WoWGrrl's own Warcraft Gold guide: Get Rich & Stay Rich right from level one!
Wealth on Warcraft

Start Instance Training Before Level 20

Priest is a class-type which is in high demand on World of Warcraft right from the beginning because of its ability to heal others and therefore keep party members alive during challenging battles, and its ability to resurrect the dead when all else fails. In general, Holy-spec’d priests are in high demand within guilds and Instance parties compared to Discipline or Shadow-spec’d ones, but the downside is that Holy-spec’d priests advance through the levels more slowly when playing Solo because Holy focus is on healing, not dealing damage.

In order to stand out as a quality Dungeon/Instance priest, you will need to become a solid healer who doesn’t waste mana through over-healing and knows how to keep “threat” ratings to a minimum during battle. It is recommended that you practice these healing and threat-management skills in Dungeon/Instance Pick-up Groups (PuGs) regularly as soon as you’ve reached level 13 or so, as practice is the main way you’ll learn and improve.

By the time you reach level 40, Instance party members expect you have a decent grasp on your class’s role within a team, and thus will be less forgiving of errors or lack of preparation. It is at this point that a Shadow priest may find themselves being hasselled by partymates: “Why are you in Shadowform?”, “Your job is to keep us alive, not deal damage!”, “Stop generating so much threat/hate, I can’t get these guys off of you!”

By the time you reach level 55, quality guilds who have members going into Instances on a regular basis may actively blacklist you from their parties, raids or the guild itself if you’re not already beginning to show a solid understanding of your healer role. Many guilds are regularly on the lookout for Holy-spec’d priests with instance healing experience, but may deny the recruitment of Shadow priests who have focussed on PvP or dealing damage within solo fights but haven’t practiced healing very much.

Group Strategy Differs From Solo Strategy

Playing your toon in an Instance group requires a different strategy than you’ve become used to while playing solo, no matter what class you’ve chosen. Different classes have different strengths and weaknesses within a grouped situation, and as your levels increase and you move closer to instances like Blackrock Depths (Level 52+) and into the rest of the “End Game training” dungeons such as Blackrock Spire, Dire Maul, Stratholme and Scholomance, you knowing your class role becomes more of a necessity if you hope to team up with others who know what they’re doing.

If you’re okay with teaming up with Mages and Warlocks who want to be the party’s Main Tank (MT), Warriors who charge in to every fight and “aggro” far more NPC opponents than is truly necessary, and Priests who aren’t interested in healing, then don’t worry about this or any other Instance Class guide that’s posted here - but don’t be surprised to find that (especially at level 50+) it’s hard to ever actually get THROUGH an Instance in its entirety as a direct result.

Preparing Your Priest Toon For An Instance Run

Before heading into an Instance, it is the individual responsibility of each party member to ensure their toon is in tip-top condition and well-stocked with various consumables. As a Priest, this includes:

  • Repairing your equipment
  • Using +healing equipment (as opposed to +shadow or +int or +spi being the focus)
  • Bringing a stack or two of HP and Mana potions for emergencies
  • Restocking your food supplies and other materials needed for healing and buffing

If you get involved with Instance parties before level 20, it can reasonably be expected that by Level 40, partymates will be able to rely on you for taking enough responsibility to be properly stocked before entering an Instance. Players over level 40 who join dungeon parties without adequate preparation can expect to be alienated in the future by players who ARE prepared. Other players aren’t going to be interested in sharing their consumables and a Priest who “forgets” to bring water and healing mats, for example, takes a severe nose-dive in terms of being a useful contributor to the party.

Common Priest Instance Duties

As a Priest in an instance party, your duties tend to be as follows:

  • Main Healer (MH), keeping the MT alive as a priority and healing others in the party when able
  • Managing threat-generation so as not to pull aggro off of the MT or OT
  • Resurrection of dead partymates
  • Group buff contributor
  • Mana pool monitoring (to prevent waste through overhealing)

Dealing Damage, Sharing Healing / Resurrection

As a Priest, there are three major ways you’ll cause problems within your Instance party:

  • Neglecting healing responsibilities in favor of dealing damage
  • Running out of Mana during average fights due to overhealing/overzeal
  • Neglecting to speak up when mana pool is low and needs recharging
  • Hogging resurrection duty when others have a lower-cost option for rezzing
  • “Letting” partymates die

In short, when it comes to Instances, quality Priests are Healers and buffers, not offensive DPS-machines. Since it is your job to heal the party members who are taking the beats (tanking) while the other classes provide the DPS, for the most part you don’t even need to know what direction you’re heading or what the boss you’re healing your party against looks like.

