Review: Healbot now available for your iPad or iPhone

This week, you can add another app to that list: Healbot, a free, stand-alone iOS game that simulates World of Warcraft boss fights from a healer's perspective. Your party takes damage; it's your job to heal through it. If the boss hits zero before your party does, you win. Just like real life! Well, real life in Azeroth, anyway.
If the name app's name sounds familiar, that's intentional. According to the game's developers, Healbot is "based on the mechanics of the Healbot mod in WoW." But how does this simulation stack up against the real thing? And is it worth your dear, sweet, precious time?
Gameplay
The gameplay is fairly simple and easy to pick up. You're shown a screen with six different health bars -- one for the boss, five for your party. As the boss damages your party, it's your responsibility to choose one of the three available heals -- light, medium, or heavy -- to keep everyone alive until the boss dies.
As you might expect, the tank takes the bulk of the damage in any given simulated fight. The rest of the party will often take direct damage, too, but at a lower frequency and magnitude. On occasion, the boss will unleash an attack that hits all members of your party.
Through all of that, it's your job to choose one of three possible healing spells to use. There's Light, a low-strength heal with a quick cast time; Medium, a middle-of-the-road spell in terms of both strength and time; and Heavy, the most powerful heal that requires the longest amount of time to complete.Currently, the game has two different modes. In Automatic Loss mode, you lose the game if any member of your party dies. By toggling that option off, you can play a much more realistic simulation in which the game continues even if a party member dies. Should someone bite the dust, though, the game gets much harder -- the remaining party members take more damage. Of course, if you die as the healer, you can no longer cast any heals -- you just have to hope the boss hits 0% before the rest of the party does.
The challenge level seems pretty low here. As a shadow priest, I have minimal healing experience, and yet I was able to almost immediately master the game. Since you have only three healing options, the game lacks a level of real complexity. There are no HOTs, cooldowns, or shields to keep things interesting. It's like playing a priest who's only able to use the spells Flash Heal, Heal, and Greater Heal, which gets pretty old after one or two simulated fights.
There's no mana bar to watch, so you can spam heals in anticipation of damage without penalty. You can also cast all three heals simultaneously -- no need to wait for your heavy heal to finish casting before hitting the light heal button. Your party members enjoy a certain amount of healing independent of what you provide, yet another factor that takes away from the difficulty. Not that any of these are necessary -- the damage the boss deals never feels like much of a challenge to mitigate.
Graphics and interface
Graphics here are simple and utilitarian. You're basically just looking at a Healbot or default raid frame healing window. Controls are simple, too; all you have to do is tap the screen to choose your target, and then tap the heal you want to use. As far as simulating the most basic of healer mechanics and experiences, it does a decent job.
Is it worth it?
This isn't exactly the kind of app I'd be willing to pay for -- but thankfully, I didn't have to. The Healbot iOS app is free. That being the case, if you own an iPhone or iPad, there's no reason not to check it out. It's an interesting little time-waster that, as a WoW player, you'll probably get a few minutes of enjoyment from.
While they're not there yet, the folks at Trip Hop have made a decent first step toward creating a fun WoW healing simulator. Hopefully, after a little more time in development, the Healbot iOS app will be a much more realistic simulator, and as such, a much more enjoyable experience.
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Filed under: Add-Ons, Raid Rx (Raid Healing)
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Reader Comments (Page 2 of 3)
Snuzzle Jul 27th 2011 9:56PM
It would be great if they put in an actual screenshot of certain boss battles, with the huge health bars plastered over it. Raganaros (classic), Onyxia, Hogger, The Lich King, etc.
Martin Jul 27th 2011 7:48PM
I love the idea, though I'm gonna try to do a webapp that uses the mouse+modifier keys. Mostly cause I'm learning JavaScript/jQuery and want something interesting to work on.
It'd be cool to have a somewhat competent 'trainer' for healers, though you can't really simulate stupid too well. Fortunately in Cata it's pretty tough to heal through stupid anyway.
