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 3 of 5)
Albero Jun 10th 2010 2:30PM
With a regular old 5-button mouse and keyboard modifiers (ctrl, shift, and alt), I manage to use all of my resto druid's spells just fine. Three modifiers gives you 15 bindable combinations. And I find it easier to have six go to spells bound to the main mouse buttons (with different modifiers) than binding all your spells to nine tiny, similar sized buttons.
Arbolamante Jun 10th 2010 2:30PM
I might check it out. I find as a resto druid that mouseovers both make my healing much more effective and reduce the use of certain key spells. There are four keys that my fingers rest on - Nourish, Regrowth, Rejuvenation, Lifebloom - in that order. left to right. Wild Growth is one key to the right, Swiftmend one key the left, and a Nature's Swiftness+Healing Tough macro two steps to the left. I find I don't use the Swiftmend and NS/HT all that much. The pinkie is the weakest finger, and aiming it without looking at the keyboard is difficult. It's not uncommon to realize I've blown a NS cooldown without even realizing it, probably when I was trying to do Swiftmend. A setup like this could change all that.
WaitWhat? Jun 10th 2010 2:35PM
Someone said it earlier, a game changing mouse. If you want a new mouse, get this....I never thought I would get used to mine, once I did.....my style/degree/success of play has gone through the roof.
Wrath Jun 10th 2010 2:41PM
Moderately off topic, but the writer did mention healbot...
I've got your typical 5 button mouse (not including a few extra buttons for variable sensitivity and whatever else)
However, I only use 3 actively with healbot and rely on fairly simple keyboard modifiers (shift/cntrl/alt and combinations of those 3) to put just about every healing trick I can at the hands of my Holy Paladin
Left - FoL, Middle - Holy Shock, Right - Holy Light
Shift-Left - Sacred Shield
Cntrl-Left - Beacon
Alt-left - Blessing of Freedom
Alt-Right - Blessing of Salvation
And so on, and so forth, including HoP, Blessing of Sacrifice, etc, etc
I'm not sure if remembering the keyboard modifiers and mouse combination is tougher or not then remembering what a set of extra buttons on the mouse do. But HB/w a normal mouse has been more than powerful to get me through raids. I'm pretty sure a non-standard mouse would have me cursing up a storm at the buttons I had no intention to press - until I got used to it.
Of course, it's cool for those it works for I am sure!
Mike Jun 10th 2010 2:42PM
Left: Lesser Healing Wave
Shift+Left: Chain Heal
Alt+Left: Cleanse Spirit
Right: Healing Wave
Shift+Right: Riptide
Alt+Right: Earth Shield
I can get in another two spells with Control, and other 8 spells with various combinations if I needed to. On top, I'm doing all that with the Apple Magic Mouse, my whole setup works perfectly. Sorry Razer, but you're not getting a sale out of me.
Henrah Jun 10th 2010 2:42PM
I'm quite happy with my Deathadder.. it does the job, and doesn't have all the extra buttons to accidentally click on the side.
5 buttons are just fine for me.
All the Naga is, is a Deathadder with loads of stuff that I find to be utterly pointless surgically implanted in, in my opinion, a pretty hideous fashion.
Squatch Jun 10th 2010 2:47PM
I have to say this did read very much like an advertisement for the Naga, it simply ignores the one poignant fact that makes click-casting viable, versatile, and flexible. In fact, ignore is too light a word, the article brushes this fact off like it means nothing when in fact, it means everything: "Without keyboard mods, a Healbot healer is restricted to no more than five heals that are ready at a moment's notice." What a misleading statement! That's almost like saying "Without his instruments, your doctor is restricted to giving you two aspirin and telling you to call him in the morning!" Any click-casting healer worth their salt uses keyboard mods and does a fantastic job with such! I've been healing for years and only recently switched to click casting (when I was finally able to start raiding on a regular basis) and the first thing I did was start assigning heals with keyboard modifiers. I don't even use all 5 buttons on my mouse as I find it completely unnecessary and overkill. I play a Disc|Holy Priest, Resto Druid, and Holy Paladin and this fact remains constant across all their setups, 3 keyboard mods * 4 mouse buttons yields 16 slots which is more than I have used on any of those characters for their targeted spells (e.g. - Circle of Healing is bound for click casting but Divine Hymn is keyboard bound).
This is getting a bit long, sorry about that. The point I'm trying to make is that this article forcefully brushes aside *THE* main feature of click casting mods that makes them almost as flexible as the Naga without the ridiculous price tag. Because of this, it sounds an awful lot like a payed advertisement masquerading as an article and IMO dings the salient credibility of this blog.
Pfooti Jun 10th 2010 2:54PM
I wouldn't call the Naga's price ridiculous. Less than a hundred dollars for a high-quality mouse that is good ergonomically (and good-looking) for non-WoW time and just happens to revolutionize your gameplay is a good investment. I'd prioritize it up over another PS3 game or something like that.
