How to heal in Battlegrounds

An indispensably important part of the Battlegrounds is having capable, willing healers. Just a small handful of powerful, practiced healers can make your Battleground team invincible. When you are the healer, you get to decide who lives and who dies on your team. You extend your warm, golden glow around the mere DPS who clamor to bathe in your power, and by means of that glow, provide victory to your team.
I might be engaging in a little hyperbole, but you get the point. A good healer can be incredibly powerful in Battlegrounds. You'll find the role engaging and complex; your greatest enemy will be tunnel vision, self-reliance, and the ability to communicate on the fly. Let's talk about how you can maximize the power of your time as a healer.
Tell your team you are a healer
Before the gates even open, tell your team that you're a healer. Announce yourself and your general style. Tell them things like:
- "I'll stick with the flag carrier to keep them well-healed."
- "I will go with a small strike group to overwhelm enemy defenses."
- "I will stay on defense."
Pick a partner
You have the option to join up with a pocket DPS character. Work out with your DPS partner whether you're taking the lead or he is. If he's going to charge around and pick out targets, then you simply need to follow them. Conversely, if you're taking the lead, you need to trust that your DPS partner will stick with you and protect you.
Trust me when I say that the DPS character will be busy. It's tempting to believe that running healer guard duty isn't a full-time occupation. What you'll quickly discover is that every rogue, druid, and other character will take pot shots at you and make assassination attempts on you. Your guard will need to deal with these attacks quickly, keeping you free to throw heals out to the rest of the team.
Your friend, the raid frames
The raid frames are your friend. While plenty of user addons can modify the game for healers, I consider the current in-game raid UI to be sufficient to the task. Nearby players are highlighted, while out of range players are dimmed.
Clearly, your first focus will be nearby healers. At a basic level, getting heals out to your team through the basic raid frame works much like PvE. If you see someone with low health, throw them a heal. If you can cleanse, go for it. Just playing this kind of whack-a-mole is more than enough to keep you occupied through most of the match.
Where expert skills come into play is both watching the raid frame and the action happening around you. Picking out which team members have become the target of multiple opponents and therefore in the most need of your services is the real art of healing in a Battleground.
It can be tempting to keep your eyes fixed on the raid frames at all time, so do your best to fight that urge. Look at the immediate area around you and pick out where you can see a group of opponents. Click one of your enemy, then hit F to find out who they're targeting. That person is probably the most in need of your heals.
Heal thyself
You should keep yourself among your highest healing priority. Sure, extenuating circumstances will sometimes demand that you heal the FC first or something like that. But as a general rule, a dead healer throws no heals.
Once you've got that priority out of the way, start getting tactical about your healing. Your decision to heal your team members make your heals a weapon. If a warrior is doing an amazing job killing other members, your heals become an extension of that warrior's DPS. If you want to make sure that warrior's target dies, provide him extra heals until the target is toast. In this way, your heals come a sort of DPS in their own right, because you select which flows of DPS (characters) continue.
Get all judgemental
This is the toughest part of being a healer; you can't be everywhere at once. You can't be next to every player. You have to pick and choose. Which team members are worth healing and which are not?
It's hard to give good, universal advice about who deserves heals and who doesn't. That's got to be up to you. Figure out who is putting in effort for your team by doing things like defending flags. Ignore the people who are fighting in roads. Outside of those few basic tropes, though, everything is one big gray area.
But if you try to heal every member of your team, you will lose and you will not heal effectively. Figure out your criteria and stick to them.
Filed under: WoW Rookie






Reader Comments (Page 1 of 2)
Shepherd57 Feb 23rd 2012 3:31PM
I just wanted to point out that healing isn't all a healer can do to prevent player death. A good use of CC can be just as potent as that extra heal.
Possum Feb 23rd 2012 3:42PM
Yes, even if a healer never learns where their offensive spells are they should definitely learn where their CC abilities are.
Aggy Feb 23rd 2012 3:34PM
"Pick a parner"
I've been playing a priest (back before discipline was cool) for a good bit of WoW time...never have I ever tried to pick a historic city in Ahmednagar District, Maharashtra, India...
Now I know what I've been doing wrong!
Thanks! :)
Aggy™
kulhanek.jeff Feb 23rd 2012 4:27PM
I thought that was hilarious, how did it get downvoted that fast?
Matthew Feb 23rd 2012 4:00PM
By the way, both Horde and Alliance bitch that 'our side has no heals!! [other faction] always has more healers!
For those readers who aren't healers. It is hard to keep you alive if I'm stunned, silenced, or CC'd. Please help out a healer.
Ad134 Feb 23rd 2012 8:09PM
Only a small donation can help a healer stay alive to prepare fighters for the oncoming battles, so please donate to the NSPCH today.
TonyMcS Feb 23rd 2012 10:18PM
Learn to heal in battlegrounds. There's no better place to get comfortable with your spells and your UI. Better yet, people are usually too busy to worry about or notice your mistakes and you don't have to worry about getting kicked because some tank wearing tissue paper armor thinks you can't heal.
