WoW Rookie: 8 tips the veterans use in their gameplay
New around here? WoW Rookie has your back! Get all our collected tips, tricks and tactics for new players in the WoW Rookie Guide. WoW Rookie is about more than just being new to the game; it's about checking out new classes, new playstyles, and new zones.
WoW's a big game, and it features plenty of nooks and crannies for everyone to explore and tuck away favorite tricks. With millions of players and years of development behind it, the World of Warcraft is a lot for a new player to grasp all at once. Even after playing on your own for a while, a player who isn't plugged into the community can miss little techniques that veteran players take for granted. These little hidden features aren't obvious if no one tells you or you don't read about them on fan sites or news sources.
Without further comment, let's dive into 8 tips the veterans use in their gameplay. They might help you out.
8. Get some addons. Addons are an obvious go-to method for improving your gameplay, but you'd be surprised how little documentation exists about them inside the game. Essentially, addons allow you to customize your game, change the UI, and otherwise tackle difficult tasks a little more easily. Addons can do many, many different things, so you'll have to experiment and explore. Addon Spotlight is a good place to start. As a note, I'd caution you not get too reliant on addons and let your skills atrophy; addons are useful, but don't let them become a crutch.
7. Grab a partner. Guilds are like big families who kill bosses together, laugh together, and wipe together. But unless you're tearing up the progression charts, you'll probably still need to run a few heroic dungeons each week to max out your valor points.
It helps to have partner when you're doing these dungeons. Even if both of you are DPS (and thus still get long queue times), then you'll benefit from simply having a friendly face in the PUG. A partner adds a bit of comfort to the PUG and will hopefully make things go faster.
6. Don't enchant items you'll replace soon. If you're leveling a new character to the endgame, it can be tempting to spend a bunch of cash on every single blue and green drop that you equip. Don't do it; you'll be replacing that sucker soon enough, and there's no reason to feed that cash to the AH monster.
At this point, even purple gear at item level 359 should be considered suspect. Take the time to check out what gear you'll get from Molten Front dailies and valor points. All that stuff is probably worth the cash to enchant, but anything with a lower ilevel is dubious.
Caveat: All bets are off if you're wearing those blue and green items into a raid. Work with your raid group about that stuff.
5. Don't buy anything from the auction house. The auction house is an awesome location of player-vs.-player combat, with the perfectly fair goal of robbing you as blind as possible. If you can avoid buying anything from the auction house, avoid it. In a single phrase, "There be dragons here."
WoW's economy is inhabited by a class of players who want nothing more than to make as much money with as little work as possible. That's the dream, anyway, and it's fair. To accomplish that natural goal, professional AH players ratchet the prices on everything as high as possible. They seek to dominate the market and make everything as expensive as possible. Gaming the auction house isn't cheating or anything like that, but it doesn't gel well with your casual or newbie playstyle. Sell your stuff on the auction house, but avoid buying from it unless you absolutely must. Even then, make sure the item you want is worth spending money on.
4. Use a damage meter. I know. I advise against addons all the time, since I believe they turn into a crutch that retards your skills. I carefully caveat that idea, though; some areas of the game absolutely demand addons, because Blizzard provides no functionality for those portions. Damage meters are an example of that.
While I loathe the DPS-obsessed mentality you usually find on the official forums, the fact of the matter is that you can't improve your damage if you don't know what it is in the first place. Nothing in the game tells you what your damage is like, and how can you improve it if you can't see it in the first place? Without a damage meter, a mage auto-firing a wand could darn well believe he's doing top DPS. While I caution you not to develop damage meter tunnel vision, you should have an idea of your numbers in the first place.
3. Click targets to reduce accidents. Everyone knows you can just hit Tab to target. Slapping Tab quickly lets you cycle through enemy targets fast. The only problem is that it's easy to too tab too quickly and accidentally pull extra enemies.
Click targeting will clean that up. Depending on your speed with the mouse, you won't lose much DPS time by click targeting instead of using Tab. However, even if you lose a second or so while click targeting your enemy, it will definitely be safer.
