Reposted from this post on my other blog, from July 31, 2007 – but still applicable!

Yesterday’s Forum Post of the Day on WoW Insider was BlizzCon etiquette tips. I was bored, so I wrote up a few to add to the list (the forum thread, sadly, degenerated pretty quickly into “omg dwafr girls r uggoz”):

  • Don’t attempt to bribe Blizzard employees with in-game cash. For some reason, it never works.
  • When announcing that you’ve found an extraordinary item, or that you would like to purchase one, remember to begin with “slash two”. Otherwise, you’ll just confuse the people around you.
  • Blizzcon has a clipping bug that prevents you from walking through other players as you can in the normal game. The staff ask that you not exploit this bug by blocking doorways, corridors, or other commonly-used thoroughfares.
  • It is considered rude to kill the Critters that you may see around and outside Blizzcon, and doing so may be grounds for a permanent ban.
  • Dueling is not permitted within Blizzcon. Although there are no mechanics that prevent it, doing so may be grounds for a permanent ban.
  • Although the people who sell food, drinks, equipment and goods at Blizzcon are technically vendors, they generally will not buy what you have in your backpack or in other containers. Also, you may discover that there are no vendors in Blizzcon who can repair damaged equipment. This is a known issue, and should not be reported to Blizzcon staff.
  • Like Shattrath City, Blizzcon is neutral territory. You will find that you are unable to flag for PVP. This is normal, and should not be reported to Blizzcon staff.
  • While mounts are convenient in Azeroth and Outlands, they are discouraged in Blizzcon. An issue with the clipping bug mentioned above causes mounts used in Blizzcon to deal damage to other players on impact, and staff may see this as an attempt to circumvent the rules against dueling and PVP combat. In addition, Blizzcon maintenance has requested that live mounts be restricted from entering entirely, due to certain debuffs that they impose on the carpeting.
  • Use spells such as Slow Fall and Levitate to go from one level of Blizzcon to another at your own risk, as players report that these spells have been unreliable at best in past Blizzcons.
  • No matter what anyone tells you, Nethaera and Drysc are not raid bosses. They do have loot tables, but accessing them is forbidden and will result in a permanent ban.
  • Although the ATM does offer convenient access to the bank, you are discouraged from attempting to fit items larger than an envelope through the Deposit slot.
  • Although there are gardens and stones immediately outside of Blizzcon, using them to improve gathering tradeskills is discouraged and may result in being banned.
  • It is likely that part of the gift bag given to Blizzcon attendees will be an in-game pet. It is expected that you will be excited about this, but this does not give you an excuse to display your “personal pet” to other players without their permission. If you do so in public, you should be aware that other players may tease you about your “pet” and your taste in bringing it out in public.
  • “Oh, sorry, clipping bug” is not an excuse. You know who you are.

Do you have any to add?

 

Better late than never! Here are my favorite posts from the WOWoblogosphere over the last week! (I think I am getting bad habits from Euripides!)

First, some departures: Saresa of Destructive Reach and Vonya of The Egotistical Priest are taking sabbaticals from blogging. Best of luck to you both!

Did I miss you? Is there someone I’m not reading that I should be? Let me know in the comments below!

 

Seriously, you’re going to hurt yourself.

I have three feeds from WOW Insider going: The Queue, The Daily Quest, and anything tagged “priest” (that last one can get really annoying when the authors/editors of, say, All The World’s A Stage decide to spam every possible tag they can on So You Want To Be A Herbalist). Today, in the Priest feed, the Forum Post of the Day came through. It was about Discipline priests in raids, and how a raid leader was singling out a Discipline priest because his healing on the meters was under par. Amanda’s final comment really rang true: “It’s not about being a star, or a prima dona [sic], raiding is about working together as a team to accomplish a common goal.”

This is going to come as news to a lot of raid leaders (go on, raise your hand if you are one), but really and truly, Ulduar is not Galaga. Galaga is about getting the highest possible score; that’s the whole point of the game. Raid leaders tend to treat raiding like it works the same way – they see the healing and DPS meters as high score charts, and penalize raiders who don’t get onto the charts. The problem with that is that unlike Galaga, World of Warcraft raiding actually has a very concrete win condition: did you defeat the boss? If you defeated the boss, the entire raid wins. If not, the entire raid fails.

If the raid isn’t failing – if you’re successfully downing the bosses you want to take down – then there’s no reason at all to single anyone out on the meters. You met the win condition! Clearly everyone is doing at least as well as they need to be, or else you wouldn’t be successful.

