Totem Talk: 5 ways to look like a bad restoration shaman

Every week, WoW Insider brings you Totem Talk for elemental, enhancement and restoration shaman. Want to be a sultan of swing healing? A champion of Chain Heal? Totem Talk: Restoration, brought to you by Joe Perez (otherwise known as Lodur from World of Matticus and cohost of the For the Lore and Raid Warning podcasts), shows you how.
Sometimes knowing how to do well at something relies on knowing what not to do. Over time, we can accumulate some pretty bad habits, and if we're not careful, they can make us look like a terrible healer or a complete and total noob. There's nothing worse than that feeling of being the cause of a wipe or looking like you don't know what you're doing.
That's sometimes the hardest thing a new restoration shaman faces when starting out healing groups in instances and the Raid Finder. It's OK, though -- just because you're a beginner doesn't mean you have to look like the world's worst healer. I've compiled a list of things you can and should avoid doing.
Sometimes knowing how to do well at something relies on knowing what not to do. Over time, we can accumulate some pretty bad habits, and if we're not careful, they can make us look like a terrible healer or a complete and total noob. There's nothing worse than that feeling of being the cause of a wipe or looking like you don't know what you're doing.
That's sometimes the hardest thing a new restoration shaman faces when starting out healing groups in instances and the Raid Finder. It's OK, though -- just because you're a beginner doesn't mean you have to look like the world's worst healer. I've compiled a list of things you can and should avoid doing.
1. Just stop healing. This may sound silly, but in my time in the Raid Finder on my hunter, I've seen a number of restoration shaman just set Healing Rain and then not cast another spell for the entire duration of the spell. You have a healing arsenal for a reason. Chain Heal, Riptide, Greater Healing Wave are all there to be used, not to just look pretty. If you want your group to survive an encounter and not just be so much adventuring good on the ground, please just heal.
Nothing makes you look like you don't know what you're doing more than sitting there doing nothing at all. It also makes it very likely that if there is a wipe or a lack of healing, you're going to get called out on it. Logs that show up on World of Logs, death reports from addons like Death Note, and other sources can very quickly identify when you've been sleeping on the job.
2. Pull bosses and trash before the group is ready. This is something I've noticed a lot of random restoration shaman doing in the Raid Finder lately. Yes, we are capable of casting Lightning Bolt even when in healing spec, and sure, we use it to regenerate mana with Telluric Currents -- but not when your group isn't ready. Attacking mobs, bosses, or otherwise engaging an encounter is just a big no-go.
Be patient! Wait until your group and especially the tanks are ready to start the fight. You may be ready to go, but what do you think takes longer? Waiting to pull the boss or recovering from a wipe when you pull too soon? Like I said, I know it sounds like a no-brainer, but I've seen it happen way too frequently as of late.
3. Stand in the bad. Again, something one would normally consider a normal thing that everyone does, but I've seen a lot of restoration shaman lately just sort of sit in bad stuff in the Raid Finder. I see them focus healing themselves to survive damage, but it's still something you shouldn't do. While you may survive, there are damage mechanics that do things like up boss damage, heal the boss, or can cause spillover damage to the rest of your group. Sure, it's an easy way to pad your own numbers, but for every heal you dump onto yourself, you take one away from the rest of the group. It's a needless waste of mana and a needless way to risk your own life.
If that weren't enough, I've seen these very same people yell at other people in their group not to stand in the bad. Sure, no one should stand in damage effects unless the fight specifically calls for it, but yelling at other people when you're doing it yourself is just bad form.
4. Roll on DPS gear. Every healer wants to make sure they have the latest and greatest gear, but knowing what is actually healing gear and what is gear designed for DPS gear is pretty important. For restoration shaman, we're in particularly weird spot. This is because while some items are designed specifically for DPS, we can still make use of them in some circumstances. This can make certain items more attractive than they should be to healers.
Take Insignia of the Corrupted, for example. This trinket drops off Yor'sahj the Unsleeping, so there's a chance you'll see it early in Dragon Soul. Every time you deal damage, you will have a chance to gain 2,904 haste. Considering that we use Lightning Bolt to gain back mana or use spells like Flame Shock to trigger Focused Insight, I can understand why some restoration shaman would want this trinket. That said, it's much better off in the hands of someone who does damage full time.
The same goes for intellect items that have hit on them. Again, I've seen some restoration shaman trying to amass hit gear for themselves in various instances so they don't miss with their offensive spells. I understand the thought process behind it, but honestly, it's better left to those who deal damage full time. Invest in more appropriate gear for you as a healer.
