. It isn't for everyone.
Draknareth Jun 10th 2010 2:28PM
This mouse is brilliant and will completely change the way you play. The Razer slogan is right it really is an "unfair advantage" :D Get one!
philipp.wow.com Jun 10th 2010 2:25PM
Equivalent (when auto-self-cast is on), but shorter macro:
/cast [@mouseover,help][] Lifebloom
Cortland Jun 10th 2010 2:28PM
Sorry for the username, didn't want to imply that I'm part of wow.com, it's just part of the email address I used for signup.
agnoster Jun 10th 2010 2:50PM
*upvote*
I actually came down to the comments to post this, glad someone else covered it. It's not really necessary in this particular case, but a) it's handy to have the "/cast [@mouseover,help][]" (or whatever - my actual selector is "[@mouseover,help][help][@focus,help][]" because I usually want to fall back to my focus after my target) in your clipboard for easy pasting if you're making a bunch of these, and because if your macros get more complicated you'll run into the character limit.
Good catch!
Cortland Jun 10th 2010 2:55PM
Someone should really explain this stuff to the unwashed masses ;)
ronwolf Jun 10th 2010 2:31PM
A radical, game changing technology to be sure... In addition, I'd like to introduce the author to another amazing advance in WoW hardware, the Control, Alt and Shift keys on the newest models of keyboards.
With these amazing "modifier" keys, any antiquated five button mouse can miraculously be turned into a 20 button raid crushing weapon. Imagine the ability to turn Vuhdo, Healbot, or Grid/clique into a more functional addon without the use of $85.00!
My next comment will probably focus on the theory of mouseturning, but I'm still in the early stages of checking my math and running simulations to see if it's actually possible outside the laboratory.
Pfooti Jun 10th 2010 2:56PM
As it happens, I use control- and shift- to modify my action bars, but also use the Naga as well. Having all your buttons handy and set up for *very simple* access is thoroughly worth the price of admission, all snark aside.
Omenemo Jun 10th 2010 4:34PM
When i was looking for a new mouse, I started pricing out different options.
Although the naga was the most expensive mouse I looked at, the additional functionality I found was more than worth the price tag. It really is quite surprising how much it changes how you play. I can barely play on my friends computers anymore.
Bob Jun 10th 2010 7:06PM
Read the article. Without the visual clues, the other solutions are missing quite a lot.
BB Crisp Jun 10th 2010 7:33PM
I like it, ronwolf.
I was a bit surprised when reading this article that it talked about the limitation of Healbot, which I thought was selling it extremely short. "Without keyboard mods, a Healbot healer is restricted to no more than five heals that are ready at a moment's notice." So what? Alt, shift, and ctrl are not that difficult to use and they push up the number of spells that can be used to 20. Yes, you have to learn where to put all of your spells in Healbot. You also have to learn where are the buttons are on this mouse and know their corresponding spells, so there's something to be memorized either way. I've also never been much of a fan of mouseover macros for healing. Having a rigid box displaying health is much better than mousing over to monitor health. Healbot and other healing addons are also used to monitor range to your targets. The box displays so much information that the standard interface has difficulty conveying.
I'm sure I could benefit from a spiffy gaming mouse, but I'm also sure that the money could be spent better elsewhere and free macros like Healbot or Grid work just fine.
uncaringbear Jun 10th 2010 8:51PM
Totally agree. The use of CTRL, ALT and SHIFT modifiers really makes mods like Healbot and Vuhdo shine. On my five button mouse, I rarely have any core spells that I cannot fit easily into my setup. I can see the value of having a mouse with a huge number of buttons, but I think it's more efficient and less unwieldy to use the keyboard modifiers.