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 2 of 2)
gooseberry Feb 24th 2012 9:38AM
Depending on what you're doing and the specific bg, you'll usually spend enough time riding around that your mana will be decently regen'ed by the time you get to where you're going (example, riding from stables to bs in AB).
Don't be shy about using your mana CDs as well--usually it won't be lack of mana that kills you, anyway, but just too much incoming damage.
If you absolutely are hurting for mana and feel you absolutely must sit down, try to do it among a crowd of your allies, preferably out of line of sight of the enemy behind a nice rock or bush. It may not completely hide you, but it will ideally make you much less noticeable.
Matthew Feb 24th 2012 4:16PM
I'm going to reply to my own comment!
Learning how to heal in a BG is a good way to learn BUT
1) you will use faster more expensive spells since you will worry about being interrupted (at higher doses)
2) when you do PvE you will be so happy you won't get silenced by 5 opponents.
Matthew Feb 24th 2012 4:42PM
um, doses = levels. yeah.
Stray Feb 28th 2012 8:37AM
For "Tell your team you are a healer": You can right click your unit frame in the in-game frame and mark role. Players rarely mark tank (which goes to the top) except in AV, so you both put the healer icon on your nameplate and your nameplate at the top. For those that miss the announcement, join late, or are in the heat of things, this will go a long way towards identifying you.
There's also quite a bit you can do, moment by moment, to cultivate a culture of protecting healers. If you notice someone peel for you and the scrap is over, a simple "/ty" (and even better, a follow-up in sticking with that player) goes a long way. And on the flipside, feel free to turn a blind eye towards the health bars of the jerks that act like they're entitled to healing but do nothing to earn it, especially those that blame healers later on for shared mistakes or their own.
Do also cultivate companionship with your fellow healers. Let them know what you have covered so they can go elsewhere, or when you need their help. "I'm healing at LH, [name], maybe you can help offense at Mines." or "Healer OOM with FC, need backup".
Turning on powerbars in the Raid Frames is great for that, by the way. At first glance you might see a fellow healer keeping players up at a node, but if you notice they're running on empty, taking some heat for them or tossing some mana assitance (an Innervate, etc) works wonders.