Saeadame Jul 28th 2011 3:32AM
That would be great! I don't know how good it would train people to actually heal in-game, but I would DEFINITELY find it valuable for learning keybindings. I have 3 level capped healers, and I've played my druid with the same keybindings for 2 or 3 years now, so it's automatic, but for my other characters I have trouble remembering sometimes. It would be nice to have a game I could set up with my own keybindings and then play while I wait for a queue/the raid to fill so I can remind myself of what spells are on what click/mod combinations =).
shadcroly Jul 27th 2011 8:06PM
"It's like playing a priest who's only able to use the spells Flash Heal, Heal, and Greater Heal, which gets pretty old after one or two simulated fights."
Welcome to healing as a Holy Paladin...
dmas Jul 28th 2011 4:43AM
Here's a great thread actually exploring the three heal model across the healing classes.
http://us.battle.net/wow/en/forum/topic/2593008994
Although statistically you do see Holy Paladins relying more upon the three standard heals, there's more to healing well as a Holy Paladin than these three spells. Just because you can heal adequately with three, it's learning to use the other healing spells and tools in your toolkit that will move you from an adequate healer to an exceptional healer.
dj.clayden Jul 27th 2011 8:23PM
I'm actually rather tempted to try and make a Flash version of this type of game, but with quite a lot more complexity. The only thing stopping me is that it'd probably be awful, and nobody would play it.
jfofla Jul 27th 2011 8:53PM
Flash is old school.
Got to be able to play it on iPads
dj.clayden Jul 27th 2011 9:25PM
Yes, but I know AS, no idea how you code a game for iOS :)
KEFIOX Jul 27th 2011 8:39PM
I am lol'ing so hard irl right now at this app. I have been having a really shitty day and this app makes me smile. I love my 4 healers, I would really love to see an app that can simulate healing a little more effectively. As it is I already play Infinity Blade pretending I'm one of my 4 tanks lol.
Revynn Jul 27th 2011 9:32PM
As others have said, it's not a truly accurate healing experience, but it does seem like a fun little time waster or a way for a new healer to get their feet wet without the pressure of people expecting you to keep them alive.
As a DPS main, though, I'm hoping someone can create something like this that let's me practice my Kitty/Hunter/Ret rotation while I'm bored and away from the computer.
Tyrlan Jul 28th 2011 6:40AM
Healbot can't be an accurate simulation of healing in game. I just easily won my first game despite the fact that, with the exception on tanking in one PUG, I've only ever played DPS and I almost always solo, so my only healing experience has been on myself.
extreem3d Jul 28th 2011 8:26AM
id like to see actual healing skills and actual bosses perhaps also setting what type of tank and dps you have would be nice perhaps im asking for to much but it could realy be helpful to prectice healing some of the tougher bosses.
Gina Jul 28th 2011 2:08AM
SO now we have the addon (its great these days), the iOS app (holy tunnel vision batman), and the entirely unrelated to both healing blog healbot.net :) It's a trilogy of healbotness!
wobin Jul 28th 2011 3:00AM
Pft, if you want a proper training of raid healing, take this game on your ipad/iphone and play it while wandering across a heavily trafficked highway =)
Philster043 Jul 28th 2011 6:54PM
^ Totally.
styopa Jul 28th 2011 8:05AM
If you enjoy this (and yes, when it becomes more accurate, adding a mana-resource, HoTs, and perhaps a randomly-displayed popup "You're standing in the fire! Move? Y/N"), I'm not sure why you'd bother to pay/play WoW. It's pretty much the life of a healer in groups.
If watching meters and missing everything else is not how we're supposed to play, then Blizz would need to disable the ability to show people's health bars anywhere but above/on/near their toons onscreen. But that's what the experience is, with one eye on the main screen to stay out of fire.
Philster043 Jul 28th 2011 6:55PM
I guess social interaction?
Rai Jul 28th 2011 8:45AM
I can imagine the next app simulating the experience of queueing for a dungeon using the dungeon finder.
"You have been removed from the dungeon finder because someone in your group ran out of battery power".
Jolly Jul 28th 2011 10:38AM
I can't wait for my next heroic Stonecore. The tank fails on Ozruk, everyone dies, and I see this:
"Stupid noob ha3lz! I am teh win on iPh0n3...wy you suuuuuck???"
You have been removed from group.
shadowhowl1900 Jul 28th 2011 10:55AM
but are they standing in fire?