Beware! Priests Must Be Thick-Skinned

As a final note in part I, I think it’s important to note that playing a Priest takes more patience than with any other class. The expectations that other players have of you to keep them alive is enormous, even when they’re playing recklessly and ignoring your warnings about your low mana pool. When you’re not already actively healing a dungeon party (and sometimes when you are!), you’ll regularly be invited into parties by complete strangers, and at times, some of the invitees can be extremely persistent and rude.

As a Priest, you have my full and express permission to do any or all the following:

  • Declining party invite requests that come from complete strangers without any type of communication confirming your true interest in joining
  • Adding persistent and/or rude players to your /ignore list
  • Refusing to join another party with a player who verbally abuses you for your healing skills, practices or ability to keep reckless players alive
  • Only getting into dungeon parties when you truly feel like going into a specific dungeon

But wait, there’s more! As a bonus to this offer, I also give you full and express permission to not feel guilty for having done any of these things.

As a Priest with solid healing experience, the World of Warcraft is your oyster and you’ll be in extremely high demand for parties, guilds, raids and the likes. The fact that other players “need a healer” for their group doesn’t need to matter to you, especially if they’re complete strangers. If they “need a healer” so badly, why aren’t they rolling one themselves??!

Stay Tuned For Part II!

This article is Part I of a short series of posts on the topic of effectively learning how to play a Priest toon in a low-to-medium-level Instance or Raid party. Part II will delve more deeply into the bullet-points mentioned in this post, so if you’re not sure what something here means, be sure to check back soon for Part II.

This entry was posted on Wednesday, January 17th, 2007 at 1:28 pm and is filed under Class 101: Priest, Warcraft Tips and Tricks. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

15 comments so far

 1 

See this is really interesting.. I actually rolled a priest, human on a server once just to tinker.. thought.. I always end up missing a priest.. and “LF healer” is a constant in general chat everywhere I go. Maybe I’ll roll a healer on my main’s server so I can finance the lil fella. Would definitely be a different mindset than a hunter/lock/mage/pally that I got already. Seems like you almost HAVE to put some points into shadow spec if you really want to be able to solo any. But at the same time, holy spec is where its “at”.

Anyway, my idea was to get the healer to about 17, and then just kinda hang out by DM and wait for ppl to need me. I thought a healer would be the ultimate money farm, since they can have all bags open (Unlike my lock/hunter.. stupid shards/bullets) and weapons just AREN’T important. I have got to get this lock up to 30 though. He’s sitting nicely at 11, or maybe 12 now I forget. I think I will make my lock a PvP machine in the 29 BG’s before I run off to the 30’s though. I wonder.. I never see priests in BG’s.. except usually one in WSG, who is always undead and always gets hit with every-friggin-thing-I-got right away.

March 12th, 2007 at 7:20 am
shawdowshots
 2 

I have a Shawdow priest and i am fine. Curenttly lvl 18. But i just make shure to tell people im a DPSer and they understand.

December 26th, 2007 at 11:10 am
 3 

Yep, you can go ahead and go Shadow and be a DPSer in a dungeon party, but know this: There’s a billion DPS out there looking for parties, and everyone’s looking for a Tank and a Healer. Shadow can do great as a healer if you know how to do it, but if you outright refuse to heal and say “I’m just a DPSer” then consider yourself lumped in with Rogues, Hunters, Mages, Fury/Arms Warriors (ie: non-tanks), cat-druids, moonkins and many other specs that exist just to DPS. When you’re sick of not finding parties, consider healing.

