Addon Spotlight: Bati's Healer Grid layouts
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, Grid gets some pre-made loving thanks to Bati!
Thursday is here! Thursday is here! Excitement abounds in my secret addon lair for many reasons. First, my original vanilla WoW character is back in action. Originally, as many of you have read in my past columns, priest was my class of choice. Healers tend to be my forte because of group desirability -- selfishly and selflessly, I always rolled healer to get invited to groups and be there to support the healerless masses back when this was a thing. After a stint in Warhammer Online, tanking became my new love and, after a quick respec and some forum threads, my Burning Crusade healadin became my Wrath tankadin. After almost three years in the freezer, my priest has emerged from cryo-stasis.
Boy, has the priest game changed since the original Naxxramas -- the world is so different now for a priest. After witnessing the second best discipline priest ever rule the school with healing and absorption, I was in love with the spec. Quickly, I rushed to the internets, pulled up a talent build and went to town. Upon loading up my priest, it dawned on me that the cardinal rule had been broken -- I wasn't addon-prepared. Sure, heals went off and shields went up, but that was the extent of the information. It's been years, and I needed a healer UI setup but wanted instant satisfaction. Let me introduce you to Bati's UI Grid Layout, a set of healer-specific grid layouts for every healing class. This, my friends, is exciting.
Bati has created something that I truly appreciate: easy-to-use, easy-to-set-up, pre-made Grid healer profiles that give you everything you could ask for. The profile set even includes a DPS setup for your off spec, if needed.
An interface for every healer

Oren.1 is the paladin interface, showing all of the pertinent buffs on the target at the bottom of the Grid frame, with built-in timers from the excellent addon OmniCC. Bati is the priest Grid setup, displaying shields, Weakened Soul, Prayer of Mending and other vital priest information right on the Grid frame. Paired with a PoM counter addon, this setup proves very powerful for priests.
Shaman is, obviously, the restoration shaman profile, sporting Earth Shield and Riptide trackers. Personally, as a resto shaman myself occasionally, I've found most healing user interfaces that are too complex become only hindrances. Less has always been better for me as a shaman healer, but your mileage may vary. Bati's shaman setup is still in a state of flux, however, so any capable shaman should hit up Bati with some tips!
Maiie is the druid interface, and while I don't have much druid healing experience, I asked my buddy and he said it looked great. So yay, druids!
Arena is a profile setting that surprised me, mostly because of how some simple changes to Grid can have such a dramatic effect on the PvP healing game. Bati's specific arena setup runs with paladins in mind, but easy tweaks should be enough to let any healer make use of the basic work done. Enabling the arena setting nets a bigger Grid layout, with larger debuff icons for quicker recognition of what needs to be removed -- an excellent choice for the beginner arena player. Speaking of arenas, all of you who have been begging for some PvP talk on Reader UI of the Week should definitely tune in next Tuesday (hint hint, wink wink, nudge nudge).
The Grid layouts Bati has created can also be found in a larger UI compilation known as Bati's UI, an excellent minimalist setup that is eye-catching and well crafted. For those of you looking to overhaul your entire user interface, Bati's would make an excellent learning tool, reference guide or just a place to snag some ideas from. I cannot commend Bati enough for putting together such a simple to use, multi-class and multi-role user interface.
Installation
Installation of Bati's Grid layouts is fairly simple. If you already have Grid, I would recommend making a copy of both your Grid addon folders and your grid.lua file from the Saved Variables folder in your WTF folder structure under your account. Just go to WTF > Account > Your Account > Saved Variables and copy out that file, just in case you want your old Grid layouts back. If you are a new Grid user, you have nothing to worry about. Just copy the new grid.lua file provided in the addon download into that folder, allowing you access to all of the pre-made content from Bati.
After all of the addons are installed successfully (use Bati's images as a guide if needed on the addon's WoWInterface page), type /grid config in game, select your profile and you're off to the races. It may seem a little bit complex, but I promise you, much like Sindragosa or Mimiron Firefighter, it's much easier in execution than the 30-minute explanation from your raid leader while everyone falls asleep.
Wrap up
Vuhdo, Healbot and the rest of the healer raid frame addons are also wonderful choices, no doubt about it. Bati's Grid layouts, however, are ready to go, and addition functionality can be added to the Grid layouts using a click-to-cast spell addon like Clique. If you aren't up to the somewhat daunting task of configuring up a perfect Grid setup, or just looking to see how other Grid setups work, Bati's configurations are excellent learning environments. Bati gets good marks for putting together many awesome setups for multiple healing classes.
Download Bati's UI Grid layouts at [WoWInterface].
Download Bati UI at [WoWInterface].
Addons are what we do on Addon Spotlight. If you're new to mods, Addons 101 will walk you through the basics; see what other players are doing at Reader UI of the Week. If there's a mod you think Addon Spotlight should take a look at, email mat@wow.com.