5. Roll on gear you don't need. How often has the following scenario happened to you? You queue up for the Raid Finder and down a boss, and a tier token drops. Everyone who can roll for the piece does so, and when all the rolls are tallied up, you look to see that the person already has that piece of gear. It's -- well there's no real nice way to say this ... It's a jerk move. They will often try to trade it later on for another piece of gear to another eligible player, but that doesn't make it right.
Do yourself a favor -- don't be that person. If you have the piece of gear already or you really don't need it, don't roll on it. This isn't just limited to raid gear, but also to heroic and dungeon gear as well. If you've got a heroic tier 12 piece equipped, alternative gear like valor gear, or something of equal level to what dropped, really evaluate if you need that piece. If you don't, just move on with the run. Everyone will be much happier, and you're less likely be called a bad restoration shaman.
These are simple things to avoid, really. Just be vigilant to avoid doing them whenever you can. Do you have any tips you'd like to share on how to avoid being singled out as a bad restoration shaman?
Filed under: Shaman, (Shaman) Totem Talk






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 3)
Twill Feb 14th 2012 12:14PM
It's always interesting that 80% of the class column articles apply to everyone :P
Great post!
Borealis Feb 14th 2012 12:32PM
Interesting or kind of pointless?
calaf Feb 14th 2012 12:27PM
Im sorry but #5 is just not valid for LFR. This pattern of rolling need on everything you can and looking to trade later is now the norm not just for Resto shammy's but everyone. If you dont do it you are willfully hurting your ability to get the gear you actually need.
ladeezluvlarry71 Feb 14th 2012 12:37PM
I wonder how fast this (and this!) will be gray...
Is it a dick move? Yes. Will almost everyone else in your lfr be doing it? Yes. Will doing it increase your chances of getting gear you need? Yes.
/shrug
Sqtsquish Feb 14th 2012 12:37PM
Sad but true, just because you don't like "that game" everyone is playing doesn't mean you can get away with not playing it when you want the reward everyone else is going for.
Eladonra Feb 14th 2012 12:51PM
I don't view it as "willfully hurting (my) ability to get the gear (I) need". I view it as doing the right thing. The behavior of others doesn't change my sense of right and wrong. If you are uncomfortably engaging in this tactic just refrain from it. There are plenty of us who support that decision. Don't compromise yourself over the idea that "everyone" does it.
matt Feb 14th 2012 2:19PM
@eladorna
That pretty much sums it up. It also seals the fate of LFR as a place that honest people do not get gear upgrades. After 6 full clears rolling the way I feel is honest, not a single piece of loot. For better or for worse, LFR is a loot factory, It's more fun to raid with friends/guild so there is no reason to be there except to chase a gear upgrade, something that folks like you and I will likely never get.
Snuzzle Feb 14th 2012 3:30PM
I agree. I don't give a lick if "everyone" is doing it. It's a dick move, and I try real hard not to be a dick. "Everyone" brings friends to LFR and rolls on loot for them. "Everyone" AFKs at the tunnel in AV. "Everyone" rolls on anything they can. "Everyone" clicks Need to DE.
LFR is not a FFA, but the way some folks act it sure seems like it. I thought a party was supposed to work together like a team, not actively try to screw each other for their own personal benefit
rdj18902 Feb 14th 2012 6:31PM
this is the number one reason people who have never been reported for being a dick should get thier own server. and if you happen to become a dick once reports you are kicked off it. why can we just all play nice togather
Glaras Feb 15th 2012 1:18AM
Down rating the post won't change the truth of the matter: rolling need on everything you can has become the new norm. Your principles are not going to stop it rom happening, and if you are among those who won't roll that way, you are rapidly becoming the minority. So long as the current loot distribution model is maintained, these need rolls will continue. Doing it differently is going to become the "way it's done in guild runs"' and is going to be seen as quaint and, ultimately, pointless.
No one's asking you to like that. But downvoting is just sticking your head in the sand.
Jem Feb 15th 2012 2:12AM
"rolling need on everything you can has become the new norm. Your principles are not going to stop it rom happening, and if you are among those who won't roll that way, you are rapidly becoming the minority. So long as the current loot distribution model is maintained, these need rolls will continue. Doing it differently is going to become the "way it's done in guild runs"' and is going to be seen as quaint and, ultimately, pointless. "
Sure, it won't stop it from happening, but downvoting the post indicates that not "everyone" loot whores their way through LFR and not everyone thinks the sentiment is a good one. So what if I'm in the minority that don't roll on gear I already have? I don't see that as a bad thing, principles are principles for a reason.
