Saturday, March 29, 2008

The 2.4 Arena Forecast

Almost as if out of nowhere, Patch 2.4 caught us like a deer in its headlights. Of course we didn't quite go out with the ensuing splatter that should follow, we can expect some bloody animal carcasses to be lying about once the storm calms. So let's go to Ollie Williams now for the Arena forecast, Ollie how's about those druids?


"THEY GOT NERFED!"

Thanks, Ollie. But in all seriousness, the nerfs were predicted to be "not-so-big-of-a-deal", however they certainly were anything short of a big deal. A million bears simply reared their ugly heads back in anguish when they realized just how dire Blizzard's oncoming threats were. For those of you who have been living under a rock for all of 2.3, let's review the highlights.

4-Piece Set Bonus (15% movement speed outdoors in Bear/Travel/Cat form) - This set bonus was removed in place of something along the lines of a reduced casting time to one of their direct heal spells. Important? Immensely. An 18,000 armor bear used to be able to outrun you in arena, unless of course you had Fleet Footed, you'd still only be running about the same speed as a druid in any feral form whatsoever. Logically, this also destroyed how fast they moved in travel form, effectively making them 21% less of a headache to catch and blow up. Mutilate rogues may not notice as much as they still have a good lead in speed, but Shadowstep rogues will be laughing all the way to the bank with this nerf. What do I think? This nerf will greatly reduce the effectiveness of comps like Warlock/Druid and Warrior/Druid. While it is a significantly power-reducing nerf, it only levels the playing field for non-druid healers in all brackets of arena in terms of survivability. Druids are still the kings of kiting, but are really hurt bad by this nerf.

Cyclone range reduced to 20 yards (26 yards talented) - No more jumping out briefly from behind a pillar on the other side of the arena to cyclone something! From several games against and with druids, I've definitely noticed the fact that now a druid really has to get up in your face to get a cyclone off successfully. It is much easier to outrange a cyclone before it goes off, or to drop a fear on a druid in cyclone range (in the case of a priest or warlock), get a mana burn off, or otherwise simply intercept. The cyclone nerf is rather devastating in conjunction with a druid's ability to kite as easily also removed, since range is their best friend, and avoiding situations where they would get caught relies on the old range. 10 yards is very significant, indeed.

Drinking effects have diminished effects for the first few moments of trying to drink - Not a direct druid nerf but it definitely impacted them as would a mack truck running head-on into a golf cart. With the ease of staying caught up to druids this patch, getting those ninja ticks of a drink off won't be quite as easy since now you have to wait a good number of seconds before you start getting minimal benefits of a drink. This means catching a druid 3-5 seconds into a drink will basically nullify them gaining anything out of it.

Enough about druids altogether though. Here are some of my predictions for the 2.4 Arena scene. Any team based around druids may experience a bit of difficulty or less success with their furry healers of choice. Less reliable CC and less survivability overall means you might want to consider opening your doors to other healer options. The Eurocomp (aka 5432) loses Cyclone as a reliable targetted CC from druids in particular, and may not be quite as overpowering towards the comp it directly counters (2345/6). Mana Burn 5v5 comps may not suffer quite as much as the Euro relies mostly on it's CC power. By taking Cyclone's range out it loses that same drive but by no means will relatively skilled druids find it too taxing, assuming they aren't focus fired now. While Euro may feel the pain, Mana Burn teams, which rely on outlasting momentous burst and slowly whittling away another team's mana may make a comeback as a popular composition...maybe. While the nerf to drinking accentuates the control of mana with this comp, mana draining effects were slightly nerfed, meaning it could go either way. Resilience now affecting mana drains puts a bit of a damper on teams that rely on mana burning to win. In this case, we can only wait and see.

In 2v2, Druid/Warrior is suffering a major blow as a result of this patch. Killing a warrior's partner is now a sensible option, and pressuring a druid's healing power is not as daunting a task as it once was. Mix that with easier to dodge CC and the effectiveness of the colossus that is currently dominating most 2v2 brackets may crumble a bit. I say crumble, but all this really does is even the playing field for other 2v2 comps. Priest/Rogue in particular will become a top dog again for sure, since they have reigned in the past, and only with the emergence of teams such as Druid/Hunter and Druid/Warrior did they recently fall to a lower step on the podium. There's no telling if this nerf directly damages Druid/Hunter's unparalleled control over a single target during extended fights, but we may not experience the same 30+ min battles that this comp is known for. Mage/Rogue gets a subtle little buff, only really helping Mages out in extended battles. With cheaper spellsteal and blink mana costs we should be seeing Mages running out of mana in mere seconds a thing of the past.

