Arcane Brilliance: Why the one true spec assumption is a lie

I don't know how to tell you this, but we are all wrong.
All of us.
Oh, we mages are right about some things: Most everything can be improved by turning it into a sheep, If you're going marshal arcane energy and bend the fabric of space time to conjure food from thin air, you might as well be conjuring cake and strudel, and yes, it is still and always will be true that the only good warlock is the one that has been reduced to unrecognizable chunks of scorched viscera. But about a few very important details, we are most definitely all mistaken. Here are a few things we all seem to accept as true:
- Arcane is the undisputed top mage raiding spec.
- If you are a mage, and you are raiding as anything other than arcane, you are hurting your raid and limiting your own effectiveness.
- Frost is a PVP spec, and hasn't been a viable raid spec since the days when Ragnaros lived in Molten Core and didn't have legs.
Though I am loathe to do it, let's talk for a moment about statistics. The disclaimer here, as always, is that when it comes to math I am functionally handicapped. Numbers confuse me, but I'm plucky and optimistic and I don't let my disabilities keep me down. I've seen enough Hollywood movies to know that by the end of this column, I will triumph over adversity and end up winning the heart of a chick that's way too hot for me.
There are sites like World of Logs and RaidBots that compile raid DPS data into tables that show which specs do the most average damage in the game's current end raid. They take a cross-section of the raiders in the game's top guilds and log their performance over a number of fights, presenting us with a gauge of who does what kind of damage to whom, and whic specs are best on which fights. This is helpful data. I'm glad we have it.
The problem it creates, though, is that we tend to accept it as infallible. Sites like these do not represent every raider out there. They only represent the guilds who choose to utilize their specific stat-gathering client. That's already a small fraction of the actual raiders out there. This isn't a massive sample size.
Let's take a look at the Baleroc fight as an example. It's a low-movement fight, one where mages don't have to worry too much about interrupting their most potent rotations with many odd mechanics or lengthy movement phases. It should provide us with a good baseline to work from.
I'm looking at the latest numbers from the normal 25-man version of the fight, which you can see here. The top mage spec is arcane, with a median DPS of 25,561. The next mage spec on the list is frost with 25,349, and fire brings up the rear with 22,718. So from that, it looks like arcane and frost have very similar DPS potential, but fire lags well behind. Blizzard seems to recognize that fire is lacking and is addressing the disparity as we speak with the mage changes on the patch 4.3 PTR. So let's focus on frost and arcane.
Here's the part I find deeply disturbing: The number of samples for arcane (or the number of arcane mages they got data from) is 6,142. The number of samples for frost is 115. Let me emphasize that:
Arcane samples: 6,142
Frost samples: 115
Can anyone explain that disparity to me? In what world does a 200 DPS difference justify such a massively disproportionate sample size? And here's the other thing: No other class has the same representation issues. Arcane has the most samples of any class/spec, by a crazy big margin. The next most represented spec is marksmanship hunters at 4,925. By contrast, frost is easily the least represented spec, behind beast mastery hunters at 174.
What that tells me is that a much larger percentage of mages are playing our top spec and a much smaller percentage of mages are playing our perceived bottom spec than any other class in the game. Some of you will say that just means we're better as a class at identifying our best spec and then gravitating towards it. I say it means we're better not just at turning people into sheep, but also at being sheep. We conform. We self-fulfill our own prophesies. As a mage community, I firmly believe this is our biggest flaw.
So, the question becomes: Does reality dictate our perception, or do we let our perception dictate reality. The argument generally goes like this:
If arcane is better, we should all be playing arcane.
But that argument only floats if you can prove, demonstrably, that arcane really is best by a sizable margin, at all times, in the hands of every player, in every situation. And of course you can't do that. Nobody can. Blizzard generally keeps the specs close enough, potential-wise, that the margins simply aren't wide enough to assume that one spec is always best, every time. Is arcane going to do more DPS most of the time, in the hands of a majority of players, on most fights? Probably. But that assumption is simply never going to be iron-clad. I don't care what your raid-leader is telling you. I'm telling you his logic is faulty. You can tell him I said so. He can meet me after school behind the gym. I will cut him.
Having said that, there are certainly numbers out there to support the prevailing idea that arcane is best. In other fights, where mechanics don't necessarily favor frost's turret-casting needs, arcane's advantage is clearer. On Ragnaros, the median DPS gap between frost and arcane is about a thousand. On Shannox, the gap is almost 400. On Staghelm, frost is actually up by a little over a hundred points. But in every case, the sample size for frost is so pathetically small and the sample size for arcane is so ridiculously inflated, it kills the credibility of all of those numbers.
I'm convinced that the reality is somewhere else entirely. What's happening in the mage community is the same thing that happened in my elementary school in the 80's. Acid-washed jeans were cool. They made you cool when you wore them. If your jeans were of the regular-washed variety, with no evidence of any acid being involved in the washing thereof, you were not as cool. This was an accepted fact. Remember that mulletted pre-teen in the header picture? He was the accepted personification of rad. On the playground, that kid beat you up and took your lunch money, scored the touchdown and made out under the bleachers with the one chick in your class who had gotten her boobs.
So what did everybody else do? They got their parents to take them to Montgomery Ward and buy them acid-washed jeans and neon-colored Jordache shirts and oversized sunglasses and LA Gear sneakers. Because everybody knew that was what made you cool. It's been a while since I was 12, but I'm pretty sure none of those things are true today. No matter how much I wish they were. Teenagers today worry me. I mean, pull up your pants, guys? OK? Please? I don't want to see your boxers, and I'm scared that when the zombie apocalypse comes, you won't be able to outrun the ravenous undead with your pants belted around your mid-thigh.
