Addon Spotlight: Tidy Plates
Addon Spotlight focuses on the backbone of the WoW gameplay experience: the user interface. Everything from bags to bars, buttons to DPS meters and beyond -- your addons folder will never be the same. This week, Tidy Plates makes its long-awaited spotlight. You can stop emailing me about Tidy Plates now.
Addon Spotlight truly is fueled by users just like you, considering how many emails I get about Tidy Plates. "Why haven't you talked about Tidy Plates yet? It's absolutely amazing." There's a reason I haven't talked about this particular mod before, and I'll get to that explanation, but for now know that I am happy to introduce Tidy Plates to those who don't know of its existence and reintroduce the 'plates to the already faithful.
What is Tidy Plates?
Have you ever pressed the V button while playing World of Warcraft? Heck, remember pressing and holding Alt during Warcraft III? What would appear were health bars above your enemy's and your units, easily allowing you to survey the battlefield for units harmed or on the verge of death. World of Warcraft continued the trend of their health bars above creature's heads with "nameplates," a name and a health bar floating happily above mobs, enemies, creatures and other assorted objects.
Fast-forward to the time of addons, when everything is malleable, Lua flows like wine in ancient Greece and the world is good. Tidy Plates took the nameplate API and turned it into something magical, creating a customizable and theme-able nameplate experience.
Why I didn't talk about Tiny Plates sooner
Tidy Plates and I had a bad first date. The reasons are still up in the air, to be honest. Was it me? Was it Tidy Plates? Who knows. When Tidy Plates showed up at my door wearing what appeared to be a beautiful dress, she turned out to be sluggish and unresponsive, sadly pushing the metaphor of my first dates too far into the realm of reality.
Finally, the mystery was solved. The version of Tidy Plates I had originally downloaded was having problems with other addons that were conveniently still on, despite needing to have been disabled a long while back. Still, the taste of dirty plates lingered in my mouth, until the constant reader email about Tidy Plates urged me to reevaluate.
Reevaluate I did, friends and readers. Tidy Plates is customizable, clean and fairly straightforward. In addition, the entire addon is theme-able, creating the possibility for some of the best functionality in the game from an addon (which I will get to in a minute).
I started compiling a little list of whys for my currently in progress mini-series Addons 101, and I think that might be a cool concept to move over into Addon Spotlight. Why would I want this addon? Here's a little list of reasons you would want to replace your nameplates with something more robust:
Threat Plates über alles
Threat Plates is one of those modifications that does one thing simply that changes your life. As a tank, you have enough to worry about. Group threat doesn't have to be one of them. What one, simple thing amongst all of the awesome things that Threat Plates does truly sets it apart? If set in tank mode, Tidy Plates shows the threat you have on a mob relative to the size and transparency of its nameplate. You can set it up however you wish. Here's the example.
You have a pack of ghouls to tank. You begin to hammer on them with your AoE threat abilities, and because you have the highest threat, the bars dwindle to a smaller size. As the jerky mage in your group begins to grab aggro on one of the ghouls, he creeps up on the threat meters. That ghoul's nameplate begins to get larger and red. Now you know to tab over to that particular ghoul and get some extra threat. It's brilliant, it works and it changed my life. Here's a video showing it all off!
Threat Plates is even more customizable than its addon parent Tidy Plates. You can customize all the transparencies and scales depending on your own preferences and even use an inverted DPS mode that shows when you're gaining too fast on the threat meter by changing the color of the nameplate. Finally, the addon sports low CPU usage and really saves a lot of space, if that's your thing.
So there it is. Tidy Plates and its happy companion, Threat Plates. Now you can stop with the emails -- I covered it. For the comments, if you're already a Tidy Plates evangelist, speak up! I want to see some awesome configurations with the nameplates. It's always been one area of the UI that I never really cared about until Tidy Plates actually started working for me.
Download Tidy Plates at [Curse] or [WoWInterface].
Download Threat Plates at [Curse] or [WoWInterface].
Speaking of emails, how about a quick reader email from the ol' Addon Mailbag?
The game has been designed with addons in mind since the beginning, and Blizzard constantly changes its encounter designs to cope with addons. Talk to any vanilla WoW player and ask about the old Decursive, how the original Naxxramas was built around players' effectively using the addon.
Blizzard also gives addons feeds of data and information now straight from the source, meaning addons like DPS meters and other types of addons that parse game information do so with the explicit sanction of Blizzard. Your DPS is not measured in the game -- the addon does the work. And for everyone who rails against DPS meters, it is still one of the better ways to tune encounters effectively and to monitor a player's ability to press the right buttons in the right order.