Thursday is here! Thursday is here! Excitement abounds in my secret addon lair for many reasons. First, my original vanilla WoW character is back in action. Originally, as many of you have read in my past columns, priest was my class of choice. Healers tend to be my forte because of group desirability -- selfishly and selflessly, I always rolled healer to get invited to groups and be there to support the healerless masses back when this was a thing. After a stint in Warhammer Online, tanking became my new love and, after a quick respec and some forum threads, my Burning Crusade healadin became my Wrath tankadin. After almost three years in the freezer, my priest has emerged from cryo-stasis.
Boy, has the priest game changed since the original Naxxramas -- the world is so different now for a priest. After witnessing the second best discipline priest ever rule the school with healing and absorption, I was in love with the spec. Quickly, I rushed to the internets, pulled up a talent build and went to town. Upon loading up my priest, it dawned on me that the cardinal rule had been broken -- I wasn't addon-prepared. Sure, heals went off and shields went up, but that was the extent of the information. It's been years, and I needed a healer UI setup but wanted instant satisfaction. Let me introduce you to Bati's UI Grid Layout, a set of healer-specific grid layouts for every healing class. This, my friends, is exciting.
Bati has created something that I truly appreciate: easy-to-use, easy-to-set-up, pre-made Grid healer profiles that give you everything you could ask for. The profile set even includes a DPS setup for your off spec, if needed.
An interface for every healer

Oren.1 is the paladin interface, showing all of the pertinent buffs on the target at the bottom of the Grid frame, with built-in timers from the excellent addon OmniCC. Bati is the priest Grid setup, displaying shields, Weakened Soul, Prayer of Mending and other vital priest information right on the Grid frame. Paired with a PoM counter addon, this setup proves very powerful for priests.
Shaman is, obviously, the restoration shaman profile, sporting Earth Shield and Riptide trackers. Personally, as a resto shaman myself occasionally, I've found most healing user interfaces that are too complex become only hindrances. Less has always been better for me as a shaman healer, but your mileage may vary. Bati's shaman setup is still in a state of flux, however, so any capable shaman should hit up Bati with some tips!
Maiie is the druid interface, and while I don't have much druid healing experience, I asked my buddy and he said it looked great. So yay, druids!
Arena is a profile setting that surprised me, mostly because of how some simple changes to Grid can have such a dramatic effect on the PvP healing game. Bati's specific arena setup runs with paladins in mind, but easy tweaks should be enough to let any healer make use of the basic work done. Enabling the arena setting nets a bigger Grid layout, with larger debuff icons for quicker recognition of what needs to be removed -- an excellent choice for the beginner arena player. Speaking of arenas, all of you who have been begging for some PvP talk on Reader UI of the Week should definitely tune in next Tuesday (hint hint, wink wink, nudge nudge).

Installation
Installation of Bati's Grid layouts is fairly simple. If you already have Grid, I would recommend making a copy of both your Grid addon folders and your grid.lua file from the Saved Variables folder in your WTF folder structure under your account. Just go to WTF > Account > Your Account > Saved Variables and copy out that file, just in case you want your old Grid layouts back. If you are a new Grid user, you have nothing to worry about. Just copy the new grid.lua file provided in the addon download into that folder, allowing you access to all of the pre-made content from Bati.
After all of the addons are installed successfully (use Bati's images as a guide if needed on the addon's WoWInterface page), type /grid config in game, select your profile and you're off to the races. It may seem a little bit complex, but I promise you, much like Sindragosa or Mimiron Firefighter, it's much easier in execution than the 30-minute explanation from your raid leader while everyone falls asleep.

Vuhdo, Healbot and the rest of the healer raid frame addons are also wonderful choices, no doubt about it. Bati's Grid layouts, however, are ready to go, and addition functionality can be added to the Grid layouts using a click-to-cast spell addon like Clique. If you aren't up to the somewhat daunting task of configuring up a perfect Grid setup, or just looking to see how other Grid setups work, Bati's configurations are excellent learning environments. Bati gets good marks for putting together many awesome setups for multiple healing classes.
Download Bati's UI Grid layouts at [WoWInterface].
Download Bati UI at [WoWInterface].
Filed under: Add-Ons, AddOn Spotlight
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
Martin Aug 27th 2010 1:54AM
The following addons make druid healing excellent:
- Grid
- Clique
- GridStatusRole (shows tank, healer, ranged, melee)
- GridStatusHots (shows individual hot timers in each corner of the grid box)
In my opinion there is far too much information to manage when raid healing 25 people with potentially four hots per person to leave it to the stock UI.
sherekhan88 Aug 27th 2010 7:11AM
I'm just about to start on my first exciting foray into healing on my Druid alt, and I'm fretting about addons that I need more than the gear (with heirlooms, I'm pretty much all set).
So far, I'm thinking of starting with HealBot since I'll be doing 5mans first, but prolly graduate to Grid or something similar once I enter 25mans.
Also, I think it's because it's partially the mug of Neil Patrick Harris instructing me that's making look at Grid more closely ;D
Wyred Aug 27th 2010 8:53AM
I would also recommend GridRaidDebuffs
Thedoctorr Aug 27th 2010 7:22AM
Umm, that "to show names or not to show names" argument?