That being said, of course, tabbing when all the local mobs are already aggro is just fine.
2. Item levels count. In general, gear has two scales of quality. Green, blue, and purple is one scale, while raw item level is the other scale. As a general rule, gear is always better with a higher item level. Purple gear is the best within the same tier of item level, while green is the worst. When in doubt, you usually want to go with the highest item level possible.
1. Dying isn't much of a penalty. Don't be afraid to die. It's disappointing, and you can accrue some very mild repair costs. But especially as a lower-level player, don't be afraid to die. Some of the best moments in the game come when you say, "I can't believe I lived through that," and you can't get to those moments without risking death.
What's your tip?
The nice thing about this column is that we get plenty of veteran players who stop by and offer advice. So what about it, you guys? What advice do you give new players that isn't documented in the game itself?
Visit the WoW Rookie Guide for links to everything you need to get started as a new player, from how to control your character and camera angles when you're just starting out, to learning how to tank, getting up to speed for heroics and even how to win Tol Barad.
WoW's a big game, and it features plenty of nooks and crannies for everyone to explore and tuck away favorite tricks. With millions of players and years of development behind it, the World of Warcraft is a lot for a new player to grasp all at once. Even after playing on your own for a while, a player who isn't plugged into the community can miss little techniques that veteran players take for granted. These little hidden features aren't obvious if no one tells you or you don't read about them on fan sites or news sources.
Without further comment, let's dive into 8 tips the veterans use in their gameplay. They might help you out.
8. Get some addons. Addons are an obvious go-to method for improving your gameplay, but you'd be surprised how little documentation exists about them inside the game. Essentially, addons allow you to customize your game, change the UI, and otherwise tackle difficult tasks a little more easily. Addons can do many, many different things, so you'll have to experiment and explore. Addon Spotlight is a good place to start. As a note, I'd caution you not get too reliant on addons and let your skills atrophy; addons are useful, but don't let them become a crutch.
7. Grab a partner. Guilds are like big families who kill bosses together, laugh together, and wipe together. But unless you're tearing up the progression charts, you'll probably still need to run a few heroic dungeons each week to max out your valor points.
It helps to have partner when you're doing these dungeons. Even if both of you are DPS (and thus still get long queue times), then you'll benefit from simply having a friendly face in the PUG. A partner adds a bit of comfort to the PUG and will hopefully make things go faster.
6. Don't enchant items you'll replace soon. If you're leveling a new character to the endgame, it can be tempting to spend a bunch of cash on every single blue and green drop that you equip. Don't do it; you'll be replacing that sucker soon enough, and there's no reason to feed that cash to the AH monster.
At this point, even purple gear at item level 359 should be considered suspect. Take the time to check out what gear you'll get from Molten Front dailies and valor points. All that stuff is probably worth the cash to enchant, but anything with a lower ilevel is dubious.
Caveat: All bets are off if you're wearing those blue and green items into a raid. Work with your raid group about that stuff.
5. Don't buy anything from the auction house. The auction house is an awesome location of player-vs.-player combat, with the perfectly fair goal of robbing you as blind as possible. If you can avoid buying anything from the auction house, avoid it. In a single phrase, "There be dragons here."
WoW's economy is inhabited by a class of players who want nothing more than to make as much money with as little work as possible. That's the dream, anyway, and it's fair. To accomplish that natural goal, professional AH players ratchet the prices on everything as high as possible. They seek to dominate the market and make everything as expensive as possible. Gaming the auction house isn't cheating or anything like that, but it doesn't gel well with your casual or newbie playstyle. Sell your stuff on the auction house, but avoid buying from it unless you absolutely must. Even then, make sure the item you want is worth spending money on.

While I loathe the DPS-obsessed mentality you usually find on the official forums, the fact of the matter is that you can't improve your damage if you don't know what it is in the first place. Nothing in the game tells you what your damage is like, and how can you improve it if you can't see it in the first place? Without a damage meter, a mage auto-firing a wand could darn well believe he's doing top DPS. While I caution you not to develop damage meter tunnel vision, you should have an idea of your numbers in the first place.
