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Wealth on Warcraft

I spend a fair amount of time these days, browsing the Official WoW Forums.

I read the Guild Relations board first and with most interest, because there’s often some interesting discussions going on from an Officer/Guildmaster perspective, about the varying challenges of running a guild. And for some reason, there don’t seem to be many inflammatory “trollers” in that forum (just posting inflammatory things to stir people up), which means the “signal to noise ratio” is high. Less annoying, more information.

I then tend to venture over to the General board, just to see what the topics of the day are. Here, I find a lot more trolls and a lot more trash posting (Subject: “Blood elves are ruining the Horde” Body: “Discuss”), but on occasion I find some very interesting reads.

Next, I hit the Raid & Dungeons forum. Everyone’s talking about the heroic and other level 70 dungeon stuff that it’ll be a long time before I ever see, but wow is that board educational. Wanna get the hard and fast on what mistakes folks in your class tend to make while in dungeon groups? Check this forum out. Wanna know why certain spec builds are looked over for the Burning Crusade 5-man dungeons? You’ll get lots of info there.

Sometimes I venture over to different Class forums, to see what’s going on there. Again, there’s some GREAT information about class abilities, tips and tricks for successful solo play vs dungeon instance play vs raiding, and a lot of heated debate in general.

I’ve learned so much just by reading the forums. Of course, for the 10% of good information I glean, there’s 90% I have to ignore outright.

Specializations Before 40 - Skill First, Efficiency Second

One of the big things I’ve learned from the forums is that specializations only really start to matter quite late in the game.

While yes it’s nice to have a “protection tank” and “holy healer”, it’s not required, because at the levels where instances can be taken on by players higher level than required, success is more about the “dungeon party skill” of the players in the party, and less about squeezing efficiency out of the tank or healer’s powers.

That’s not to say that a player can’t slow their progression down by speccing poorly, nor to say that certain specs don’t work better with specific other specs… it’s just to say that learning how to play your class well (in a party situation which is different from solo play) is an important first step, and then fine-tuning your class play through spec(ialization) is something to focus on later.

Purpose of Specializations

First of all, you choose your Specializations by spending your Talent points (’n’ brings up your talent trees). The very basic purpose of a ’spec’ is to allow a player to ‘tune’ their characters so as to be somewhat unique from others within their class, depending on their own play style and needs.

The first time I spent my Talent points as a levelling Hunter, I spent points according to where I felt I needed a boost in my gameplay. Pulling aggro from my pet, or my pet dying too quickly? Put points in Beastmaster. Fights lasting too long? Put points into Marksmanship. At the end, I came out with a predominantly Beastmaster talent spec but I’m sure it wasn’t “THE Beastmaster spec”.

The beauty of Talent specs is that you can get them wiped (for a fee) at any of your class trainer locations, and you can re-allocate the points in a different fashion. If you’ve got the cash to spend and want to try some other talent specs, have a ball!

All Classes Are Hybrid Classes

Some may argue that not all talent point configurations can really be called a “specialization”, due to the true definition of that word. If, after all, you put an even amount of talent points into all three talent trees, are you really choosing a “specialization”?

But at the same time, whatever your Talent configuration is, that’s your “spec”. Funny.

At any rate, because of this imbalance, it can truly be said that all classes can be configured as Hybrid, meaning they’re not truly strong in any one tree of potential specialization. For some players this may be a “gimped” playstyle (especially in dungeon/party situations) but for others it may work perfectly.

That’s all I have to say about that, for now.

This entry was posted on Saturday, March 17th, 2007 at 9:06 pm and is filed under Class 101: Hunter, Class 101: Mage, Class 101: Priest, Class 101: Warlock, Class 101: Warrior, General. 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.

2 comments so far

Rizzo
 1 

I think its funny what they consider ’spcialization’. My priest is specced for holy damage and healing with a 23/29/2 bulid (so that I can still solo without a lot of downtime) and the armoury calls me a ‘hybrid’… /shrug… +350 spell damage and +500 healing makes up for any slack I may be suffering in those departments. :)

It was funny coming out of Ramparts the other day and someone threw on the damagemeter and I was 4th in our group with 8.5%, just above the warlock… although I don’t think damagemeters count pets… I still think that’s pretty good being the healer! :) Other members were druid tank, rogue, and elementalist shaman, all of whom had 23-27% dmg… I have newfound respect for elementalist shamans now!

Speccing for the ‘now’ as opposed to when you plan on being 60/70 is definitely the way to go. I would totally encourage any hunter to go more Beastmaster (with 11 points at least in MM for aimed shot) until higher level, then it all depends on playstyle. I would rather have a full on survival hunter that loves his character, and plays well, than a MM hunter that is just button mashing and not having fun.

With my priest I went predominantly shadow priest until 60, when I specced for holy so that I could be more effective in instances. The 50’s were interesting because everyone just saw ‘priest’ and needed a healer for their group (IE: strat/UBRS/BRD/etc) … and then I showed up in shadow form…. much to the disappointment to the tank. :) For lower dungeons like ST/ZF/etc, I was able to keep everyone alive with Vampiric Embrace and still do lots of damage, but when it came to the big bosses I had to convert out of shadow form and stick to the healing, which was pretty minor without much +healing gear, and my mana depleted quickly. Not to mention the warlock had to change his playstyle because he wasn’t getting fed HP throughout the fight… There’s something to be said about speccing that 23 points into Discipline, let me tell you. Now I hardly ever run out of mana, and downtime between fights is next to nonexistant, and casters really like the +70 spirit buff. People are always giving me a ‘GJ’ after a particular hairy fight because not only did I heal and keep everyone alive, but with Searing light from the holy tree, I was able to throw in the odd 7-800pt smite on the mob when I crit a heal, and with prayer of healing, I would usually crit at least 1-2 times a cast… free instant cast smite?? Yes Please!!! :) With the proper potion, and when I had more +spell crit gear, I was able to get my holy crits up to 20%…. always nice when you can land that 4000+ heal and follow up with an instant manaless nuke…. /sigh… and I thought crits were only for hunters! ;-)

Rizzo, level 60 hunter
Yaja, level 63 priest

March 18th, 2007 at 9:47 am
 2 

Even though I don’t sport a lvl 60 yet, I totally agree. Personally the marksman tree was just the better tree for my style of playing a hunter. Luckily I have never seen a guild ask for a BM spec, or a Survival spec to go on a raid, but I don’t hear much want for hunters either..

That being said, I would say that before you start “spec’ing” your toon, check the skills/abilities up to lvl 50. These will pretty much be what you are getting regardless of spec. Then check Thottbot for “talent” based skills. See what end result you might be interested in. Most trees I have bothered to look at have a ending “reason” for going that tree. If you see a end result you want go that way. Another hint for me was to not /ignore ppl in general chat doing the desperate crying LF … I look specifically at the classes I have and I try to tune them according to that if I can (so far, been ok). I dont’ plan on doing a butt-load of raiding, or even a modest crap-load.. But I would like to be in a few.. If I had it to do over again, I would probably go BM spec until mid 40’s then go MM. Mostly because of the easy fights I am preached to about for BM hunters in PvE. But I do love Aimed shot.. mm.. Trueshot Aura.. and the yummy goodness of my “Oh S%^&!!” button.. scattershot. I have a dranai hunter I am training up on another server and he is strictly survival spec, and I have dualed warriors at melee range with him at lvl and won. as usual.. I have rambled..

March 21st, 2007 at 7:07 am

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