Paladins
may make a re-surfacing as viable healers in 2v2 and 3v3 though the buff they received isn't incredible, it is definitely a step in the right direction. For those of you who don't know, Paladins received a significant buff to Holy Shock, an instant heal/damage spell that is on a 15 second cooldown. This likens their clutch healing ability to that of Swiftmend, only 3 seconds slower but delivering the same potential burst heal that may help Paladins in the long run. While the plate heal-pistons were always some of the best stationary and mana-efficient healers, they have suffered the most criticism because of their ease in being CC'ed long term. The Holy Shock buff may make them slightly more viable now, but don't go throwing away your priest (or druid) for a paladin just yet, rogues!

3v3 Double Melee teams may take a small hit as far as using Shadowstep rogues goes. The fix to Cheat Death is noticeable as many players are blowing right through the 90% damage reduction and getting kills off on the formerly 99% mitigated damage buff used to ensure the survival of. With this, potentially you may start seeing Shadowstep rogues spend those 3 talent points into something else, like Master of Subtlety or Enveloping Shadows, though many will still swear by Cheat Death if nothing more than a single GCD save. I personally would experiment with and without it and see what I think is more valuable. So don't put all your eggs in one basket, as the saying goes. The talent is now working as intended. Ret Paladin/Warrior may use Shamans a lot more often now, instead of Druid healers for the insane damage output Windfury grants them. Druids no longer being the survivable titans they were, of course. Which brings me onto Shamans.

Shamans, the class most people like to focus fire in many cases (3v3, 5v5 mostly) may be on their way to being a lot more viable as healer choices (or maybe even melee choices) in your composition. While elemental shamans got a major shaft, bringing 2345/6 teams down to a level playing field with other compositions, resto shamans are now starting to pick up the new Enhancement talents that grant reduced snare time and instant ghost wolf. From the perspective of a warrior the new Toughness talent makes it incredibly hard to keep a shaman locked in place very long before having to refresh hamstring (or piercing howl). Quite literally, every other GCD I found myself having to hamstring, or risk being kited by a shaman, who also upon getting out of my hamstring is able to instantly ghost wolf for slightly increased speed. This gives them an overall edge in escaping warriors, and makes it even more annoying to stick crippling on them, between cleansing totems and their own spammable de-poison. Expect to see shamans playing a bit more competitively at higher ratings, with a new bag of tricks at their disposal.

Mutilate Rogues did receive a nice buff this patch, but by no means will this fix the spec overall. I myself have been playing around extensively with the bonus 15% crit from Puncturing Wounds and found the buff to be well received. As I said, this definitely isn't fixing the underlying problem of Mutilate specs in general, that is lack of mobility, but it definitely accents our ability to burst, which is what the spec is designed to do. Now with more reliable crits, you can definitely expect your combo point efficiency to skyrocket as this fun, but mostly "underdog" spec. Just because of the change in general, and the bandwagony state of the rogue community, expect to see a lot of fledgling mutilate rogues, or old supporters giving it another chance. Of course give it a month or so before most of them respec back to Shadowstep.

Most of the highlights of the patch really lie on the drastic blow received by druids, as far as arena goes. Quite a few say Blizzard overdid it, some say it has been long overdue. The only question arising now is that Rogues are once again on the list for future nerfs, as they have quickly become significantly more popular as far as arena representation goes. As it stands, at high ranking competitive arena levels Rogues have overtaken Warriors, and the spotlight has kind of shifted off of them as of late. No longer do you really see Warriors being criticized as the most overpowered class. Rogues shot up a good 2%, bumping Warriors to 3rd as the most represented class at high level arena. Druids still dominate the #1 spot, of course, but I'm predicting this will fall to more mediocre levels now that the whole hype has calmed down. As a direct result, and the fact that Rogues are still very powerful, we may even see Rogues reach the top of the pedestal this patch.

Finally, while season 4 hasn't even been remotely announced as coming soon, competition at all levels of every bracket is somewhat intensifying, as potential season gladiators are pushing to get their teams set high in the battlegroup early. Expect a bit of a tide of difficult opponents in the low 2000's until most of the teams reach their goals. Team selling will most likely continue till late into the season, or until the 2 week warning for end-of-season rewards. If you already are part of a high rated team that is set for Gladiator, now might be a good time to sit on and it and wait, as many higher active teams will be playing often to top themselves off a bit, or to pad. Especially former druid-based teams may or may not stop queuing as a result of the nerfs.