I dont' roll on things I don't need, and I don't roll on things I already have. It didn't quite get through ot another priest who wanted to know who I was going to swap the Maw with off DW if I won it. Pointing out I already had the item and so I wouldn't be rolling didn't make sense to that player. They assumed I meant I had already set up a prior arramngement with someone else. I simply didn't roll. What need to I have to roll on an item I already have equipped? Just because "everyone else does"? That's childish and immature thinking.
Rolling need on everything and then trading isn't necessary to gear up. I've managed to acquire all 5 lock tier tokens without having to be a loot whore in LFR, along with several other slots. Without rolling against my personal principles. Trying justify it as the "only way I'll ever get loot" is rubbish - once you have the item, rolling on it again is just being a jerk imo.
Spellotape Feb 15th 2012 7:56AM
@Glaras
I think you misunderstand the purpose of down-voting - it is simply to show whether you like/dislike. People who dislike the post are well aware of the situation and they don't like it.
Clinto Feb 14th 2012 12:29PM
NO!!!!! I'm not going to stop rolling on DPS gear. If those dps, dime a dozen bastards, keep rolling on my resto trinkets in LFR... I'm going to roll on their DPS gear
Caliea Feb 14th 2012 12:46PM
wrong + wrong != right
Nishan Feb 14th 2012 12:49PM
When I queue for LFR i queue as dps and healer. just because it picks me as a healer doesn't mean i wouldn't rather equip my elemental spec. if you want me to heal, let me roll on the gear I want to roll on.
in an actual raid, yes I'd wait till the dps had their chance at an item, but if a dps is only thinking they'll maybe use it, then i'll maybe roll against them.
Luotian Feb 14th 2012 12:31PM
I healed my first Cataclysm dungeon yesterday on my little dwarf, and it wasn't as scary as I thought it would be. But, I can honestly say that this applies to those too. The mage died twice because they refused to follow the simple 'don't stand in bad' on a regular ToT. I felt terrible, but there wasn't anything I could really do about it. DK tanks are spikey, and I seemed to always be in the middle of a chain heal for her and two melee DPS when he'd suddenly drop like a stone.
I do have a question, though. My Shaman is dual-spec as an elemental, and a lot of the gear will carry over but won't be optimal. I want to be able to do both my jobs the best I can, and that is going to require (most unfortunately for my tiny bag space) two sets of gear. Is it all right to need on OS-pieces in RF? I've seen a lot of people on my hunter main throwing fits about it, and only slightly less defending. What's your stance? And which set am I better off purchasing first? Can I still heal in my DPS gear, or am I better doing slightly less than stellar DPS for a while in my healer gear?
Stilhelm Feb 14th 2012 1:52PM
Why do you think most gear won't carry over? You will need different head pieces, obviously, because of the meta. As you gear up, you'll want a couple pieces without spirit or hit so you aren't way over hit cap when you dps. You shouldn't need any hit pieces at all since you'll be going for spirit so much in your healing set, and spirit converts 1:1 to hit.
Resto is pretty forgiving as far as secondary stats go until you're healing more difficult normal modes or heroics. For LFR, you could easily get away with healing in a full elemental set, as long as you actually try. The healing requirements in LFR are nearly non-existent compared to even normal mode.
Adam Feb 14th 2012 2:25PM
I would also consider finding an addon for reforging.
You can easily use the same gear for both, and then slightly rebalance your stats with reforging. It beats holding multiple pieces of gear.
PodPeople Feb 14th 2012 3:02PM
You absolutely can use the same gear for ele that you use for resto. And you are correct that they will not be 'optimal' for either, but they will be more than adequate for both. you just have to pay attention to things like meta gem and weapon enchant and select one that is definitely useful to both, e.g. +int and 3% crit effect, and power torrent. Also keep in mind the subtle differences in stat preference between the two specs; like int and haste are good for both, and while for ele crit is a low priority, it is a strong resto stat. As far as Spirit goes, my feeling is that it's better to be over hit capped as ele than it is to be constantly going OoM as resto.
detailbear Feb 16th 2012 6:41PM
And while doing that, remember that your weapon is a good place to stack/unstack a stat you need to change between specs. Your "DPS" weapon can be specced one way and your "Healing" weapon can be specced the other. Maybe not enough to be optimal in both, but enough to shift you one way or the other as you change roles.