The Light and How to Swing It: 3 essential addons for holy paladins

Holy paladins have come a long way from the days of five-minute Blessings and WhisperCast. There's a good kind of complexity that comes from being given choices, and there's the bad kind of complexity that comes from busy work. The developers are constantly streamlining the game and removing outdated mechanics, and I can't complain. Even though addons like PallyPower made our lives easier, the new Blessing system is so simple that we don't need any external help to handle it.
Today's holy paladin has different addon needs from the healer of yesteryear. Three of the most important holy paladin addon concerns are unit frames, holy power management, and raid-specific alerts. In Dragon Soul, there are plenty of important things that we need to keep track of. Raid encounters are only going to get more and more complex and chaotic, and we need to be able to quickly get the information we need.
Holy Trinity solves your holy power problems
Holy Trinity is one of those addons that has a lot of great features that I don't utilize. I know it has paladin-specific cooldown tracking and plenty of sound effects, but I don't need all of that. I turn off all the auxiliary functions, and I focus on what it does the best: giving me a clean, movable holy power bar. If you're looking for an addon to tell you how long you have until Rebuke is ready again, then you can kill two birds with one stone.
Managing our holy power is an important part of healing well. Talents like Tower of Radiance, Blessed Life, and Eternal Glory can cause our holy power to fluctuate rapidly, and wasted holy power points are a newspaper tragedy. You need to be able to query your holy power status instantly, without searching around for your unit frame's power bar. The decision between starting an expensive Divine Light cast and simply dropping an instant/free Word of Glory comes down to how quickly you realize Eternal Glory just activated.
As a quick note, I still use CLCBPT to track my Judgements of the Pure and Beacon of Light uptime. It's the same addon that I've loved for years, and I still recommend it for tracking your two most important buffs with ease.
Know your way around an encounter
Just like any conversation involving the Horde and the Alliance, Coke and Pepsi, or Emacs and Vim, there's no clear winner in sight when we're talking about raid-specific addons. I've used nearly every raid alert addon in my time as a holy paladin, including BigWigs, DBM, DXE, and few others. I know a lot of players love BigWigs because of its lightweight memory footprint, while DBM tends to be updated the most frequently with changes. It doesn't matter what addon you pick, as long as you pick one and learn it well.
When you're dissecting a raid encounter, you're trying to answer three questions: What type of healing is necessary, when can I regenerate mana, and when will I use my cooldowns? By keeping track of boss abilities and encounter phase information, you can know when it's safe to pop Divine Plea and when to lean on Divine Favor.
Every fight in Dragon Soul has regen windows built in that are perfect for a Divine Plea and Concentration Potion combination. If you're constantly wondering what's coming next on an encounter, you won't be able to take advantage of these opportunities. If you don't realize that Yor'sahj just absorbed a purple ooze, your next errant Holy Radiance could wipe the raid. Keep your raid alert up-to-date and activated, so that you can exploit every possible advantage.
Making your green bars pretty
You're going to be looking at your raid's unit frames for the better part of any raid night, so make sure you're getting all the information you need out of them. Like raid-specific packages, there are several right choices here. I personally use X-Perl raid frames because I'm very old-fashioned and I've been using them for years. I know that Matticus swears by Vuhdo, while Grid and Healbot are standbys that have helped thousands of holy paladins. Again, the key isn't which addon you prefer but rather ensuring that you have it configured properly.
First and foremost, your raid unit frames need to tell you how much life everyone has. Whether you prefer seeing the numbers displayed as life remaining or life missing, you understand that a player's HP is the most valuable information you have. Your unit frames also need to alert you to any important debuffs that a player might have. Specifically, in Dragon Soul, you really need to know when a player has Searing Plasma on them and how many stacks of Deep Corruption they're packing. If you can't tell how many stacks of Deep Corruption your tank has with a glance, then your unit frames aren't doing their job.
Extra credit
When holy paladins first started working on the Spine of Deathwing encounter, I spoke with a lot of healers who were having trouble getting their raid frames to display Searing Plasma properly. They didn't know how to customize their frames, and so they were constantly relying on the addon author to update the debuff list. As they say at Make: "If you can't open it, you don't own it." Spend some quality time with your raid frames this week, and learn how to both add and remove a debuff from being listed. There's nothing more aggravating than holding up your raid's progression because your addon isn't working as you'd like it to.
In addition to tracking player health and debuffs, there are a few other attributes that I like to monitor as well. Keeping tabs on your raiders' mana levels can help you know how your fellow healers are handling an encounter. If I see that my favorite resto shaman, David, is at 80% mana, I know that I can safely Divine Plea without putting too much strain on him. If he's sitting closer to 10% mana at the end of a fight, I'll have to hold off on using Divine Plea just yet. I love having that mana information at my disposal, since it means that I don't have to clog up our voice chat with unnecessary chatter.
Finally, make sure you can cast spells without being forced to click on your unit frames. There are a lot of ways to accomplish this. I personally love mouseover macros, but addons like Clique or Healbot work fine as well. If you're clicking your unit frames and then clicking or pushing your healing button, you're not performing as efficienctly as you could be. It will take you 10 minutes to set up mouseover macros for all of your heals, and it will make your job a hundred times easier.
Filed under: Paladin, (Paladin) The Light and How to Swing It






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
Alex Ziebart Jan 21st 2012 4:53PM
I think that's the most gaudy, horrific header image we've ever used on the site.