December 26th, 2007 at 1:09 pm
Kiama
 4 

My main is a level 51 holy priest, and i like it well enough. I put 5 talent points in the dis spec for the wand damage, and use my wand exclusively when im soloing. I cannot -stand- it when people will pester me for a long time to leave my group, and join theirs. Half the time im to high of a level to get any experience off of the other dungeon. That is by far the most annoying thing ever. I’ve thought multiple times of just switching to shadow spec, but i know that as long as im a healer, i wont be in the que long. All my bags are 16 slots, and at any givin time, 2 will be empty and a third half full. it pretty much rocks since you can pick up every little thing that drops and sell them to the vender, getting some $. a bunch of small things sold sure do add up to alot. i currently have more gold on my 51, then my boyfriend has on his 41,53, and 70 combined ^.^

March 9th, 2008 at 1:39 pm
 5 

One thing I keep seeing is people don’t realize how much good you can do soloing with a mostly disc spec. It seems everyone says, “Are you holy or shadow?” as if there’s nothing else. Now that I’m 70 I’ve respecced to holy but I don’t ignore the importance of discipline. But when I was out soloing most of the time it was great having all those discipline points because there were so many fewer interruptions to my spells and I loved having my shield causing damage w/o aggro.

March 11th, 2008 at 2:41 am
Hanayol
 6 

I’ve rolled a holy priest, and I’m now at level 30. Whenever I log in, I’ve got to deal with several whispers from people who want me to come heal them in instances, something I’ve never experienced before.

I like it!

And, to make you even happier Wowgrrl (or maybe not, but I think it’s worth mentioning) - if I don’t find a group I’d like to go with, I go on LFT, type “Holy Priest - Whisper first”, and then go fishing till I find a group I’m comfortable with.

Hanayol - Turalyon (EU)

March 20th, 2008 at 10:06 am
Jason
 7 

I have a lvl 67 Night Elf Priest - and I concur with everything you’ve said. Also, in follow up posts - yes - you will need a few shadow points (I’m not giving up my Mind Flay) to solo and level, but you can always respec (for a price) later on when you’re ready to do raids and instances full time.

Priests are always in demand.

April 7th, 2008 at 2:22 pm
Groove
 8 

Well, I think this subject could just as easily be tips for healers in general. 1 point I might make: Any specof a healing class is capable of “solo healing” (meaning you are the only healer in the group) just about any 5 man instance or group scenario currently in the game. “Offspec healing” (playing in the healing role while not having invested many, or any, talent points in the appropriate talent tree)is especially viable at lower levels. I would never recommend that someone try leveling, especially as their first WoW experience, as a healing class beginning with investing talent points in their respective healing tree. Extreme frustration is likely to result from this.

At lvl 70, the major difference will be that the gear requirements will be much steeper than a person who has invested significant talent points in healing talents, and generally I would only advise doing this if you are very familiar with the in’s and out’s of healing in the class you have selected.

If you are bound and determined to be a healer at level 70, and have a morbid, nigh pathological, dislike of spending the gold to “respec” (change your talent point arrangement), I suggest beginning by investing talent points in the DPS tree that best compliments the healing talent tree. All the heling classes have talents and abilities available in other trees that both improve their functionality in a group, and often improve their ability to solo grind/pvp/quest/level without wanting to gouge out your eyes with a rusty spoon.

April 15th, 2008 at 9:31 am
Rashave
 9 

I completely agree with everyone here, but one thing about priests is PvP, almost iverywhere i go i see druids and pallys in PvP gear but i have yet to see a priest. the downside to them is their terrible defense, everyone i slooking for druid pally healers because they just have more durability, making a holy priest almost useless for pvp unless you have a good team…=/

June 4th, 2008 at 12:25 am
 10 

I don’t know where Rashave is pvping. Disc priests are amazing in all arena brackets (although resto druids are more highly in demand in 2v2 due to their insane kiting and cc powers). I just re-leveled another disc priest (faction change) and even in the welfare S2 pvp gear I can easily tank 4 melee for a long time. (Well, provided one isn’t a purge-spamming enhancement shaman.)

Paladins are beyond awful in small-bracket arenas. Yes some do well (I got Gladiator in S2 as a holy paladin in 3v3), but reliance on cast-time heals and a single school of magic (you’re screwed if you get hit with an imp counterspell), no cc and minimal offensive utility make them pretty weak.

June 29th, 2008 at 9:28 pm
Ortho
 11 

I enjoy playing my 70 priest as a healer rather than shadow, but must deal with the fact that Paladins seem to enjoy more popularity as raid healers. Still, there always seems to be a shortage of healers and I can always find work.

