Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Introduction to Melee Formations

The old adage, which we've all heard, goes like this:
If the tank dies, it's the healer's fault.
If the healer dies, it's the tank's fault.
If the DPS dies, it's their own damned fault.
I take exception to this adage, and think it conveys a bad attitude and is disrespectful to damage dealing classes. If the tank dies because he's wearing spellpower gear and is not talented into mitigation or avoidance, it is not the healer's fault.

This is just one example where the adage fails. We need to be honest about survivability.

If the point of the game were merely to stay alive, then a tank and four healers would be the optimal group composition. However,
The first duty of a tank is not to stay alive, but to keep their party alive and buy them time to bring down the quarry. Staying alive is merely a habit in keeping with that primary goal.
Every member of the party is responsible for accomplishing the overall goal, which is to bring down the quarry. The responsibilities of the different roles can and do overlap.

For example, if the tank dies, it might be the damage dealer's fault. Whenever a mob parries a frontal melee attack, they get a ~40% haste buff on their next white damage attack. This means if you're standing shoulder-to-shoulder with three melee damage dealers, and none of them are expertise capped to remove the 12-15% parry chance, you will be taking a lot more damage than usual.

Yes, it is one of the melee DPS's responsibilities not to contribute damage to the tank. This further disproves the adage above.

If one of your damage dealers is a Fury Warrior with 0 Expertise skill, and you're trash tanking four mobs, each of their whirlwind attacks (assuming a 13.5% parry chance on each of the four mobs) are ~44% likely to proc the haste debuff on one of the mobs.

This is why you, the tank, should always be on the other side of a mob from your melee damage dealers. Always. Mobs can't parry attacks from behind them, so the damage dealers will be much more effective if you coordinate to keep the mob's backside pointing at the party (unless it's a dragon).

Once we accept that the tank and the melee damage dealers should always be on opposite sides of a mob, the tank becomes partially responsible for where the melee damage dealers are standing. When the tank moves, the mob moves, and when the mob moves, the DPS must also move, in order to stay behind or to the side of it. The question for the tank becomes where shall I place my melee DPS?

Acknowledging that some fights are just plain messy, accidents happen, and nobody is perfect, we should still do our best as tanks to keep our melee damage dealers safe. For starters, we should not put our melee DPS in any place where:
  1. They can body pull.
  2. Their abilities can pull.
  3. They can be flung into a mob or other damage source.
If you do any of these things, then you're forcing the DPS to choose between not engaging in the fight until the tank moves somewhere else, engaging and likely getting themselves killed, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with the tank and maybe getting him killed, or not using the abilities that define their class and role. It's a no-win situation for the melee damage dealers, and it does not contribute to the primary objective.

So, how can you, as a tank, avoid some of these common pitfalls? The answer is by planning and practicing melee formations. Over the course of the next couple of weeks, I will begin a series of short articles describing various melee formations--general positioning strategies for party members that are not encounter specific. The goal will be to outline the advantages and disadvantages of each formation, and to provide videos that illustrate them in use with melee damage dealers. Because other websites such as TankSpot have encounter-specific raid videos, I will focus on formations for general use.

Melee Formations

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

My promise to you

This is a "meta" entry; an editorial post about this publication.

I was disheartened to read one of my favorite druid blogs today, which strayed completely from the type of content that made me want to follow it and link to it, but instead wandered into a thoughtless, unhelpful, uninformed, unneeded and most unkind mire of off-topic and offensive "tripe" (to borrow from one of the comments). The post first upset me, but then enticed me to step back and try to salvage something of worth from my initial reaction.

Many years ago, a dear friend advised me to "THINK" before publishing any written work, and to be certain that the written piece was:
  • Thoughtful
  • Helpful
  • Informed
  • Needed
  • Kind

I've tried to live and to write by that standard ever since.

In light of that fact, the point of this blog is not to "entertain" a daily audience or to "stimulate" any readers that find their way here during their search for relevant content on playing a druid. Our readers don't need mere stimulation--we have all of Azeroth to excite our senses.

The point of this publication is to provide relevant and useful information for druid tanks. My promise to you, the reader, is that I will not waste your time by forgetting this. When I have nothing useful to contribute, I will not write. When, as is the case today, I have more entries in 'draft' state than published, it is because the entries can all benefit from revision.

I look forward to seeing more on-topic, useful content elsewhere in our community of writers, and am happy to wait for quality. Finally, I hope that the wayward writers I look up to can find their bearings and get back to basics soon.