3. Click targets to reduce accidents. Everyone knows you can just hit Tab to target. Slapping Tab quickly lets you cycle through enemy targets fast. The only problem is that it's easy to too tab too quickly and accidentally pull extra enemies.
Click targeting will clean that up. Depending on your speed with the mouse, you won't lose much DPS time by click targeting instead of using Tab. However, even if you lose a second or so while click targeting your enemy, it will definitely be safer.
That being said, of course, tabbing when all the local mobs are already aggro is just fine.
2. Item levels count. In general, gear has two scales of quality. Green, blue, and purple is one scale, while raw item level is the other scale. As a general rule, gear is always better with a higher item level. Purple gear is the best within the same tier of item level, while green is the worst. When in doubt, you usually want to go with the highest item level possible.
1. Dying isn't much of a penalty. Don't be afraid to die. It's disappointing, and you can accrue some very mild repair costs. But especially as a lower-level player, don't be afraid to die. Some of the best moments in the game come when you say, "I can't believe I lived through that," and you can't get to those moments without risking death.
What's your tip?
The nice thing about this column is that we get plenty of veteran players who stop by and offer advice. So what about it, you guys? What advice do you give new players that isn't documented in the game itself?
Filed under: WoW Rookie







Reader Comments (Page 1 of 7)
aleanneld Aug 25th 2011 9:07AM
To avoid keyboard turning rebind your A and D keys to strafe and bind Q and E to turn if you want. The last part isn't really needed but if you can't reach the keys to keyboard turn as easily you won't be tempted to do it.
Bellajtok Aug 25th 2011 9:37AM
I ought to do this, really. But I game on my laptop, and the trackpad is less than desirable for that purpose. Oh well. I need to rework my keybindings to be left hand centric first anyway.
Amaxe Aug 25th 2011 10:32AM
I NEVER use the WASD keys...
...mainly because I always use the arrow keys.
/flees the mob
quickshiv Aug 25th 2011 11:16AM
Great tip but I would take it one step further and say q and e should be rebound to something useful. Turn keys serve no purpose.
Sorro Aug 25th 2011 11:16AM
Bella, if you game on a laptop, get a regular USB mouse to use instead of the trackpad. I play on my laptop, and having a regular mouse is the single biggest reason I actually can play well.
Draelan Aug 25th 2011 12:45PM
Completely eliminating the A and D turning keys on my keyboard would actually be a bad thing. While I don't use them for standard turning, I do sometimes use them in combination with the strafe keys. Strafing allows me to move at a good pace out of nasty stuff without actively turning my character and potentially losing DPS because I'm not facing my target. The turn keys in combination with that allow me to accomplish that goal AND maneuver my character to points that aren't directly to my left or right.
noel mcleod Aug 25th 2011 12:59PM
This is conventional wisdom and it applies to most people ... but not everybody.
If you PvP and key-turn, you will draw people who think you are an easy target ... and when you flip over to mouse-driven after they're within melee range, it's great fun! I can say that because, outside of PvP (and not even all PvP ...) I use the arrow keys. Two-plus years of playing before I EVEN KNEW that the other keys worked as movement keys.
One tip I would add - read WoW Insider ... but then you probably already figured that out. I didn't know about the PvP tricks UNTIL I started reading Insider (nobody in my guild PvPs).
Neofox Aug 25th 2011 1:43PM
Actually, the turn keys do have one function that I've grown fond of. When I'm PvPing on my paladin or warrior, I love to stun my target in place, and then press and hold either A+E or D+Q (I seem to naturally prefer A+E). This causes your character to constantly run in a perfect circle while always facing the opponent inside. The circle is perfectly small enough to stay well within melee range, and you're running at full speed. And your mouse is totally free to do whatever.