Addons are here to stay, and many of them are essential to the WoW experience. Just ask any healer in beta right now who has been healing with the default user interface. It's not fun.
See you guys next week!
Addons are what we do on Addon Spotlight. We did broker addons? Again!? Mat, what is wrong with you? Two broker Addon Spotlights? I never said I wasn't crazy! And remember, Addon Spotlight is fueled by viewers like you, so if you have a mod you think we should take a look at, email mat@wow.com.
Addon Spotlight truly is fueled by users just like you, considering how many emails I get about Tidy Plates. "Why haven't you talked about Tidy Plates yet? It's absolutely amazing." There's a reason I haven't talked about this particular mod before, and I'll get to that explanation, but for now know that I am happy to introduce Tidy Plates to those who don't know of its existence and reintroduce the 'plates to the already faithful.
What is Tidy Plates?
Have you ever pressed the V button while playing World of Warcraft? Heck, remember pressing and holding Alt during Warcraft III? What would appear were health bars above your enemy's and your units, easily allowing you to survey the battlefield for units harmed or on the verge of death. World of Warcraft continued the trend of their health bars above creature's heads with "nameplates," a name and a health bar floating happily above mobs, enemies, creatures and other assorted objects.
Fast-forward to the time of addons, when everything is malleable, Lua flows like wine in ancient Greece and the world is good. Tidy Plates took the nameplate API and turned it into something magical, creating a customizable and theme-able nameplate experience.
Why I didn't talk about Tiny Plates sooner
Tidy Plates and I had a bad first date. The reasons are still up in the air, to be honest. Was it me? Was it Tidy Plates? Who knows. When Tidy Plates showed up at my door wearing what appeared to be a beautiful dress, she turned out to be sluggish and unresponsive, sadly pushing the metaphor of my first dates too far into the realm of reality.

Finally, the mystery was solved. The version of Tidy Plates I had originally downloaded was having problems with other addons that were conveniently still on, despite needing to have been disabled a long while back. Still, the taste of dirty plates lingered in my mouth, until the constant reader email about Tidy Plates urged me to reevaluate.
Reevaluate I did, friends and readers. Tidy Plates is customizable, clean and fairly straightforward. In addition, the entire addon is theme-able, creating the possibility for some of the best functionality in the game from an addon (which I will get to in a minute).
I started compiling a little list of whys for my currently in progress mini-series Addons 101, and I think that might be a cool concept to move over into Addon Spotlight. Why would I want this addon? Here's a little list of reasons you would want to replace your nameplates with something more robust:
- Nameplates are underutilized by the Blizzard UI, only giving the player a health bar, elite or non-elite status, and a name.
- You want more robust information in front of you and above your enemy, as opposed to having to look at a unit frame.
- You want to have a customizable nameplate that matches the look and feel of your user interface.
Threat Plates über alles
Threat Plates is one of those modifications that does one thing simply that changes your life. As a tank, you have enough to worry about. Group threat doesn't have to be one of them. What one, simple thing amongst all of the awesome things that Threat Plates does truly sets it apart? If set in tank mode, Tidy Plates shows the threat you have on a mob relative to the size and transparency of its nameplate. You can set it up however you wish. Here's the example.
You have a pack of ghouls to tank. You begin to hammer on them with your AoE threat abilities, and because you have the highest threat, the bars dwindle to a smaller size. As the jerky mage in your group begins to grab aggro on one of the ghouls, he creeps up on the threat meters. That ghoul's nameplate begins to get larger and red. Now you know to tab over to that particular ghoul and get some extra threat. It's brilliant, it works and it changed my life. Here's a video showing it all off!
Threat Plates is even more customizable than its addon parent Tidy Plates. You can customize all the transparencies and scales depending on your own preferences and even use an inverted DPS mode that shows when you're gaining too fast on the threat meter by changing the color of the nameplate. Finally, the addon sports low CPU usage and really saves a lot of space, if that's your thing.
So there it is. Tidy Plates and its happy companion, Threat Plates. Now you can stop with the emails -- I covered it. For the comments, if you're already a Tidy Plates evangelist, speak up! I want to see some awesome configurations with the nameplates. It's always been one area of the UI that I never really cared about until Tidy Plates actually started working for me.
Download Tidy Plates at [Curse] or [WoWInterface].
Download Threat Plates at [Curse] or [WoWInterface].
Speaking of emails, how about a quick reader email from the ol' Addon Mailbag?