One final note on useful PVE additions to your PVP arsenal, healers! Heroic Magister's Terrace (the new 5-man dungeon located on Sunwell Isle) provides a very nifty healing trinket that may be worth your time. This drops off the 3rd boss in MrT (an Arena style 5v5 encounter) and from quite a few games with both of my healer partners, we've found this trinket to be extremely useful in many situations. A few notes about the Vial: It is off the GCD completely, like any trinkets. It also is stackable to full potential during the preparation period of an arena match. It is on a 2 minute cooldown, and the heal effect can crit, however it is affected by mortal strike and other healing debuffs. From what I understand the user's +healing has no amplification effect on releasing the trinket. The holy power stacks are not dispellable. You may see this a lot in 2v2 and maybe 3v3 brackets as another "oh shit" button used by many healers. So make arrangements to farm this handy trinket in your spare time!

This is all very silly of course, seeing as Blizzard distinctly said that season 4 was still a long ways off. I'd give it about 2-3 more months to let the new PVE content stagnate a bit before they release it to the Welfare Epic community, as to keep the content from getting too old, too fast. Just call it a hunch. Season 3 is still somewhat fresh to many people.

This has been your Roguespot Arena Forecast for 2.4, good luck and have fun! And remember, don't take your warlocks to 3v3 anymore! ;P

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Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Arena Trends, Pots, and Black Kettles

Actually I'm quite guilty of this myself. How many times have you run a 2v2 composition, a 3v3, or a 5v5 and run into another team that made you think to yourself "god what a bunch of lamers, running XXX/YYY/ZZZ, wow that takes skill". You just ran into Priest/Mage/Rogue and you're running Warrior/Rogue/Druid. Well gosh, Pot, meet Kettle. The fact is every team composition out there is "pretty lame", and we can muse on that all we want just to make us feel better about our own compositions, but when it comes right down to it we are guilty of the same thing.

The team compositions are lame, but they work. And this is the means of succeeding in arena. It breaks my heart to say that a lot of team makeups might be more "fun" because they're wierd and all, but many players are out to win. They don't care about playing fair, or playing with honor. Now, I draw your attention to a very dead-on article regarding the "Art of Video Game War" as I like to call it: Playing to Win

If you are not about to read that whole article then let me sum it up for you. You don't get first prize by playing honorably. You don't win a duel by bringing a knife to a shootout. You don't- well you hopefully see where I'm going with this. A lesson to learn is that the most successful arena players win by minimizing their disadvantages and adjusting their advantages to the times. Each season brought about new compositions that became widely popular due to this very fact. PMR was extremely strong in season 2 with it's heavy CC and ability to drop a lot of burst damage very quickly. 2345 dominated the 5v5 bracket until a counter (2346) was found, until another counter (euro, or 5432) was found. This is how the times change. Flavor of the month comp will be a FOTM until the new FOTM takes it over, and everyone will flock to that. This is not necessarily "cheap" or "lame", but top players take advantage of these head starts to win.

Of course all of the above is not to say that everyone who doesn't play a FOTM matrix isn't going to win, after all most of the comps played are, or were FOTM at some point in time. Just because the flavor has moved over to the next jug in the ice cream freezer doesn't mean the old flavor has gone out of style, of course.

Just remember next time you step into arena, if you see a FOTM team comp, go ahead and call them lame for running it. If nothing else, they are probably mumbling on the other side of the field, the same thing about your team.

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Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Proximo for the Arena

I am going to try to document the addons that I use on a regular basis, explain how I use them and create a new section / tab just for addons. I think I am going to hold off on the rants for now. My next one will declare me the new savior of the Rogue Community and that your all doing it wrong.

I have recently jumped back into the arena. I must say it is alot more competitive then I remember a year ago. You have people geared in full venge / vindicator that start teams or team hop for gold. PLing newer players like me above 1850. This means that when you play you are frequently running into very well geared, organized arena masters.

I have always been a fan of arena live frames back in the day so when I found out about Proximo and got it right away. I must say this has some really cool features.



- Allows you to set your right and left click to a variety of functions like /target /focus or a custom macro of your own. So that if you where a priest you could make right click target and dispell that player. Very handy.

- It does the ussual Syncing showing you and your teammates what your up against Shows cast bars / manabars

- Some feature for main assisting that I have not played much with.

If you pull up the options theres plenty to play around with as well. The only beef I have with this mod is that it was not easy to move around my screen. I had to put it into a test mode so that it showed up outside of an arena, then alt left click and drag. Needless to say it sat in the top middle of my screen for at least a day.

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