Spiritual Guidance: So you wanna play a priest

You've seen them basking in that heavenly golden light while effortlessly dishing out heals left and right. You've seen those magnificent white wings stretch out over your fallen allies, just when it seemed all hope was lost, and in the longest 15 seconds of your life, carry your comrades to victory. They are priests, arguably the healer of the World of Warcraft.
Today I am writing for the players out there who don't have a priest of their own, but have long watched from afar with longing. Does the priest class intrigue you? Perhaps you have been thinking of venturing into the light but have yet to do so? Well, today I will be laying out what you need to know before you get started.
Playstyle
I dare say that it is common knowledge that a priest has two talent trees dedicated to healing: discipline and holy. There is also the shadow spec for when you want to go on holiday, but that sort of thing I'll leave you to explore with Fox.
Discipline and holy have different strengths and weaknesses, but both are very capable, and versatile healers. Both specs heal in a "bursty" fashion, meaning there are extended moments when no healing occurs, then moments when large bursts of healing are dispensed. Because there are often several seconds of time between your largest heals, playing a priest is very much about proper timing. You need to learn how to anticipate incoming damage and be ready to respond with a healing spell, or already be casting one. You cannot just play a priest reactively and expect to be the best of your class.
Both priests have a great quantity of healing spells, all with varying degrees of strength and effectiveness. Weak spells usually have no cooldown, while powerful spells do. You will constantly be making decisions on which heal to use, and which heal to save for another second in battle. You will not have one button that is the answer to all your problems as a healer.
A master priest is a master of triage -- that is, the act of deciding who, when, and how to heal your targets. If you do not want to think one, two, or six steps ahead of where you currently are in an encounter, then a priest might not be the class for you.
Performance
All classes are subject to nerfs and buffs; priests are no exception. I am not going to carve in stone my thoughts on whether or not I think priests are underpowered, overpowered, or just right, as conditions are constantly changing to affect that. What I can tell you from my experience, though, is that a priest's power is dependent on the player behind it. Whether we want to admit it or not, there are some classes in WoW (tanks, DPS, and healers) that do not require as much decision-making to reap rewards. A priest is not one of those classes, and you can usually expect your efforts to be rewarded or your lack of effort penalized. If you do not try hard, the class will seem underpowered. If, on the other hand, you do try hard, there will be players complaining about your class on every major community forum. This holds true in PvE and PvP.
In PvE, a priest is well equipped to handle every 5-man dungeon, and is arguably better than any other healer due to our versatile toolbox of spells.
In raids, we can effectively perform any raid role (provided your raid team puts in the proper organization) or support the roles of one or more healers in an encounter. A priest can easily switch between tasks without respeccing their talent tree, and can do this several times in an encounter. In that sense, you should never be bored as you'll be able to perform many different roles.
In addition to your aid as a healer, you will also provide a few "must haves" to a raid team. Pain Suppression and Guardian Spirit in particular are both huge tactical abilities for player survival in the current game model, and like our heals, they require proper execution to be effective. I would expect to see this continue into Cataclysm. Passive buffs we bring are more likely to be homogenized and given to other classes, so I wouldn't count on them as guaranteeing your raid spot. (My suspicion for saying this, by the way, is that the Improved Power Word: Fortitude talent disappeared.)
In PvP, you will be the bane and fodder of various classes. In a battleground, one good priest can sometimes tank three opponents while dealing damage to a fourth. A priest can also instantly dissolve against an onslaught of attacks from a single player. A priest in battlegrounds and world PvP will need to know how to pick and choose his battles, and know when and how to assist allies with heals or damage.
In arena, the priest is the cornerstone of one of the most timeless and powerful 3v3 team compositions, PMR (priest x mage x rogue) and if you want to experience the beauty of this class, you should set out to experience this arena composition at least once. Priests are also formidable in countless 2v2 compositions, as both offensive and defensive players. In 5v5, you will play more defensively unless your team can provide you ample protection.