Thanks for the email, Abe. I'm glad people are enjoying Addons 101; I've been getting some great feedback on it. As for whether addons are necessary, in light of the default UI doing its own thing, I have a short, simple answer to that. Addons were not allowed in WoW by accident. The interface was designed to be a malleable, changeable and improved-upon piece of the World of Warcraft experience.Dear Addon Mat,
I am reading and very much enjoying your Addons 101 series. Even though I am already an addon aficionado, I do like going back and reading over this stuff, to remember why I am using this stuff in the first place. My question, though, is something for you: how many addons do you really think are necessary? A lot of people feel like the default UI is good enough.
Thanks for the columns and recommendations,
Abe
The game has been designed with addons in mind since the beginning, and Blizzard constantly changes its encounter designs to cope with addons. Talk to any vanilla WoW player and ask about the old Decursive, how the original Naxxramas was built around players' effectively using the addon.
Blizzard also gives addons feeds of data and information now straight from the source, meaning addons like DPS meters and other types of addons that parse game information do so with the explicit sanction of Blizzard. Your DPS is not measured in the game -- the addon does the work. And for everyone who rails against DPS meters, it is still one of the better ways to tune encounters effectively and to monitor a player's ability to press the right buttons in the right order.
Addons are here to stay, and many of them are essential to the WoW experience. Just ask any healer in beta right now who has been healing with the default user interface. It's not fun.
See you guys next week!
Addons are what we do on Addon Spotlight. We did broker addons? Again!? Mat, what is wrong with you? Two broker Addon Spotlights? I never said I wasn't crazy! And remember, Addon Spotlight is fueled by viewers like you, so if you have a mod you think we should take a look at, email mat@wow.com. Filed under: Add-Ons, AddOn Spotlight
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 4)
Adrilankha Jul 15th 2010 4:15PM
I was hoping Addon Spotlight and the community at large would be able to help me with an addon question. Does anyone know if an addon has been developed that adjusts the anchor (and to a lesser extent, the appearance) of the Real ID status pop-up box? That little box that pops up to tell you that Joe Schmo has logged in. I like that it was added to the UI, but when it pops up, it blocks some crucial parts of my UI and I'd rather not redo everything just for this one element.
Hëx Jul 15th 2010 4:19PM
Try out MoveAnything:
MoveAnything! is an User Interface(UI) customization addon. It enables you to move, scale, hide and alpha blend just about anything in WoW, making customizing your UI a walk in the park.
In order to take full advantage of MoveAnything you should bind a key to at least the "Move frame - Safe" key binding and possibly "Hide frame - Safe" and "Reset frame - Safe" as well. This can be done in Blizzards keybinding interface. MoveAnything will be at the bottom of the keybinding list if you've just installed it. These keybindings all operate on the frames that are currently under your mouse cursor, whereas the Safe ones tries to be a bit smart as to which frame you actually want.
http://wow.curse.com/downloads/wow-addons/details/move-anything.aspx
Ryan Jul 15th 2010 4:24PM
Not exactly what you asked for, but you can hide the popups under Options, Interface, Battle.net.
Uncheck the "Show Toast Window".
NomNomNom Jul 15th 2010 11:48PM
I've been searching for something similar, and stumbled across this.
http://www.wowinterface.com/downloads/info17035-Real-idToastmaster.html
Works perfectly :)
Mutak Jul 15th 2010 4:20PM
I would say that while a lot of addons make playing less of a hassle, none of them are necessary unless you raid or do serious PvP. If you just want to level and maybe run a few dungeons or the occasional BG, the default ui works fine. (Yes, even for a tank or a healer - i've done both.)
That said, i'm definitely going to try TidyPlates on on my tank - thanks for the heads-up there.
Pyromelter Jul 15th 2010 5:11PM
I would agree that the game is certainly playable with minimal or no addons. With regards to Tidy Plates, I have to say that it is a massive quality of life improvement, and really doesn't change your interface, just the way that you see mobs. For PVP, the Plates setting I use shows the health bar of the enemies as colored by class. In a big scrum in a battleground, the information is just so much easier to absorb... you know as a clothie if you see 2 dudes with brown bars over their head heading towards you, you get the heck outta there.
Mike Jul 15th 2010 4:22PM
Is there any Threat Plates skin that'll make it look like the default UI? I really like consistency in my UI, and while I used to use Tukui, I've since dropped it for a mostly-default UI for future-proofing reasons. I don't use any unit frames addon besides Healbot (which covers everything I need it for), iPopBar adds extra action bars to the base one (replaces the Micro Menu - VERY useful), and a couple other ones that I've managed to integrate rather seamlessly. The major exceptions are Threat Plates, Skada, and Healbot. Healbot I put up with for over-the-top usefulness, and Skada is only a tiny bit of real estate anyway. Threat Plates I'd like to match better, however.