If the raid is failing, everybody needs to step up a little more. It’s really tempting to go through the high scores – sorry, the meters – and identify the people who aren’t scoring as high – sorry, doing as much damage or healing – and try to “fix” those people. (In the example in Amanda’s post, the RL asked the priest to go Holy to increase his HPS.) Unfortunately, that simply won’t solve the problem. Unless you’re being actively sabotaged or someone’s doing something incredibly dumb, fixing a single person isn’t going to make the raid go from not killing the boss to killing the boss. When a raid fails, nobody is exempt. If the raid isn’t doing enough DPS but the healing is okay, the healers can look at ways to keep the raid alive a little longer after the enrage timer hits, or to damage the boss between heals. If the raid is doing enough DPS but important players are dying, the DPS can work on staying out of the fire or taking the adds down a little faster. I don’t mean that the DPS is exempt from improving in the first scenario or the healers are exempt in the second; I mean that everybody shares the responsibility of a failed attempt.

(If you are being actively sabotaged or someone’s doing something incredibly dumb, the meters aren’t going to help you anyway.)

I’m not saying that meters are useless. The best – perhaps the only valid – use of meters is to check your own performance in the raid (and even then it’s not necessarily accurate, like the Discipline priest example above, which is why WOW Web Stats is handy), and to look at other raid members to see what you could be doing differently. Raid leaders, though, should be paying attention not at individual raiders – because I will guarantee that there isn’t a single player in the raid who can’t improve something – but at the statistics of the raid as a whole. It’s obvious, but damaging to the egos of the other raiders, that if you think a single person is holding you back enough that you can identify them as the cause of your wipes, it’s actually the whole rest of the raid that needs work.

 

I could go on for pages about my reasons for writing this blog (okay, I probably couldn’t, but that’s because I’m naturally terse), but really they all boil down to one overarching reason: I want to make your WOW experience better, and mine by extension.

I can do a lot of that here on Duct Tape. You get to benefit from my experiences and experiments, and they make me a better player as well. But lately I’ve been feeling like I can’t do enough here.

I’ve also been seeing a lot of my fellow WOW bloggers complaining about their hosting recently. Their blogs aren’t customizable enough; they don’t have space to host their images or media files; they want a different platform altogether.

So I’ve put together The Story Thus Far. The first part – the bit that’s up now – is a way for you to host your WOW blog, whether you’ve started it elsewhere and want to move it or you want to start a new one. The details are all on the main page, and as an added bonus, signing up before 11:59 PM this Monday, 5/11, gets you the first year free and a 50% discount for the rest of the life of your blog. There are no setup fees or hidden costs (although there is one feature I haven’t listed there yet, because I’m not sure how I’m going to work it yet).

The Story Thus Far will have a phased roll-out, though, like the Shattered Sun Offensive. This is merely the first stage. Keep an eye out for further community-oriented features; it’s important to me to help the WOW blogging community feel like a community instead of just a random assortment of players, and to help even players who aren’t WOW bloggers to be part of that community. I’ll keep posting here with updates about the next phase of TSTF, but in the meantime, if you’re interested in a WOW blog, or in new hosting for your existing blog, please head over and take a look.

 

I don’t know why Disqus is refusing to acknowledge these comments. I’m getting email notifications, but they’re not showing up on the blog.

On Math is Hard, Zusterke wrote:

I wasn’t aware in your previous posts that you had it miscalculated. Perhaps you valued haste higher because of it? Hmm. Still going to lurk on your blog :) I wanna know where you’re going with this.

Anyways, an interesting point: various sources of haste stack multiplicatively for your cast time but it doesn’t stop there. When checking your throughput you get:

new hps = (old_base_heal/old_base_time) (1 + haste1) (1+haste2)… (1+crit/2) etc..

So in terms of throughput, your sources of haste aren’t just multiplicative with eachother but with all factors that increase your throughput (including SP). As they are a product, the largest product can be created by balancing the stats (not just A > B but A/B = best ratio). And this balance is quite easy to work out! Since all your throughput stats gain equally from borrowed time & enlightment, you will obtain the same ratio whether you include them or not. You can work out the balance between haste, SP, crit etc without BT and Enl.

(Unless you hit the softcap)

Maths can be fun, no? :)

And on A Quick Update, he wrote:

So, in fact, it hastes 2 spells. Your PW:S and your next spell. Very nice :)

 

The other day, I was in a group for heroic Utgarde Keep with one non-guild member, a DPS warrior who’d put all 71 of his talent points into Arms. I noticed at the beginning of the run that he had some mismatched gear – pants with Spirit, mail shoulders, etc. – but I figured as long as he knew what he was doing, everything would be okay.

It wasn’t. We had enough DPS from other sources to carry him, but he was barely pulling 700 DPS. Midway through the run, after Prince Keleseth hadn’t dropped anything useful for him, he asked the party, “My friend said I should get PVP gear to make me better. What’s the best way to do that?”