My point is this: Just because a large percentage of the population accepts that a thing is good doesn't actually make it good. That's trite, and I've said it before, but it's true. As a mage community, we have made arcane better than it actually is through our overwhelming perception that it is better.
The reality, I believe, is a little bit different.
Arcane is generally better. More people have will produce higher numbers in more fights with arcane than with frost. The argument can be made that arcane brings a more frequently useful raid buff to the table. But is it the absolute best spec?
No.
Frost is very close. In some cases, better. Once the 4.3 buffs to fire go live, I believe fire will become competitive again, also. The bottom line?
If you are skilled at playing a frost mage -- and after the patch a fire mage -- and your abilities meet the needs of the fight and the needs of your raid, the numbers are close enough that no one should ever be able to tell you that you should be playing arcane instead. No one.
Any more than anyone should be able to tell you you should be wearing acid-washed jeans.
Filed under: Mage, Analysis / Opinion, (Mage) Arcane Brilliance






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
Revynn Oct 22nd 2011 12:10PM
What Mr. Archmage Pants has neglected to tell you is that the person in the above picture is Fox Van Allen and it was taken last weekend.
matthias2479 Oct 22nd 2011 12:20PM
Hes got the power! Nintendo power!
Eccentrica Oct 22nd 2011 12:30PM
Pfft, that's Tyler Caraway silly. The whole emo-I'm going to cut myself-I'm so badass thingy that warlocks put out is just a front so we won't suspect what they're really like.
SamLowry Oct 22nd 2011 1:00PM
Ooh, pastels. The early '90s were so...yiiiick!
evoxpisces Oct 22nd 2011 2:15PM
That pic is amazing.
Mummrah Oct 23rd 2011 9:43PM
Is that Steve Sanders?
Vessol Oct 22nd 2011 12:10PM
The only way that kid could be radder is if he had a Power Glove..
Onyxis Oct 22nd 2011 12:28PM
I have an unmatched and eternal adoration for the Nintendo Entertainment System peripheral known by the designation "Power Glove". Its disdain for mores of society as a whole resonate with me.
Vacasta Oct 22nd 2011 12:26PM
Awesome writing. I'm going to go roll a Frost Mage and throw away my Swatch watch.
ikkewow Oct 22nd 2011 12:24PM
I love you
Garmsdottir Oct 22nd 2011 12:32PM
When I play pvp with my mage (and actively hunt warlocks) I always play arcane. I can say that I am hated by alliance when I stay over them and blast my arcane blast on them and win all the time.
And warlocks die so easily.
jackalx619 Oct 22nd 2011 12:32PM
I love the power glove...it's so bad...
MusedMoose Oct 22nd 2011 12:43PM
"I don't want to see your boxers, and I'm scared that when the zombie apocalypse comes, you won't be able to outrun the ravenous undead with your pants belted around your mid-thigh."
That's the thing, though: people like that aren't supposed to survive the zombie apocalypse. It's a bizarre kind of natural selection: if you think fashion is more important than practicality (and I use "fashion" lightly, like the word "script" when talking about a Michael Bay movie), then you deserve to be zombie food. The same goes for anyone who tries to run from zombies in high heels.
...why the zombies are wearing high heels, I don't know.
But on topic: I really do wish more people would understand what you're saying here. Some day that perception dictates reality, but in something like WoW, the numbers dictate reality, and these numbers clearly show there's not as big a disparity as people say. Do you think that this will change with the new ability/talent system coming with MoP?
ravyncat Oct 22nd 2011 2:42PM
The zombies are wearing heels because they were caught by a zombie, bitten, and became one themselves. Ditto zombies in any bizarre or impractical fashion.
Felix_NZ Oct 22nd 2011 5:36PM
I don't see too many low-hammer-pants teens so much these days. In fact I can't actually tell which ones are the guys anymore 'cause they all wear skin-tight jeans and low cut tops. I blame the BPA in baby bottles of the 90s.
SamLowry Oct 23rd 2011 2:31PM
I thought it was a sign of the coming apocalypse a few months ago when I first saw GIRLS sagging.
So I'm kinda torn between wanting to tell them to pull their drawers up and, um....
Arrohon Oct 22nd 2011 12:48PM
Please pull up your pants! You look like idiots and this is coming from a teenager!
P.S. Why would be scared that they'll be killed by the zombies? You don't have to be the fastest to survive, you have to be faster than the slowest. If they die, you don't and they aren't smart enough to pull up their pants. (apologies to those that sag for any reason other than trying to look cool)
SamLowry Oct 23rd 2011 2:37PM
Is there a medical reason? 'Roids, perhaps?
detailbear Oct 23rd 2011 4:01PM
@SamLowry: Economics, maybe? If you get your older brother's hand-me-downs and don't have a belt you might be saggy. As to medical/health, I've been losing weight and haven't bought new clothes yet, but I have a belt.
Arrohon Oct 23rd 2011 6:20PM
I put that in for two reasons. One of them being what detailbear said. The another is so I'm not being hypocritical. I'm incredibly skinny which means that finding pants that are long enough without being too big is nigh impossible. I'd prefer not have pants that I don't have to hold/pull up, but they are very rare when they exist at all. I'm also in between belt sizes which doesn't help either (currently wearing a belt at the tightest hole without it doing at good while the size smaller is too small at the loosest hole). I do try to keep my pants up whenever I can (stairs plus carrying things is a nightmare).
@SamLowry I don't know if there are any medical reasons, but those are mine.