This means you get to just unload crazy attacks on your opponent; and in my experience, they usually just get confused and don't run away, even after that initial stun wears off (the stun is just to help make sure you're going perfectly around your target, although you can just start running around someone in this way and they'll often stop moving). I can't help but grin every time they actually sit in the middle and just spin around trying to hit me, it's very amusing.
While using this technique, I find it easier for me to just switch from using my hotkeys to clicking my abilities, since two of my left hand fingers are busy holding the two movement keys. People like to bash on clicking your abilities on the action bar, but the GCD is more than enough time for me to move my cursor (accurately) from one ability to the next. I've never heard of anyone else doing this exact thing, so I can't say if it works well for everyone, but it has always worked great for me.
Noodlenose Aug 25th 2011 10:10PM
Heres two more uses for keyboard turning:
On my priest, I can heal on the move by running around with WASD and click healing with Vuhdo.
Destro warlock pvp: mount up, chase down fleeing enemy using WASD while your mouse hand targets them with the Shadowfury targetting circle. You knock them off their horse and win.
I think its best to master both keyboard and mouse turning, so you can use either if necessary.
Dragoniel Aug 26th 2011 6:02AM
Strafe keys are utterly wortheless. You could only possibly need to strafe in PvP combat and to do that you only have to keep the right mouse button pressed.
I am playing wow for many years and I am using both modes of movement - WASD, arrow keys and a mouse, when in combat.
Being able to fully control your character with a single hand while traveling allows you to eat without going AFK at the very least, going as far as to allow you to use a second screen to browse the web (i.e. inspect enemies in PvP or use databases like wowhead) if you are of appropriate nerdiness level.
David Aug 27th 2011 7:54AM
Oh, the Q & E keys can be useful. Try using Q+D or E+A. Perfect for circle strifing in PVP or running around a boss without having to move it. Also you can go AFK mount up and just fly / ride in circles.
Zuckerdachs Aug 25th 2011 9:10AM
"Item levels count."
What have you done?
Boydboyd Aug 25th 2011 9:46AM
The gearscore fanatics (from both sides of the pond) are sure to pounce on that one!
Puntable Aug 25th 2011 9:48AM
"As a general rule, gear is always better with a higher item level."
EXCEPT for wearing PVP gear if you do not PVP. Remember that resiliance stat does not help you at all for PVE.
Infinite Duck Aug 25th 2011 10:06AM
Except the PVP bracers and occassionally the weapons/offhands are good for an up-and-coming alt. Some pvp gear is better than your blues and greens. As always, look into it. But as a BASIC rule of thumb for PVP gear, reduce the item level by about 30 and that's the PVE item level. Only pick pieces that have your best secondary stat.
Wearing all pvp gear = bad. Wearing a few pieces to replace your greens till you get 353/359+ gear to replace the pvp gear, not so bad. Since bracers are difficult to get for an a new alt, having a little honor saved to buy the bracers at least, is helpful.
Phaelan Aug 25th 2011 10:48AM
sadly my priest hast to wear crafted pvp shoulders right now :(
crystallinegirl Aug 25th 2011 12:58PM
My Mage is still using a pvp wand - because it's better than the quest green out of Twilight Highlands, and I've never seen a wand DROP, let alone won it...
Amaxe Aug 25th 2011 1:05PM
I think the place where it really makes a difference is finishing up WOLK. You can pick up some Cataclysm greens from 78-80 which are vastly superior to the WOLK 78-80s and **usually** leaves you in a better position for the Cata zones than a person with WOLK purples.
Of course that means ignoring #5
krislen Aug 25th 2011 3:35PM
you really should recant the item level counts thing, there are multiple classes where some 372 trinkets or even 359's are better than anything in the current tier for instance for DKs Heroic Heart of Rage is still our BiS trinket and Heroic vessel only barely beats out DMC hurricane and license to slay
damoronsonline Aug 25th 2011 9:14AM
Skill is far greater than skill. Take the time to learn your class and you will go far.