Henrah Jun 10th 2010 3:13PM
@Pfooti
Revolutionize your gameplay? What're you on?
I hate to ask this, but what're you doing with your left hand whilst you heal? So.. you can now do things just as efficiently with one hand as anyone else on the planet can do with two?
How exactly is that revolutionary?
icepyro Jun 10th 2010 3:35PM
I don't know about Pfooti, but I do stuff like move out of fire, control my pet (if I'm on my hunter), pop trinkets and pots, etc. That's what my left hand does while my right does all the work.
That's all a lie. It's what I should do. Instead, I eat my sandwich, sip on some "water", and hold down the key to talk on vent. When I'm close to death, I'll put down the sandwich and move out of the fire and let a lock or rogue die while I heal myself.... jk, usually it's the person still standing in the fire that dies.
Pfooti Jun 11th 2010 9:48AM
@Henrah - before I had a naga, I used my left hand to navigate the world (keyboard-turning and all), and my right hand on my numpad to activate my action bars as I didn't have enough non-movement fingers under my left hand to keep everything I wanted at my fingertips. It's also somewhat inconvenient to use your pinky to shift/alt at the same time as you're hitting a keystroke with the same hand. That meant I had to keep my hand off my mouse most of the time when I was DPSing and Tanking.
What I call "revolutionary" is having all those actions at a simple keypress while still having the ability to mouse-turn and manually target creatures instead of tabbing through. But I understand that people don't all agree, haters gotta hate, right?
Dawn Jun 10th 2010 2:48PM
I looked at that mouse when it came out, then looked at the price tag. :(
I've been using a freeware program called X-Mouse Button Control to remap the side buttons on my 5-button mouse to control and alt. This made everything much more accessible; not only do I not have 36 action bar buttons easily accessible (great for my engineer, overkill for almost everyone else) -all- my healing and other targeted spells can now be bound to mouse keys. (My main's a paladin, though; results may vary for classes with more than 3 healing spells and a few Hands.) Using mouse wheel up and down on VuhDo, that gives me 15 spells accessible with the mouse alone, 30 if I use shift (which is in an easier to hit spot and bigger than the other modifier keys.) I've been quite happy with the results of this.
Pfooti Jun 10th 2010 2:53PM
I do just that. It's so amazing in general. For non-healers, it means I can easily navigate with my left hand and keep my right hand on the mouse for fast turning and selection, while still having tons of DPS moves at my fingertips. For healing, it really shines- mouseover macros, Naga, and Grid are a spectacular combination.
Albero Jun 11th 2010 9:36AM
@Pfooti
Stop posting your love for the Naga. They're not going to pay you like they clearly have paid the author of this article.
Duffman Jun 10th 2010 2:55PM
Concerning Healbot...I use it on my Disc priest (and while lvling my shaman). It makes life so much easier, considering out of all my priests spells, I only have to use 6 of them (which gives me Left/Right/Center clicks and the Shift variants). Does that make me a bad healer? No, I do fairly well (although I haven't logged on her in a while).
And for classes that have roughly 6 spells they use for healing, Healbot is much easier to use than Grid/Clique. I've tried that combo and I hated it. Clique was too confusing to use, Grid took up most of the screen in 25mans, and it's two addons eating up memory instead of one. But that's just my opinion.
Awwjwah Jun 10th 2010 2:56PM
Am I the only healer left who assigns spells to the task bar and presses the corresponding number buttons and then either clicks the player or in the case of 5-man groups uses the F keys?
The only "healing" mod I use would be decursive and that's not healing specific and I have healed 5 mans and raids without a problem. Like the author says, works perfect even after patch day.
ronwolf Jun 10th 2010 3:06PM
Yes.
This system of healing simply can't match the efficiency of clickcast mods (vuhdo, healbot, grid/clique) in raiding situations with 10 or 25 players, taking all your casts from 2 actions down to 1...
Squatch Jun 10th 2010 7:19PM
I used this method for many years when I wasn't raiding. This works just fine for 5 mans but it's just not tenable once you start having 10 or more people to target and heal. Not to mention you no longer have keybinds to directly target half or more of your group members anymore.
One major advantage of mouseover macros, click-casting mods, etc. is that you can target one thing, focus another, and still be able to heal. So I tend to focus my tank, target the boss, and I can keep an eye on the flow of the fight, the boss' casting/health, etc. all while doing my job. I would highly recommend you give Healbot or Grid+Clique a shot, the results could bring your play to that next proverbial level (got to give it some time of course, not going to happen the moment you try them out ;).
Rocksanne Jun 10th 2010 2:59PM
"The Razer Naga is a typical five-button mouse with a not-so-typical, cell-phone-style keypad underneath your *right* thumb."
Sigh. No love for the left-handed mouser.
Karasuu Jun 10th 2010 5:15PM
Agreed!! I have to use my 4th and 5th button with my pinky instead of my thumb, lol.