I don’t really remember what the rest of the group said to him; it was along the lines of “no, get boss drops in PVE”. It was pretty clear that he didn’t know what boss drops to be looking for, though, and I got the impression that the response confused him. So I sent him a whisper: “You can look at Wowhead to find out what items are best for you. Here’s a link:” And I pasted in the URL of a Wowhead filter that contained warrior-friendly gear in Northrend. (I think this was the link I gave him.) “You should also take a look at WOWWiki to see the kinds of things warriors want on gear.”

He asked for a minute to go AFK, and we proceeded without him for a minute or two. When he got back, he ran back to the group and whispered me back. “Thanks a lot,” he said. “I never knew about those. I’m going to read them after we’re done.”

“No problem,” I replied. “You might also want to check out the talent calculator on Wowhead, and there are a couple blogs that are useful for warrior stuff.”

He thanked me again, we proceeded to take out the twins and Ingvar, and then he left the group. The next time I saw him, in Dalaran, he’d swapped out all of his warrior-unfriendly gear with warrior-statted heroic blues. I whispered him again. “It looks like you’re getting some better gear!”

“Yes, thank you! I didn’t even know what good warrior gear was. Wowhead helped a lot. Now I know what to look for.”



We have a problem, guys.

It’s certainly nothing life-shaking or insurmountable. We can work through it if we want to. But it does need to be addressed.

Here it is: our problem is that we think of players who don’t know what they’re doing as “bad”.

They’re not, really. They just don’t know what they’re doing. They aren’t playing consciously – they’re just picking up gear and taking talents that look like they ought to be handy or cool. They’re warriors taking a +spell power mace because it has higher DPS; they’re Restoration druids in +hit gear, because if their offensive spells miss, their healing spells might too. But this isn’t about badness. It’s just about inexperience.

See, if you’re reading this blog, I can make a couple assumptions about you, the foremost being that you’re interested in how Discipline priests work. That is, after all, mostly what this blog is about. You wouldn’t be here looking for [redacted because I don't want to show up in Google searches for those things]. You’re probably aware that I’m not the only WOW blog on the planet. You probably know that there are official forums for World of Warcraft. You might have a Twitter account where you discuss WOW.

Now here’s the important part: because of the spotlight fallacy, we assume that in general, people are like us. (It’s a very focused spotlight in this case.) We assume that Discipline priests read the Discipline priest blogs, and read the official forums, and use Wowhead, and read up on boss fights in WOWWiki, because that’s what we do. So when we see other players in gear that isn’t itemized for their class, who have talents that we wouldn’t have chosen, who don’t know how the boss fight works, we assume that they’re just Bad Players – that they haven’t assimilated all the stuff they’ve been reading, or that they’re consciously ignoring it.

Sure, that’s true in some cases, but I’m going to go out on a limb here and say that 95% of the World of Warcraft player base doesn’t visit the forums on a regular basis, and that probably 50% of active players don’t even know that there are official forums. They’ve never heard of WOWWiki or Wowhead. They see the tooltip on Spirit that says that it helps health regeneration, and figure that sounds pretty good. They aren’t bad. They just don’t know about the resources.

Here’s an open request: the next time you see a “bad player”, send them a whisper. Say “hey, I see you’re wearing thus-and-such” – or have this talent, or whatnot – “that I wouldn’t expect a warrior” – or whatever the player’s class may be – “to wear. Why’d you pick that piece of gear?” Establish a dialogue, rather than just writing the player off as bad. If it turns out they’re one of the vast number of players who don’t know about gear itemization, Wowhead, and the link, give them links; help them educate themselves. If they’re trying out something different, talk to them about it and maybe you’ll learn something. And if they say “shut up, mind your own business”…

Well, then they’re probably a bad player.



Did you notice the most important clause in the previous section? Go back and look. See if you can figure out what it’s going to have been. (I love the pluperfect.) I’ll wait.

*dramatic pause*

It’s “help them educate themselves“.

See, all the websites in the world aren’t going to do an uneducated player a lick of good if all the player does is follow the advice of those websites blindly. They’re going to be just as uneducated, but now they’re letting someone else tell them what to do instead of picking it up piecemeal based on tooltips. They’re in a worse situation than they were before, because now they’re going to rely on what you’ve shown them. What happens when the site you’ve shown them is down? What happens if the game changes but the page doesn’t (as seems to be the case with much of WOWWiki at the moment)? They’ll be back to groping at tooltips to help them figure out what to do next.