McFish Jul 16th 2010 8:53AM
If you mean can you choose the bar texture "blizzard" in tidy plates of course you can, It uses the same shared media library as just about everything else.
Mike Jul 16th 2010 9:22AM
I mean have the plates look like Blizzard plates with the extra features (namely, resizing based on threat, which is why I have it).
firstlordmoth Jul 15th 2010 4:48PM
But can I use it to make my bite target on BQL stand out from the rest of the raid? A last second cloak of shadows and I've lost visual on my guildie and wind up getting mind controlled.
Pyromelter Jul 15th 2010 5:17PM
The best way to do a bite on BQL is to target them with your raid frame, and then use a follow macro. I use Clique and I have ctrl-alt-left click set to a simple /follow command. Your bite target should be making sure they are near you, as you are going to be doing more dps with the bite. Regarding the name plates, I've only ever been able to see friendly name plates as blue, but I've never tried changing the settings to change that up. Other than a raid mark, I don't see how you can make your bite target stand out any further. (Friendly nameplates on in a 25man raid would create too much on screen clutter, I would imagine)
K-Diggidy Jul 15th 2010 5:14PM
Ween! Represent the Boognish! Time to kiss the Blarney Stone and have some bananas and...
rhorle Jul 15th 2010 4:52PM
A lot of people I know prefer doc's nameplates. http://wow.curse.com/downloads/wow-addons/details/docsui-nameplates.aspx
Ramzor Jul 15th 2010 8:07PM
Indeed DocsNameplates is better, it tracks your dots on multiple mobs, so you can see who isn't dotted yet. Has the threat info as well.
Tidy Plates fails, has only 1 theme to track dots (neon?), only on your targetted plate, tracks also the useless one, are HUGE and bad placed because on top of the plates is the worst way to make multiple plates swap everywhere.
McFish Jul 16th 2010 8:50AM
@Rhole
A lot of people? That's very odd, considering Doc's usage is MUCH higher, Doc's has a lot of bug reports, and on both wowinterface.com and curse.com Tidy Plates has Literally 10X as many downloads.
Do you live somewhere where people make bad decisions on purpose? Or are you just like all those PS3 fan boys desperate to justify your bad decisions?
JoeRandom Jul 16th 2010 9:29AM
I can't comment on the general populatity, but docs-np work nicely for me. As a wl, the ability to track dots (and threat) on multiple mobs around me is very convenient, but the main selling point is the general slickness of the nameplate-design, which is much more polished than tidyplates: it's just looking gorgeous.
Then again, docs-np *is* a real ressource-hog, especially when there are plenty of mobs. I always get a considerable drop in fps when running Gun'Drak, as the snakes in the first room pop up, and I'm running a really hot gaming PC. Can't comment if that's a problem with tinyplates as well tho.. for heavy ae fights (think sindragosa-whelps-, not vile-spirits-LK-massive), I just turn the nameplates off.
Wellsee Jul 15th 2010 4:55PM
I used Tidy Threat plates for a good while, then switched over to DocsNamePlates, which is now in its fourth version. I'm wavering on going back to Tidy/threat though. One of the great things about Docs is the plate will show DoTs that are on each target, which works great for my Shadow priest. I thought the new version of Doc's was lacking a good threat display (about to get aggro, oh noooo!) but I found an option that may do it. The plates seems to stack on each other a little too much for my likes, but again, this could be user error.
I see there is a new version of it out today.
DocsNamePlates: http://www.wowinterface.com/downloads/info15809-r8.html#info
Pyromelter Jul 15th 2010 5:22PM
Guess what? Tidy/Threat plates also has that same DoT functionality out of the box! Even shows you cast bars, if you're into that kind of thing. I actually turned off my Threat Plates DoT timers because it felt a little cluttered, plus I track my dots with bars, so it was redundant. But if you like to track your dots on a huge trash pack Tidy/Threat does that perfectly. It shows the icon of your dot with a small timer (can't remember if the timer was displayed over the icon, or just under it). The default setup has the icons appearing just above the health bar with left alignment.
lol i am such a fanboy.
Ramzor Jul 15th 2010 8:14PM
@Pyromelter
No absolutely doesn't track the dots as DocsNameplates. On Tidy you can only see 1 dotted plate and the dots are shitty placed.
With Docs I can see who miss my dots and on what mobs are expiring.
Jayfitty Jul 15th 2010 5:42PM
Since I first installed Tidy Plates I've been using the Clean Plates theme, but I recently discovered Threat Plates, it is an excellent theme with a lot of simple and clean functionality. And it hides the health bars on those stupid Gundrak snakes!