What the future holds (class development)
Picking a class in WoW isn't like picking a driver in Mario Kart racing; you're not going to be with this class for a couple hours, you could be with it for a couple of years. That said, it's important to know how much time and attention you can expect from the game's development.
A friend once told me that the priest class was the first WoW class to be designed, and that all the other classes in the game were balanced around it. (My friend claimed that this tidbit of information came from "a reliable source.") While I am not sure if this is true or not, I have to admit that I've rarely observed my class as being overpowered in the same sense that I have observed it in other classes. Perhaps it is a bias, perhaps it is not, but I do believe Blizzard is very careful in how it chooses to execute changes to the priest class. Certain abilities or bonuses often have "a catch" to get the most out of them, and that catch is what holds priests back from becoming overpowered. So, if you are a player who enjoys playing the "flavor of the week" class, priest will rarely be it.
Other things you can expect from Blizzard is an occasional attractive, and iconic tier set (as well as an occasionally atrocious one.) You can also expect an attempt at very unique, original, and innovative spells, since for the most part we have all the basic heals already covered. Blizzard has to work the hardest to design new things for us, and that can be quite exciting if healing is your thing.
What to expect from other players
Imagine that you're a level 80 priest; you just made the last payment on your mechano-hog and you're cruising across the breathtaking landscapes of Crystalsong Forest. You're looking super fine in your freshly pressed tier robes, and you're not even displaying your cloak (you're not a show off, after all). Is that Jamiroquai playing on the mechano-hog's radio? Yes, yes it is, because you're a priest and that is your soundtrack, you cool cat. Suddenly, the chat box of your fabulous UI chirps at you. Probably one of your adoring fans. You glance down to your tell window and see a whisper from someone named Andronixi; you've never heard of him. Your conversation goes something like this:
Well, that was oddly cryptic, wasn't it? You wait with a raised brow; the radio continues to pump out some fine beats. What is this Andronixi guy getting at? Is he from some rival guild? Wait, who is Andronixi anyway? Before you can finish typing out a /who his next tell comes and answers all your questions:[Andronixi] whispers: Hi!
To [Andronixi]: Hi.
[Andronixi] whispers: Are you busy?
To [Andronixi]: No, not really.
[Andronixi] whispers: Oh good. Ha ha.
To [Andronixi]: Um, do I know you?
[Andronixi] whispers: Ha ha.
[Andronixi] whispers: No. Not yet.
The radio cuts to static and your bike stalls; somewhere, a rare blue-winged butterfly is devoured.[Andronixi] whispers: Can you come heal Uldaman for me?
Now I've played a lot of characters. I've played two other hybrid classes, and a few pure DPS classes. During all of these adventures I can count on one hand how many times I've been asked to come assist in a lower level dungeon by a complete stranger. Playing my various priests on the other hand, I can't count how many times I've been approached because the number is simply too high.
Disregarding that Andronixi seems to think he needs you to heal a level 40 instance (as opposed to carrying him, his in-game girlfriend, and a couple PUGs to victory with nothing but Don Carlos' Famous Hat and Holy Nova exploding from your statuesque body) we are able to observe one of the great fallacies of the WoW community: all priests are healers. Now, in the defense of Andronixi, and all players like him, there is a good chance that a priest will be a healer. Unlike other hybrids, we have two healing specs. However, between Uldaman and Crystalsong Forest there are a lot of players that are capable of helping Andronixi and his ragtag crew, but for some reason lower level players always like to go to level cap characters to ask for help. Maybe they think we've got nothing better to do? Whatever it is, as a priest you'll never escape it. It haunts you even before you're at level cap. Say you were a level 40 priest in the above scenario, Andronixi might have already messaged you, or will be messaging you very soon. It will look like this:
5 minutes pass.[Andronixi] whispers: Hi! Do you want to heal Uldaman?
To [Andronixi]: No thanks.
[Andronixi] whispers: Aw, please! We just need a healer!
To [Andronixi]: I'm busy. Sorry.
