5 ways to keep your healer happy in 5-man heroics

While much of Azeroth has been busy engineering the repeated demise of the big Dee-Dubya, many of us are still running 5-man dungeons. Maybe it's for valor points, maybe it's to hit the ilevel required to take a pop at that dragon, or maybe it's while frantically levelling another character to 85. With every 5-man instance comes a healer, and you really ought to be showing your healer some love.
Before you say Pah! I don't need to do anything to keep my healer happy -- I massively outgear all the 5-man content the game has to offer. This advice is worthless!, spare a thought for those who don't. The new healer who wants to get a look at some Hour of Twilight. The player with bags overflowing with PvP gear to cheat the ilevel requirement. The fresh 85s who are facing these dungeons for the first time. They need this advice, and if you're running with them, you could consider reading it too. And if you think it's not your responsibility to help your healer out now and then, remember: You don't do any DPS when you're dead.
Before you say Pah! I don't need to do anything to keep my healer happy -- I massively outgear all the 5-man content the game has to offer. This advice is worthless!, spare a thought for those who don't. The new healer who wants to get a look at some Hour of Twilight. The player with bags overflowing with PvP gear to cheat the ilevel requirement. The fresh 85s who are facing these dungeons for the first time. They need this advice, and if you're running with them, you could consider reading it too. And if you think it's not your responsibility to help your healer out now and then, remember: You don't do any DPS when you're dead.
- Don't stand in bad. I can't emphasize this enough. If you suddenly see big, angry damage taken numbers coming up on your screen, you are standing in bad. Move. Some bad is more bad than other bad; examples of very bad bad to stand in include the purple rivers periodically chucked out by Echo of Sylvanas' Blighted Arrow in End Time. There is no unavoidable ability that kills you in a matter of a few seconds, so if you're dying that fast, there's something you should be doing about it. And even if you are moving out of bad, you could probably move faster. There's usually a moment before the bad stuff starts dissolving you from the feet up, so get out of there before that happens. And if the tank moved so that he wasn't in bad but the boss's back end still is? Just move out of the bad. Your DPS may drop a bit from not attacking him from the perfect angle, but it won't drop as much as it will if you're dead.
- Pay attention to the mechanics of fights. Zul'Gurub is a great one for this. The group gets to Zanzil and decides to use the patented red cauldron method where everyone takes the red cauldron buff and DPSes the boss from melee range. Great, if it works. Not great if you're a low-geared healer and your group includes a warlock and a mage. Even less great if the DPS aren't as DPS-y as they think they are and Zanzil casts Graveyard Gas but nobody notices in time. Or if the lone berserker ambling around kills your healer who's trying to save your backsides with something that requires a cast time. And I know Archbishop Benedictus' obvious wave of obviousness "isn't a one-shot," as one tank eruditely pointed out, but is it going to mean the fight takes twice as long if you avoid it? No. This is linked to point #1. If you're planning to red cauldron it up or to not avoid the wave, check with your healer before doing so. If they say don't, then don't.
- Watch your aggro. You heard me -- you, the mage over there doing the crazy numbers. Let the tank establish an aggro lead -- it only takes a couple of seconds -- then attack what he's attacking. The tank is designed to take huge hits to the face; the mage is not. And yes, the tank can taunt it back -- that would be lovely -- but once the mob starts retreating back toward the tank, that's not the time to unleash your mightiest DPS cooldown. Your armor is basically very pretty origami. Omen is your friend here. Healers can also chuck out quite a lot of aggro, but usually it's because they're rolling out the big guns trying to prevent a wipe. Bear that in mind, and remember that if your healer dies because something is eating their face, you probably will too. On the same topic, try not to be That Guy who always stands where another patrol will be or just in aggro range of another pack. Pay attention to your surroundings, not just to your meters. Oh, and DPSers, let the tank pull. If you're stressing because they're going too slowly, feel free to leave and head back into the 35-minute queue.
- Interrupt things. All classes have the ability to do this somehow, albeit with varying provisos, ranges and cooldowns. An awful lot of very, very tiresome abilities are interruptible, including ones that do a good amount of damage. Many mobs will keep chain casting those abilities until interrupted, such as Arcurion's Hand of Frost, so just interrupt it. Please. The less damage the group takes, the less mana your healer gets through, the fewer breaks you have to take, and the faster you'll progress through the instance. And the less likely it is that you'll wipe.