I’m sure you know the expression about giving a man a fish and teaching him to fish. I don’t need to repeat it. But the lesson applies nonetheless: help uneducated players educate themselves. Don’t just say “you need strength gear”, explain what Strength does for a warrior and compare it to other stats. Don’t just rattle off a Best In Slot list (you’ll notice I haven’t updated my Naxx lists for Ulduar yet); help them figure out why each piece of gear is desirable. Perhaps most important, let them make their own decisions about gear; guide them, but don’t define for them. The goal is to have players be playing consciously.

And yes, “I like the way it looks” is, at its heart, a conscious decision. Just so we’re clear.

 

There is a very simple explanation for why I haven’t been posting: I haven’t done a link roundup in two weeks, and I feel like I need to do that before I can post anything else here. Unfortunately, I also haven’t found the time to go through my RSS feeds and pull out my favorite posts! So I have a conundrum: don’t post until I get my act together, or give up on the link posts from the last two weeks and move forward. I’m sure you know how difficult a decision this is for someone like me. :)

Anyway, that’s where I’ve been.

 

(Nota bene: I’ve already written this post once. If I seem a little terse here, that’s why.)

I’ve been reading over the comments left on this blog, and it occurs to me that a lot of the disagreement I’m seeing might stem from a misconception about where I’m coming from. I see a lot of bloggers, forum posters, and WOW personalities adopting an attitude of “of course I’m right” or “of course Elitist Jerks/the Big Name Bloggers/the WOW devs are right”, and I’m doing my best to avoid that here. My goal is for Duct Tape to be a place where hypotheses are floated to see if the facts fit. I have no interest in treating what the Big Names say as though it’s holy writ; I want to try things out and see if they work. At the moment, my attention’s on Haste as a desirable Discipline Priest stat, and I do think it’s a valid course to pursue, but if it doesn’t work out, I’m not bound to it. I’ll just move on to the next hypothesis.

An important corollary to this is that the positions I take on this blog are going to change over time. That’s by design. It does nobody any good for me to insist on sticking with an idea after it’s been proven wrong. (But see above; “that’s not what thus-and-such says” or “that’s not the conventional wisdom” doesn’t count as proof!)

The bottom line is this: I’m here to experiment and figure things out. If you’re more interested in Being Right than in figuring out what right is, perhaps this isn’t the place for you.

 

It turns out that the first two days of 31 Days to Build a Better Blog are things I’ve already done (the WWSGD elevator pitch) or things I already have a habit of doing (my Linkathon list posts). Here, without further ado: my favorite posts from the WOW blogs I read from the last week, in Google Reader order:

Trivia: I’ve added three WOW blogs to my blogroll since I started writing this list.

If there’s a blog you think I should be reading (especially if it’s yours, and especially especially if we talk on Twitter!), let me know in the comments!

 

In no particular order, my favorite posts from the WOW blogosphere this week. But first, a special mention: my guildie, Dan Howell – otherwise known as BigRedKitty – is retiring from World of Warcraft and WOW blogging to spend more time with his family. Good luck and godspeed, Dan.

Also leaving the WOWblogosphere this week is Omen, from Omen Scourge. Omen, best wishes and good luck getting things back on track.

  1. Building a Better Beast-Master Pre-3.1 from Aspect of the Hare, by Pike
  2. All Dressed Up and Nowhere to Party from Destructive Reach, by Saresa
  3. And They Would All Go Down Together from Egotistical Priest, by Zasp (please be kind and don’t overload their bandwidth this month! ;)
  4. Melee Priest from Holy Discipline, by Anea
  5. The Value of WOW from Holy Dueg!, by Dueg (if you read one post from this list, make it this one)
  6. WOW Podcast List from The Hunting Lodge, by Brigwyn
  7. Milking the Silver Hand Economy from Less QQ, More PewPew, by Dan
  8. Well, At Least Someone Around Here Has Been Busy from Master’s Call, by Faulsey
  9. Achievement Guide: Lovin’ Squirrels and Killin’ Snakes from Mend Pet, by Brajana
  10. Twitter Musings from Pixelated Executioner, by Pix
  11. It’s A Hum-Drum Time from Rune Tap, by Lyliith (It’s okay to be getting tired of WOW, Lyl, I promise.)
  12. Naxxtastic: A Small Guild’s First Attempt from Sideshow and Syrana, by Syrana
  13. You’re Marked For Death… By Anyone Around! from Stabilized Effort Scope, by Rilgon
  14. Heroics killer in the making? from Tank Like A Girl, by Kadomi
  15. The science of relationships from Temerity Jane, by TJ
  16. Say Hi to No Stock UI! from World of Matticus, by Matt
  17. We Were Pretty Goddamn Stupid from World of Warcraft, Eh?, by Kelly

Anyone else I should be reading? Do I follow your Twitter but not know you have a blog? Leave a comment!