Just so you know, I'm not really joking (and I've decided to spare you the "will you come heal 10-man Ulduar?" horror stories!) Most of the time these exchanges aren't very drawn out, but as a priest you will find them again and again, and they won't always be civil. Maybe that will bother you, maybe it won't, but it's something to keep in mind when you roll a priest. Healers are a necessity in the game, and as a priest you will be branded with that title. The plus side is that for all pre-raid content you'll have a lot of group requests. Once you get into raiding content, gearscore seems to exert its dominance.[Andronixi] whispers: Hi! Do you want to heal Uldaman?
To [Andronixi]: You asked me already ... 5 minutes ago.
[Andronixi] whispers: Oh. Ha ha. Do you want to come now?
The class community
Though priests are far from the most popular class, we boast an impressive and active online community. Perhaps this is because we are more helpful players by nature (we do play healers), or maybe it's just because we're all loudmouths. Whatever it is, there are many online sites and resources to check out, and if you like having a lot of online resources to help you up your game, priests definitely have that going for them.
Obviously, you can visit the official class forums, where you'll find the help outweighs the trolling (even if the QQ is a little more rampant.) Other forum communities, like PlusHeal.com and ElitistJerks.com, have well maintained priest subsections. Even ShadowPriest.com can be a nice resource for finding brilliant priests to talk numbers with, as many of the shadow priests there also heal.
The priest community also sports an impressive collection of bloggers: over 50 by my current reader count. Many of those blogs can be found on WoW.com's resource page, and a few more at Miss Medicina's Full Healy-Blog List. (And of course, there is me.)
Wrap up
So, my brilliant and intuitive readers, do you have any idea what could be coming next? A leveling guide, of course! You've asked for it, I've dreaded it, and finally it will be seeing the light of day. This week's column will hopefully have given you a good idea of the class before you hit the character creation screen; next week we'll be hitting that screen face first, as well as diving into the actual leveling. Check back next week to work on your smite-spam tan.
Filed under: Priest, (Priest) Spiritual Guidance
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 4)
lariva007 Jun 27th 2010 10:15PM
Pesonally i dont think the priest is the best healing class. yea pain suppression is good and all for hard hitter like fester but idk ive always preffered a holy pally resto druid reto shammy heal combo for tens and such. And personally when it comes down too it pally healers almost always outbeat disc and as far as ive seen resto druid is better then a holy priest
IDK if the priest on my server are bad (and theres not that many) but as far as ive seen they are always outbeaten and i only grab 1 or 2 in my raids for buffs and variety)
Possum Jun 27th 2010 10:48PM
I don't believe it was ever said they were the best healing class, just the most versatile.
Brett Jun 27th 2010 11:10PM
What Possum said. I'll be honest, I can heal and heal well with any of the healing specs/classes, but there are times when I'm not on my Priest that I say... damn I miss X that my Priest could do... Just sayin' :)
Sebastien on IcftB
lariva007 Jun 28th 2010 1:27AM
yea i can totally agree with that they are def versatile just a little underpowered and i say this from a standpoint of not owning one
Xaklo Jun 28th 2010 2:09PM
I think people are missing the meaning of this statement. It's a powerful and bold statement to make so it's understandable that people are reacting the way they are to it.
>"They are priests, arguably the healer of the World of Warcraft."
Nowhere in that sentence does the word "best" appear, nor "strongest." As stated several times in the article, priest have the largest toolkit available for adapting to any situation requiring healing. Sure Druids usually top the charts, Pallies have the best tank heals, and even Shaman can outright beat Priests if they just spam Chain Heals, but priests are the only class that can effectively switch roles on the fly and can be used in just about any healing role in a raid.
Aside from gameplay, priests are the most iconic healing class in WoW. For someone who hasn't played WoW but is familiar with basic RPG classes, it can be inferred that while Druids, Shaman, and Paladins may be able to heal, a priest will be the only for-sure healing class. Along with that priest are probably (dare I say) the strongest spiritual leaders in current lore. Priests' beliefs are the cornerstone for the Religions of Humans, Draenie, NE's, Dwarves, BE's, and in a slightly twisted version Forsaken.