Good job, Chase.
Gordal Jan 22nd 2012 6:05PM
My God, I suddenly felt a little nostalgic for the days of GeoCities for a moment before finally choking it back down.
This is truly a work of art.
Belfonisis Jan 23rd 2012 1:02AM
I'm confused how wowinsider obtained a screenshot of my user interface. I have never submitted a screenshot in, despite being a regular reader. I can only assume one of my intrepid guild mates copied it from our guild website and sent it to you for some reason?
Anyway, I'd much appreciate if you'd take it down. My UI is individual and highly tuned, and I don't really want every kid that reads this website copying it after I spent months putting it together.
Raposa Jan 22nd 2012 6:05PM
What is that weather forecast addon called? I totally need it
Cadychan Jan 22nd 2012 6:18PM
Needs more Comic Sans.
Caylynn Jan 22nd 2012 6:27PM
VuhDo is my healing addon of choice. Love it. :)
Mackeli Jan 22nd 2012 6:49PM
One quick addon I would like to chuck in for Holy Power,
Hear Kitty - it has an audio queue when you gain or lose a holy power point which I have found amazing
Taitle Jan 23rd 2012 7:06AM
This. Hear Kitty is even better than a visual cue for holy power, because you'll always know based on the tone which point you just generated. Of course, I use it in addition to an addon to display holy power, just in case: NibPointDisplay.
Snuzzle Jan 23rd 2012 9:38AM
HearKitty is a great multi-class addon. So far, I've found it works for cats and rogue CP (obviously), MM hunters and their Aimed Shot proc, pally HP, and shaman Maestrom procs. It saves screen real estate and you can even customize the audio cues. It's great. Can't recommend it enough.
Unowitz Jan 23rd 2012 12:33PM
KAHolypower is another good lightweight holy power addon.
It allows you to move the frame anywhere and scale it.
And it includes an audio cue.
I don't think it's been updated in awhile...but i've been using it since the begining and it still works nicely.
Meighan Jan 22nd 2012 7:29PM
I'm using power auras to monitor JotP at this point. I don't need to be staring at a bar seeing how long it has left, I just need prompting to refresh it when it falls off. If I'm not in the middle of something, I'll look at my buffs when I think it's been about a minute so I can refresh early while I have the spare gcd, but the best way to get across the essential info is the power aura.
VSUReaper Jan 22nd 2012 7:27PM
Power auras should be added to that list.
Mine is setup to track buffs, debuffs, holy power...
Chase Christian Jan 23rd 2012 1:35AM
Power Auras is definitely a great addon, but I find that either you're already using Power Auras and love it, or you're not using Power Auras and don't mind. A Power Auras guide for holy paladins might be in order...
Monion Jan 22nd 2012 7:38PM
X-Perl + Mouseover Macros FTW!
I love X-Perl because it gives me all the things that are important to me. Range indicators, coloured borders if they have a cleansable debuff, debuff listings which I can tweak, red borders if someone gets aggro (useful for when a boss tuns to do a one-off attack, I can anticipate damage), it can monitor my HoTs (all 1 of them, yay...good for Druids and Priests though), and as a raid leader it gives me extra bits and pieces like how many people are targeting a mob (ie: nonono, people, X should have 2 people on it, me 'cause I'm watching and a tank. Everyone else should be on Skull), and emphasizes my debuffs on the boss with bigger icons.
And it does this all with little to no customization required.
Arrohon Jan 22nd 2012 7:50PM
Horde-side Azgalor... my condolences. I went there this past summer to play with friends, and left as soon as I hit 85. I couldn't take the community anymore. You could tell that trade was 95% immature adolescents (compared to the usual 60-75%). This is coming from a 16 (then 15) year old.
Erebos Jan 22nd 2012 7:57PM
I use ForteXorcist to track cooldowns, and it also has a very nice buff tracker which handles my JotP, Infusion of Light and Daybreak procs, Power Torrent, etc. VuhDo handles Beacon for me, and nibPointDisplay is what I use for holy power.
Just my two cents :)
Mycroft Jan 22nd 2012 8:30PM
I've actually found the Blizzard raid frames to be quite handy and useful. It shows debuffs that I can dispel, debuffs I can't, and special ones like tank-swap mechanics.
The only thing I've disliked about them is that, with a lot of people leaving/joining, they can get messed up in battlegrounds and LFR, where clicking one person's frame actually targets somebody else. That's the main reason I poked in here, to see recommendations on a replacement that can be reliable.
Wes Jan 23rd 2012 6:48AM
"Raid encounters are only going to get more and more complex and chaotic, and we need to be able to quickly get the information we need."
HAHAHA, good one! Hahahaha! Ha ha ha. *whipes tears from eye*. Wow, getting harder and not easier/more simple.
priestessaur Jan 23rd 2012 12:06PM
Remember when Pally Power would have been at the top of this list?
unowitz Jan 23rd 2012 12:43PM
question: Can healbot monitor the Searing Plasma and Deep Corruption debuffs? I've been meaning to look into this...but always remember after raid time. I imagine i just need to enable uncleasable debuffs...but i'm not sure. Thanks in advance.
I would also like to recommend Ardent Defender. I use it for tanking...but it's nice as holy because it announces your Hand Spells.
Also, KAHolypower is nice...and I mentioned it above.