- Use your abilities. But I am! I hear you cry. I'm spamming these damage abilities like it's going out of fashion! Of course you are, but are you using those other ones? The stuns? The ones that remove enrages? Have you made your healer a Mana Cake recently? Have you noticed your health getting low and used a heal on yourself? Have you dispelled a curse or used Dark Simulacrum or Spellsteal to, well, steal a spell? Are you using crowd control? Are you putting debuffs on the boss? Are you occasionally using a defensive cooldown if your health is low? Are you popping out a Tranquility when things are going pear-shaped? If you're doing all these things, then thank you. You're making your healer happy.
And if your healer gets angry with you for using your abilities, healing yourself, paying attention to the mechanics and the like, then don't worry. You're doing the right thing -- and while you may have angered one of the 10 million or so people who play WoW, you'll make many others very much more cheerful.
Filed under: Analysis / Opinion






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 4)
sentinelarkblog Jan 10th 2012 7:07PM
Great stuff. One thing I would like to add: Keep in mind where the healer is positioned and how much mana they have. I hate it when people pull and the healer out of range or pull when the healer is no mana or not enough to last.
Spellotape Jan 10th 2012 7:12PM
This. It's pretty obvious when a tank (or healer, or just about anyone) does not have a UI which tells them who is or isn't in range. Although Blizard's in-game raid frames will inform you of this, I don't think the standard party frames do, unfortunately, and not enough people seem to be defaulting to the first one.
HappyTreeDance Jan 10th 2012 10:20PM
I can't upvote this enough.
Tank: OMG DRUID YOU SUCK WHY DIDN'T YOU HEAL ME YOU NOOOOOOB?
Me: Well you see, I hadn't actually zoned in yet so yeah. Kinda tough to click on the health bars when I can't, you know, see them.
Skyrei Jan 10th 2012 11:04PM
I've been in many groups where either the healer complains the tank should not run out of range of them or the tank complains the healer is not keeping up.
Unless the tank is really silly about running super fast while the healer has no mana, I tend to side with the healer following the tank rather then the tank having to be aware he's running out of the healers range at all times
(Doing both would be best but that usually doesn't happen. I have both a tank and a healer)
Becca Jan 11th 2012 1:35AM
THIS.
I've been leveling a healer via the dungeon finder, and SO MANY TANKS feel the need to run ahead around a corner into a different room, then bitch when they die. Or inexplicably hide behind columns. Situational awareness is your friend.
rodmin Jan 11th 2012 7:27AM
"And if your healer gets angry with you for using your abilities, healing yourself, paying attention to the mechanics and the like, then don't worry. You're doing the right thing -- and while you may have angered one of the 10 million or so people who play WoW, you'll make many others very much more cheerful."
But i was supposed to make my healer happy. Even if it's just one person, it's still a healer, and thus the subject of this post. And i made him angry, when i was supposed to make him happy. Oh, i'm so confused...
/Sarcasm off
The idea is quite nice and i agree with it, since i'm a healer too. What amazes me was that you didn't mention Dark Intent and Focus Magic. Even though they're tools to increase other player's DPS, they can increase healing as well (and DI goes so well along with resto druids even).
A tip from a pro:
- Be nice. Start the instance with a "Hi everyone", and add a few random fun gossips along the run.
Kurly Jan 11th 2012 11:05AM
@ Skyrei
"Unless the tank is really silly about running super fast while the healer has no mana, I tend to side with the healer following the tank rather then the tank having to be aware he's running out of the healers range at all times"
Sorry, as a I can't disagree with this enough. If I have no mana I will NOT chase a tank. Staying in range of the tank implies I am ready to heal him. If I run out of mana I will let the tank know in party chat, then I will sit down and drink. If he wants to ignore me and run ahead, it's his funeral.
Good tanks are ALWAYS aware of their healers mana and whether or not they are keeping in range. As a tailor I also like to stop and loot. Dungeons are a good source of clothe and I resent tanks who can't slow down enough to give me a chance to loot.