Two words: Battle Rez
"Druid 1 brez baddps1"
"Druid 2 brez baddps2"
Etc, multiple death need names for coordination or you will
a) be slower
b) waste rez on same failbot
Camaris Aug 27th 2010 7:31AM
Names are quite important, IMO. You know who your absolute top DPSers are, and who are (off-)tanks. Also, how else do you handle multi-spec people? Retri tanks and holy tanks would both be pink.
Also, you need to know who are gnomes.
jacksworth Aug 27th 2010 8:09AM
cos gnomes get extra heals right? ...right?
tokani11 Aug 27th 2010 3:05PM
Hello there and thanks for the preview. Now even I could have describe it better. Please make sure if there are any issues you will be mentioning them on the addon page.
Bati
wyzim Aug 27th 2010 9:09AM
If 2-3 people die at the same time in a burst of damage, my raid leader specifically assigns each dead person to a druid. I don't know how druids can heal without the names on raid frames.
archer75 Aug 27th 2010 9:17AM
I have tired all the healer addons but always come back to grid. More specifically Grid2 because it's easier to configure. And my setup is pretty similar to what is shown here. That plus my gamepad makes me a very fast healer.
DoubleCrit Aug 27th 2010 9:50AM
Talk about information over load. Just started healing on my Shaman and grid could not be easier to set up. Just take a whole 20 minutes to look over the settings of grid and you too can be a master of healing. For the next few months until Cata launches if you heal and don't know about grid then you should not be healing in my raid.
Evoke Aug 27th 2010 11:08AM
Healbot>grid
Healbot>VuhDo
Styvorama Aug 27th 2010 6:08PM
Lies, Grid > all, just need to be willing to put the time in to set it up. If you want less, but need out of the box function, go with Vuhdo or Healbot.
tokani11 Aug 27th 2010 3:08PM
edit to my other post...
I couldn't * describe it better.
Innocente Aug 27th 2010 3:30PM
@Bati
Don't know why some developers just insist on using something other than .zip files.
I suppose you like .rar
Some like other formats.
But, really. The vast majority use .zip
Your addon doesn't even get a first look from me since not using a standard distribution format immediately raises a red-flag in relation to judgement on other issues.
And yes, Mac does have native support built in for .zip files.
Good Luck
tokani11 Aug 27th 2010 4:10PM
@ Innocente
Hmm, I didn't think at that. I am not really a .rar fan. Was only the fact that it packed smaller. Will update it with .zip then.
Jesse Felt Aug 27th 2010 4:12PM
My only healer is a Shaman, and I would certainly agree that simpler is sooo much better. I want to know who my ES is on, who my RT is on, Who has Inc heals, Who has something I can Cleanse (one color please) and health levels. That's it (okay, maybe mana too).
Maybe that's why I have never liked Grid before. It seems to be far more complex than is really necessary as a Resto Shaman... that and the fact that visually it never seems to match the UI, no matter what you do with the quite limited visual configuration options.
LytLady Aug 27th 2010 7:27PM
As a Healer on 3 classes (Druid, Priest, Shaman), I started with Healbot for about 9 months, tried Grid for 7 months, and ended up with Vuhdo. All those that are Grid users who gave Vuhdo a try back in the day, should give it another try. It has changed quite a bit with a ton more options as it is constantly being updated. This is not just a healing addon. Threads on PlusHeal.com website are addresseed daily by IZA (Iza_Gilneas). This guy is amazing with his tentativeness to his addon, esp if you read his back story and how/why Vuhdo was started. Vuhdo on PlusHeal.com http://www.plusheal.com/viewforum.php?f=32&sid=76488d6bd3bb35ac628729f1132c56d3
I just healed ICC25 up to LK with super high latency (Averaging between 1.2k and 2.8k, with spikes of 4k, which was odd and very frustrating when I usually average below 300) on my Druid and most of my heals went through just fine. Infact I was usually at the top where I usualy am and kept my guys alive. I was surprised how quickly Vuhdo exchaged the info. I am no computer wiz, but to me this is a major plus. I do not know how Grid would have handle this.
Most of our raiding guild Healers use Vuhdo. Mine looks like RainbowBrite land, where one of our top main raiding Healers looks almost exacting like Grid.. and very dark. He leans towards the very dark hues, where I am a pocket of colorful sunshine. Our health bars flow differently. We also gather different informatin in different ways. I prefer bars, he like dots. He was a huge Grid user, while I admit I was more of a Healbot. He was the one who suggested I switch to Vuhdo. I like the versatility of Vuhdo to fit all types of needs. This is not saying Grid is bad, only testimonial that Vuhdo works for me and a variety of players that I know. Though it is out-of-the-box easy, there is a ton of configuring you can do with it. Actually, there seems to be too many options.
But Grid does have a following and should not be discounted. I think our addons should always fit our style of play, and our personality. For begining, or non-commital, Healers I recommend Healbot or Vuhdo, with great out of the box features. For our more serious raid Healers I recommend Vuhdo and Grid, with more info and customizations avaliable.
To each his/her own.
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