WoW Rookie: Becoming a PvP legend, step 2

We talked a few weeks ago about how to become a PvP legend. That advice was the pretty general stuff like "master the mouse turn" and "learn the other classes." Let's start talking about the more advanced stuff that will take your game to another level.
Remember that learning how to PvP isn't an easy road. While you can look up specific strategies and mods for boss fights, battlegrounds and arenas are dynamic, fluid fights. Your opponent will act and react according to your behavior, not follow any kind of script. The challenges are different, and it will take some time to pick up the way PvP works.
Healers: Protect yours, kill theirs
I feel like I say this a lot and am in danger of sounding like a broken record. Still, I suppose if it's a broken record someone listens to, it's a broken record worth playing: it's about the healers. The way healers are balanced, you're just not likely to blow through your enemy if he's getting healed. Healers just output way too much healing to be left alone.
Here are some tips to help you actually accomplish that:
- Keep your healer in your line of sight; you can't protect what you can't see
- When you get the enemy healer in your target reticle, announce it to the rest of your team so that they can back you up
- Keep your interrupt handy; it's hard to kill a healer through their heals, so you need to stop those spells from getting off
- If you have DoTs, spread them around; anything you can do to produce pressure is a good idea
Thinking in terms of pressure
While doing damage is how you will ultimately kill your target in PvP, just like it is in PvE, the real currency of player combat is "pressure." Damage is a type of pressure, certainly, but it isn't the only kind.
Other types of pressure include:
- Crowd control applied to opponents
- Consistently interrupting and stymying opponent's attempts to cast
- Snare, slow, and debuff the enemy player
These techniques are more effective against most players than they even are against PvE bosses. Players frequently panic and lose focus when they get lit up with debuffs and DoTs. Getting the other guy to panic is just as good as an actual game-mechanic crowd control.

Due to the cross-server nature of battlegrounds and arena, you will usually face a huge variety of opponents. That's okay. Start learning their names anyway. Pay attention to who you're fighting. Do this even inside a single battleground; learn the name of that vile rogue who's farming the graveyard or the annoying hunter sniping people toward the flag.
Once you've done that, start specifically countering those folks. If you recognize the name of someone who dies easily, take the time to kill them. If you recognize someone who kills you easily ... avoid them!
While you won't often recognize the same person between battlegrounds, you absolutely need to take advantage of the times you do.
Zergs win
If you are by yourself, and you charge into a pack of ten players, you're going to die. More importantly, you're going to die uselessly. And then when you're uselessly dead, and uselessly waiting for the spirit healer to bring you back to life, those ten players are going to go succeed at their goal.
It helps to stick with other players on your team. This provide mutual protection and a much higher chance of success.
I sometimes like to stick with a particular player. Not only does that give me the chance to roleplay that I'm in a buddy cop movie and pretend to be the loose cannon running side-by-side with my straight-laced compadre, but I find that's a good way to develop a rapport and improve skills.
Filed under: WoW Rookie






Reader Comments (Page 2 of 2)
DG Apr 21st 2011 6:54PM
I like playing healers in Alterac Valley. A 51 level healer can turn that match around if the toons in it are serious about winning. IT's a miserable match to heal when the team races to the end boss and stands around guarding nothing. I will head back out then, but am not available to heal at boss when towers go down.
I look for an aggressive high DPS char to place my focus on and follow around.
Awesome Apr 21st 2011 8:27PM
that last bit with sticking to a another experience player brings back many fun BG memories
I can't remember how many times I ran along side someone else backing them up on my alts.
And the experience got even better when someone ran behind ME giving me back up on my main.
Even if your not an RP'er its still kinda fun to RP to yourself that your the bumbling/not so talented side kick, or on the flipside, the badass hero.
sherekhan88 Apr 21st 2011 10:26PM
The varied terrain in BGs are great for some unusual tactics too. I have a Rhino and a BM PVP build for when I'm on AB, EOTS or AV. These have towers, strange terrain, or places where being flung into oblivion by a charging Rhino is the worse thing possible. The best is how it works with the Rhino remaining camoed, so I see many people trying to run from my furious Predator-shielded charing Rhino, only to be caught and flung high high high into oblivion.
chrissie Apr 22nd 2011 10:47AM
As a healer, one of my favorite PvP partners is a guy who always seems to have an idea of where I am and if I need peels.
I don't PvP seriously enough to switch to Skype or voice-activated Vent, so by the time I have the leisure to call for help, it might already be too late. I try to be vocal about these things, but in the end, it's so much easier to know that your partners are keeping an eye out for you.
Note that there are plenty of very good players who are nevertheless terrible at this, and it's not something I expect from people; it's something in the nature of a bonus. I realize that DPS already have a ton of stuff eating their attention -- kill target, enemy healer, enemy cooldowns, diminishing returns on CC, etc. -- but if you can spare some attention for the status of your healer, too, I am sure that it will be appreciated.