I disagree that priests can’t do well at PvP - even with fairly poor gear. Yes, you will die a lot, but it doesn’t mean that you can’t have a large impact on the game. Particularly as Spirit of Redemption allows you to keep healing at full speed after a death in battlgrounds. It just took me a while to realise you can’t play it like PvE - i.e. stand still and let the tanks get all the aggro. People realise you are a squishy healer and target you first, particularly if you present as an easy target. I jump around and drop lots of renews and shields and flash heal after a psychic scream. I die a lot less often than I used to.

And yes Rashave, a holy priest won’t do well without a good group, but I would argue that a bad PvP group will kill any player or class.

July 18th, 2008 at 8:39 am
Patchwork
 12 

Why do people think that shadow priests can’t heal? (aside from encounters with idiot shadow priests who refuse to heal, of course).

I have a 70 shadow priest, and while I’m not above snaking an open “dps/cc” slot for a dungeon I want if someone is fool enough to put me in it, the fact is I’m not dps. Check the damage charts - the only people I consistently top are the specced healers. Occasionally I will beat a tank, and this makes me cry, because it means the tank is not good. Even when someone else is handling the “real” heals and I have full permission to do nothing but spam mind flay/vampiric touch/vampiric embrace, I am a healer, and the proof is in how close I can come to the specced healers on a healing recap. In encounters which feature a lot of aoe damage, I may beat the specced healers.

Conversely, in any 5-man dungeon, a shadow priest is all the healing you need if they just accept their job, drop out of shadow form and do it. Get yourself a good healing suit, and practice. I levelled as shadow, as most of us do, and when I hit cap I saw no reason to change - hadn’t I been healing instances for people throughout the levelling process, with far more satisfactory results than unsatisfactory? The core abilities of the priest class, combined with halfway decent gear, will be all you need.

The only place where shadow diverges sharply from the specs more commonly acknowledged as healers is in 25-man raid content, where we have a very specific job (caster support) which only we can do, and where the extra oomph of the standard holy/disc hybrid probably really is needed on the main tank. In anything smaller, we’re healers like the other specs, with one distinction I consider important:

We can solo if we have to.

Cheers and love,

Patch

July 23rd, 2008 at 3:07 am
 13 

Yes, I do agree that Shadow Priests can certainly heal in instances if they actually practice it.

Part of the problem is what your group will accept, however - like someone who knows how to fear properly in a dungeon may have problems when they run across folks who don’t understand it can be done safely (and really, I was one until I became a Priest and thought “screw it, I’m way back here and being attacked, I’m fearing whether you like it or not”), a Shadow Priest may run across people who can inspect him/her and see his/her spec, and judge accordingly.

PUGs are different beasts than guild or friend runs - the latter two will give a lot more freedom for the healer and tank to not be “healer or tank” spec’d whereas in a PUG it’s often found that one or more of the DPS is low-quality and thus the Tank and Healer combination must make up for it.

Plus of course, this article was written before BC’s effects were really known - I do need to write an updated version :)

July 23rd, 2008 at 8:30 am
 14 

Oh, but I do want to add…

My Holy/Disc priest is very set up for healing, I only use Smite and Shadow Word: Pain for offense.

I’m a JC so I’m doing the dailies on the Isle of Quel’Danas in order to get the rep to buy all the (expensive) epic cuts.

I’m doing JUST FINE soloing these quests. Sure, there are other places I might not solo as well, but we’re not as neuter in terms of soloing as some would believe either.

I think the general consensus is that Blizz did a good job with BC and made all spec’s a little more viable in various aspects.

Too bad they can’t fix idioticy. ;)

July 23rd, 2008 at 8:43 am
timmeetheturtle
 15 

My alt is a 57 holy priest i was spec’d holy through my leveling it gets frustrated every once in a while soloing esp since my main is a hunter, but getting asked everytime i sign in to do instances is just too great. The weird thing is if im in lfg trying to do an instance it takes hours to get a group. Now im looking forward to doing instances in bc.

August 18th, 2008 at 1:41 pm

Leave a reply

Name (*)
Mail (will not be published) (*)
URI
Comment