Aside from classic roleplaying vocations, Priests and the Holy Light play a part in Religion. I'm not advocating anything here, but since we live in a primarily Judeo-Christian-Muslim world, more players might relate to a role in which their character's deity resembles their own. And although Paladins share the same Deity, their class (being holy warriors) might be misconstrued as something more like Crusaders, which for many people might give a negative image.
So you see, while gameplay may not be the priests' strongest attribute, it makes up for in sheer reputation.
Keith Jun 27th 2010 9:16PM
I don't know what Cataclysm has in store for us, but right now I can say ICC10 has turned my Disc priest into a bubble bot, with PoM and Penance when the whole raid has Weakened Soul. I have to remind myself constantly that a 10k shield is better than a 10k heal even if it doesn't look as exciting as sending a health-bar shooting up.
Retardo the Magnificient Jun 27th 2010 9:17PM
I tried to be a priest but all the game would let me play is a death knight.
Deathknighty Jun 27th 2010 9:32PM
That's cool, Retardo. xD
Kc Jun 27th 2010 9:23PM
Good Read.
Is there an article like this for each class? I am thinking of re-rolling and would really like if there was.
-Thanks
Squelchy Jun 27th 2010 9:25PM
/looks up Andronixi on the Armory
TonyMcS Jun 27th 2010 9:31PM
In real life, healers bury their mistakes. In WoW, they'll be back whining in no time ;-)
It's almost always a healer mistake to the newly dead and a lot will blame you for not keeping them up while they were standing in the fire, just as they blame the tank for not being able to keep aggro due to their over the top DPS.
Thick skin is almost a pre-requisite for a healer ;-)
It requires you to recognise a problem, evaluate it in priority with other problems and then apply appropriate solutions to your everchanging list of problems.
You can heal with the standard UI. My GL does, and he's a great healer, but anything that can speed the process of problem recognition and applying a solution is preferred. Using an add-on like Grid to give you all your targets in one box with status indicators and something like Clique to bind Shift/Ctrl/Alt mouse click combos (or other add-ons that are similar) is recommended.
These add-ons require customisation and lots of practice, but it's well worth it. You can now just concentrate on a rectangle (Grid) and apply heals to the appropriate people by just clicking their rectangle with the mouse and a modifier key. It also means you can still easily move around while healing and better still, you are also just another rectangle in Grid, so you can easily monitor and adjust your own health as well.
I use all my instant heals on my left click and timed or channelled on my right, but any combo is possible. With enough practice you won't even need to consult action bars.
Practice is the problem and dungeons and heroics are probably not the best for that. PvP on the other hand, is perfect. You can learn all you need to know about triage and practice all you want with your add-ons, by just running battlegrounds. The other benefit is that PvP players are used to dying a lot and are pathetically greatful to have any healer, even a novice ;-)
As an added benefit, you can get L264, 251, 245, 232 PvP gear in the battlegrounds that will help in PvE, until you replace it with Frost emblem gear or drops.
Once you feel comfortable with your add-ons, then do the dungeons and the raids. You may then find instances a lot less complicated than battlegrounds as you will often have less people to worry about and you may just have to worry about the tank. However, that bg experience is going to be useful when the excrement hits the fan.
boworr Jun 28th 2010 2:45AM
I'd agree that PvP is a great way if you have an Shadow Priest you've half levelled, or an old Priest gathering dust on your log in screen like add had. I've had a level 70 Shadow Priest I've not touched since TBC, and a few weeks ago respec'd her Disc and jumped into some battle ground to 'figure out how all this stuff works'. There's no pressure, you can mis-cast all the wrong spells you like to start with, but after a while you get into the swing of things and you start getting a lot of 'thanks'. That's a good feeling! I spent about a week doing PVP then hit the dungeons and it was a lot less scary as I really hate letting people down and looking a dork.
clevins Jun 27th 2010 9:31PM
Hmm I never get those tells. I wonder, Dawn, if it's because you do high end raiding and people are looking for someone from one of those? Or perhaps it's just a server thing...
