Tips for great success in the Raid Finder

Of course, for newer players, using the Raid Finder can be intimidating, especially if you've never spent any time in PUG raids before now. Grouping up at random with 24 other players is intimidating. You can't just ignore that; jumping into a raid group that has expectations and demands about you can be a scary thing.
With that in mind, here's a handful of tips to make sure your Raid Finder experience goes as smoothly as possible.
Get Deadly Boss Mods and voice chat. Not every Raid Finder group will use the same addons and tools, of course, but you can expect most groups will want you to have Deadly Boss Mods. Yes, there are alternatives. However, Deadly Boss Mods still seems the most popular go-to. When a raid leader asks you to get a different mod, you might as well. But have DBM installed before you hit the Raid Finder button.
Voice chat is a little more difficult, since there's a much wider array of available voice chat clients. Still, you should have Ventrilo and Mumble already installed. I prefer Mumble, personally, but I encounter Ventrilo among PUGs much more frequently.
While nothing in Blizzard's official tools demands you have these tools, the random groups you encounter will expect everyone to be DBM and voice chat ready.
Have food and flasks. Remember all those annoying mods that do things like whisper "Joe-Bob ain't drunk his flask"? Well, they're back -- and probably with good reason. While Raid Finder difficulty is easier than normal raiding, you still want every little numerical advantage you can get.
More than a few Raid Finder groups will have incredibly generous folks who provide cauldrons and food for everyone. But don't bank on that happening. Try to have your appropriate buff food and flask ready to go.
Be polite and patient. Being polite and patient with your group probably sounds like silly advice, but what blew me away about Raid Finder so far is that groups are pretty cool. I've found the stress level to be much lower than even 5-man dungeons. I couldn't tell you why that's the case, but I haven't encountered anyone who's really irked me so far.
So with that fresh, exciting opportunity out there, do your best to be polite and patient. Remember that this is new content, that raid groups are learning, and everyone's (presumably) doing their best. If you find yourself getting frustrated, grab a cup of coffee and dial it back a notch.
Watch videos before you queue. The bosses in Dragon Soul via the Raid Finder aren't exactly difficult. I blew through my first Dragon Soul in less than two hours. That being said, it helps if you are forearmed with a basic knowledge of the fights.
Make sure you check out our guide to Dragon Soul bosses in 5 seconds or less. That'll give you a basic idea of what the heck's going on. Really, though, you should still survey some video guides to get the in-depth why and wherefore of each fight.
Yes, the fights are perfectly explainable by a competent raid leader -- but that really shouldn't be necessary. Hit up that 5 seconds post. It'll cover the vast majority of what you need to know.
Be prepared to chill out. The harshest part of Raid Finder is that you end up with 25 opportunities for someone to disconnect, go away from keyboard, or otherwise wander off into unknown territory. This is a natural consequence of getting a large group of humans together.
If someone leaves the raid, you'll have to wait for a replacement. I've generally had to wait longer for healers than anyone else, but you definitely have to wait. Combine that with all the usual raid breaks, and you could find yourself killing some time.
Play a movie in the background. Bring a book. Make sure you can occupy a few odd moments without losing your mind. If you're going to freak out over five idle minutes, then Raid Finder is not the place for you. Remember how I said it took less than two hours to all four current bosses? Probably 35% or more of that was spent waiting for replacements. It's going to happen, so prepare for it ahead of time.
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Reader Comments (Page 4 of 4)
Matthew Dec 1st 2011 4:28PM
I like how it says the debuffs in the UI - and what would happen in regular version. (i'm thinking of 'if you dispell this you get knockbacked')
LFR was easier than the new 5 mans (as heals)
ANd as far as new 5 mans, trash harder than bosses.
Magicslime Dec 1st 2011 4:37PM
My LFR experience went pretty well, except for one problem: My fps. I don't know if it was because of unupdated addons, or because I was raiding 25m on a couple year old laptop that my fps was always either 1/6 or 20. Other than that though, everything was 1 or 2 shotted.
Dellcrw10 Dec 2nd 2011 8:55AM
@Kram
"...leaving out those who won't put in that time?"
It's a game. Why should I treat it as a job?
bahzob Dec 3rd 2011 5:24AM
I am doing RF now. On my PVP geared warrior while reading and replying to this thread. Its way to easy.
Its a nice idea but should have been set up for FL to allow people to catch up in terms of story and gear. Its plain wrong that the first time I kill a boss in the latest patch is with a bunch of strangers while grinding VP to convert to conquest once arena starts
Ian Dec 5th 2011 10:30AM
"the random groups you encounter will expect everyone to be DBM and voice chat ready."
"Try to have your appropriate buff food and flask ready to go."
"Watch videos before you queue."
Erm, nope, totally unnecessary on all counts. I queued LFR as DPS on Saturday morning. Queue time? 2 minutes. Teleport in... inspect a few people. No one really in uber-gear - mainly people on a mixture of previous VP gear, 5-mans, maybe a bit of FL. We charge in. Trash down. Oh, is this the boss? Tactics explained? Nope. "Charge...." Boss down - no-one dead.
People managed to pick up where not to stand, when to hide behind walls - because the *game* tells you what to do in big yellow type across the screen. You don't even need DBM to be honest. You most definitely don't need Vent or Mumble. Heck, I didn't even pop any flasks. Didn't need to. All 4 bosses down with no wipes and I left with my 384 shoulders and gloves and a shiny new achievement. In fact, the only time any "tactics: were even slightly mentioned was a Purple/Green/Yellow kill order on the third boss with the oozes and that was just one sentence in raid chat.
Maybe things will change later, but remember this was not a group of hardcore raiders - they were all off doing normal DS runs.
LFR is a faceroll and I'm happy for it. I'm glad the fights are tuned to be simpler as anything else would be terrible. The only shock will be when people try the real DS raid which I gather is not so much of a pushover...