Ooglie Jan 11th 2012 12:49PM
Yes. A Thousand times yes. Last night, like so many other times, I zone in to the instance where the tank has already engaged the mob, despite my alert in party chat that I was still on my way. And after stupid pull after stupid pull the tank (who obviously ISN'T a tank but a dps who wants short queues so he tries to tank) runs off again into a new room despite my "Out of Mana" emote, I had had enough. I had no regret when I simply dropped group to let them meet the fate that awaited them. Besides, healers can get pretty short queues themselves :)
But seriously, I'm normally a VERY conscientious healer, but tanks like that annoy me to no end.
Brasson Jan 13th 2012 1:13AM
Why oh why can I only lifegrip from forty yards away. :(
goldeneye Jan 16th 2012 5:37AM
Yep, plenty of times where I'm looting a 20-mob trash pull and tank goes around the corner. When tanking the other party members are my "flock" and it's my duty to keep them with me and protected.
SDevil Jan 17th 2012 3:13PM
I have 3 healers. I recently got my priest to 85, and the horror stories I could tell about normal 85 dungeons with tanks that insist on running off at half health to pull the largest pack of mobs they can, while I'm sitting around the corner and/or down the hall trying to get mana back from the last pull. Oddly enough, I had one tank abusing me after doing that very thing in Grim Batol, it was so bad, the dps voted to kick him.
Scott Jan 10th 2012 7:08PM
You forgot "Eat your mage food". I absolutely rage in heroics (and raids too) when a mage table goes down at the start and people refuse to eat after a fight; expecting me to waste my mana to top them off.
xvkarbear Jan 10th 2012 8:24PM
This only bothers me if I've asked them to eat and they still don't. I had more then one person me like: "Just heal me." at which point I can either get into an argument with them about being low on drinks or just not heal them.
Was especially bad in the troll heroics.
Snuzzle Jan 10th 2012 8:56PM
I actually had one person tell me he had a druid too and it takes "like one spell" to heal him up from 20% to full (he had been freshly rezzed). I told him it would take at least a couple HTs to which he barked that I didn't know my "healing rotations" and was a nub. Then he dropped.
Then the tank said he didn't want to deal with arguing and dropped.
Then the second DPS dropped with an "lolnub" and shortly after the final DPS left without a word, leaving me standing in the middle of GB wth my mouth agape at what had just gone down.
deymorin Jan 11th 2012 1:04AM
I don't mind when everyone drops group. Even if you are all alone you can reque now and keep your progress in the dungeon. Any time this has happened to me I have lost a group of bads or whiners (or bad whiners) and gotten a competent and friendly group in exchange. Dropping group just cause everyone else is doing it is silly and unproductive.
Adam Jan 11th 2012 11:05AM
Healing rotation.
/sigh
There's no such thing. If you play a healer, you know. You hit what you need to, when you need to.
Now we might see a paradigm change when it comes to monk healing. They may well have a rotation when it comes to healing.
I do agree that politeness goes a long way in 5 mans, and RF for that matter, but I'm finding my politeness goes out the door when people are so ignorant of everything. It's not hard to understand boss mechanics, where to stand, what classes can cc which targets etc. Just a few minutes of research either in the dungeon journal, or on sites like wowhead or even wowinsider (they are pretty competent, although I'm not sure about that Fox guy) can make a world of difference.
Maybe it's just me, but I like knowing who can do what, and how it makes us win.
Ecthalar Jan 10th 2012 7:10PM
Also known as, "L2P, n00b."
I'm going to downvote myself for that one.
Elennoko Jan 10th 2012 7:13PM
As someone who mains a restoration druid and a holy priest, I approve of this message. They both may be well geared, at least for the new heroics, but that doesn't mean I don't get tanks that are geared like a wet noodle so I have to focus all of my efforts on them. Having to heal the DPS that like to stand in the way of Jaina's frost blades or sit in the Fel Fire on Pero'tharn is not fun for me or any other healer. So again.
I am a druid & priest, and I approve of this message.
Kar On E Jan 10th 2012 7:19PM
Here's one specific for tanks. On Peroth'arn in WoE, let your healer top you off and then please grab the eyes. It's far easier to keep the tank up as a healer than anyone else IMHO. And as a healer, I can't do much of anything if the eyes catch me due to the stun.
Jeff (Not that one ^ ) Jan 10th 2012 7:32PM
Tanks: don't hop around like a tweaking addict on Asira Dawnslayer. I need to stand behind you and heal.