Gothia Jun 28th 2010 9:51AM
Sending tells in "who" use to be a prereq for finding a tank and healer before the Lfd option. Since Druids, Paladins, and Shaman have mutiple roles it makes sense to spam the Priest 1st because everyone knows that people that roll a Priest want to be healers. Strong hybrids like Druids would only give you a 25% chance of hooking up with a healer. This misconception (or not) of class roles is also true for tanks in the case of Warriors and is one of the reasons why everyone thinks Priests and Warriors were developed to be the games Healer's and Tank's.
Old tell to me in pre-bc.
Need Priest for Mc, I don't care if you are in greens we will provide FR gear and pots.
vocenoctum Jun 28th 2010 10:39AM
I definitely got them on my warrior all the time. Sometimes they'd be "hey, how's it going, can you tank for us..." stuff, but quite often it'd be "Spec?" and nothing else.
And yeah, my little protection warrior was mainly just for grouping with friends, I didn't like tanking for others since they get blamed as much as the healers, but I'd get raid invites when I was in greens and never seen a raid. :)
Just standing around in my shield, people would just send a group invite with no precursor.
My priest hasn't had that much attention, really. I've only been in a couple groups where folks blamed me for stuff, including one group that blamed me for not being there when I'd stopped for mana and the tank just kept pulling...
My resto shaman is leveling now, and I'm still working out the kinks, and all my groups have been friendly whether my fault or someone elses.
spam Jun 27th 2010 9:38PM
Here's the simple 5 step guide to super easy solo priest leveling:
1. Power Word: Shield actually is a vastly overpowered spell for solo play, you just need to improve the visual representation of the mechanics of it to help you unlock its true potential. Get the PowerAuras addon and create two auras with timers, one showing the duration left on your Power Word: Shield, the other one the time till your Weakened Soul debuff falls off. (While you're at it you should also make an aura that alerts you when your Inner Fire wears off, and another showing if your current target has SW:P on it.)
2. In case you're fighting multiple mobs, always start by applying both Devouring Plague and Shadow Word: Pain on each of them before moving on to your nukes. Be sure to always reapply SW:P on each mob should it fall off before you get to nuking them.
3. Know your limits. Once you adhere to points 1 and 2 you'll have no problems handling 3 mobs your own level at the same time. But more than 3 can get messy, so try to stay out of situations like that. If that's not an option, use Mind Control on one of the mobs and let the others kill it.
4. When s* hits the fan use the 'fear-flay' method. Use Psychic Scream to scare mobs into running away, then cast Mind Flay, which nukes and slows them at the same time, keeping them from getting back in range and hitting you again.
5. The proper management of your primary damage dealing spells' cooldowns is the bread and butter of every DPS, that's why I'm always flabbergasted when I see people trying to level and even raid without a proper cooldown display addon. There are many great, deeply configurable options like CooldownWatch and NeedToKnow which are bar style and Sexycooldown and ForteXorcist which show CDs on a timeline. By simply putting your 4 most important cooldowns, PW:S, Psychic Scream, Mind Blast and SW:D on prominent display with one of these, you'll immediately become a better player and a soloing powerhouse!
Purf Jun 27th 2010 9:58PM
Devouring Plague can only be on one target at a time :p
Trid Jun 27th 2010 10:08PM
One problem though. Devouring Plague can only be on one target at a time, so putting it on every mob is a huge waste of mana.
I suggest putting it on the mob you want to die first, then moving on to the next mob. You will have a lot more mana when you are done.
spam Jun 27th 2010 10:07PM
Oh, I stand corrected then :) Sorry I conjured all this up from memory, been a year since I finished leveling mine...
Brett Jun 27th 2010 11:19PM
Plus, since Mind Flay is for Shadow Priests, Dawn probably won't be covering its use here :)