Most dungeons and certainly RF are a breeze to heal after coping with the chaos of battlegrounds. So if you do want to try healing, head for the bgs first ;-)
pwherman Feb 24th 2012 3:05AM
I would second the "learn to heal in battlegrounds" strategy. This is how I learned. I decided to level a new toon with the intent to heal. But leveling alone meant starting with a dps spec, then dual-speccing a healer with PvP gear as a way to learn that role for the first time. Learning in battlegrounds is much more forgiving. I found it took the pressure off of being the only healer in a 5-person dungeon. And it was easier to see the effects of different sequences of spells, a sort of experimental laboratory, that would have been harder to observe within the chaos of a 25-person raid.
If you end up with a group that's not playing to the battleground objective, then create your own objective, as in, staying at one node to heal a defender, or pick a player or small team that seems to be staying together and follow them around. And you may also discover you like battlegrounds.
gooseberry Feb 24th 2012 9:32AM
i second this what TonyMCS says.
Healing in battlegrounds puts you under pressure that makes you learn fast, without the social humiliation that comes in dungeons if you fail. You master your clutch heals and hotkeys and class cds like nobody's business when healthbars are yoyoing around you and a rogue is beating on you.
laudickj Feb 23rd 2012 4:01PM
I would also like to add that you should prioritize better geared players and the players that are actually playing for the objectives.
Alysandir Feb 23rd 2012 4:08PM
My one and only bit of advice to anyone foolis-, er, I mean brave enough to attempt healing in a battlegrounds is this: be aware of where your opponents' attention is likely focused...and DON'T BE THERE.
A truism of PUG battlegrounds is that you generally have a few people trying to achieve an objective and a bunch of baby ducklings following behind, supporting the "leader." In my experience, this leads to tunnel vision on the part of the DPS; they fixate on what the leader's doing: the flag or on the random furball they encounter, and don't pay a whole lot of attention to much else.
Another truism of battlegrounds of all types is that healers are like ice cream trucks; as soon as folks see one, they come a runnin'. So the trick to being an effective healer is to not be seen. But how do you pull that off, especially with addons that highlight you as a juicy target? Don't be where they are looking. Don't stand on the flag. Don't stand on the road. Try to skirt around the enemy's flank so that they're facing away from you, because they're probably not going to look behind them so long as their objective or an obvious HK is in front of them.
Of course, against pre-mades using Vent...if you aren't in a pre-made yourself, you're dead. Repeatedly. Just accept it and take your medicine. Builds character.
Matthew Feb 23rd 2012 4:34PM
That was very Sun Tzu. Be where you are strong and they are weak.
noel mcleod Feb 23rd 2012 5:11PM
Not true, I heal as a 60's Disc priest as Horde and a 4.6k resil disc priest as Alliance. I use the same Healbot and macro setup for both, with unmodified left-click being Power Word: Shield and unmodified right-click being Penance. Macros are for my focus target and focus is the flag-carrier or node-defender I'm currently working with.
In places like Gilneas or WSG I pick the highest health plate-wearer and look at gear and spec, if they are pretty reasonable I set focus and let them know they have heals. If there is a predetermined FC they always get focus unless we are overburdened with healers.
There's ALWAYS someone worth healing, and sometimes you can take someone to "Wrecking Ball" or "Ironman" and they are appreciative. (And sometimes your own team deliberately sabotages you when you are doing that - there's a rogue from Nordrassil is the only person on my ignore list ...).
Osiris Feb 23rd 2012 5:58PM
Try to use heals that dont point a big green arrow at yourself.
Matthew Feb 23rd 2012 6:33PM
at least chain heal confuses with multiple targets. Penanace is like: oh look lots of sparkles - lets see where it came from!
Hoofio Feb 24th 2012 9:19AM
^^this
I even try to keep rejuv to a minimum unless it's really hectic.. the less graphical indication you're around the better.
A general rule I follow in healing BGs is "be a coward".. I'm much more likely to cut and run as a healer.. at least to out of range of the flag.. I find the enemy tends not to follow you and hopefully you can come back before it's too late.
Sunblade Feb 23rd 2012 6:51PM
I must admit that when I'm getting heals in a BG on my rogue, I feel like some invincible uber god of pain (not a common thing for me!). So I appreciate how powerful a healer can be and when I play my holy pali in a BG, I do tend to try and keep the rogues alive. I just wish some people would appreciate that if they don't protect their healer, they are not going to get healed!
On my rogue, I use "Healers Must Die" addon which I believe was recommened on WoW Insider - it can also tell you when one of your healers is getting beaten on, as well as making the enemy healers very easy to spot in a crowd.
ekeefe41 Feb 23rd 2012 7:07PM
Hope for but never expect peels, learn to stay alive and move move move
Matthew Feb 23rd 2012 7:16PM
Why was Noel downranked?
Grelliena Feb 24th 2012 6:01AM
Just a curiosity question. I've recently discovered the world of PvP, and decided i kinda like it. So i've been running with my new disc-priest pet (~lvl 30 now). My problem is that I quite often run outta mana completely. What do you do then? Run to the enemy to get a quick kill-ress-full mana boost, sit down drinking and play find-the-healer with all the rogues and druids on the other team, or just run with the crowd and hope to regerate a bit? I've tried all three with different luck, but input from someone who acctually know what they're doing would be great.