WOW The Care and Feeding of Warriors: Cataclysm tanking, part 22011-3-26 23:19:50 |
![]() Last week we talked about tanking etiquette and how you can deal with the heightened stress of tanking an instance without convincing your run that your brother is actor Emilio Estevez. This week, we're going to talk about how you, as a new or returning warrior, can learn how to tank. I've been playing warriors for a long time now. Right now, I have three 85 warriors that I'm working on, for DPS, tanking, and PvP. This means to some degree I'm in a constant state of relearning the class. In addition, I'm leveling a druid, DK, and paladin for tanking purposes as well, because I think it does help you as a warrior tank to see how other classes tank. (So far, my perspective is that paladins and DKs are brokenly good and druids need a little work. I don't pretend this is unbiased.) The first and best advice I can give someone who wants to learn to tank is, go out and tank things. While this is akin to the old teaching people to swim via throwing them in deep water approach to swimming, it has several advantages. Read Cataclysm tanking, part 1. Don't drown
![]() Okay, this is all fine and dandy, but where do we go to pick these things up, especially now? There are quite a few options, be you a neophyte warrior just leveling up or a long-time DPS warrior trying out tanking for the first time. One place to start off tanking is Alterac Valley. Yes, Alterac Valley. Why do I suggest tanking in AV? Well, because AV has plenty of opportunity to do so for a battleground without the pressure of having to be the focus of the group the way a dungeon or raid can. With the ability to queue for AV starting at level 45, you can get started fairly early and work on the starting basics on the Captains (Stonehearth and Galvanger) and work up to tanking Warmasters and the Generals. I don't consider AV to be real tanking, mind you -- but if you've never tanked, it's a fairly painless way to stick your toe into it. Finding a dungeon has never been easier Once you're fairly comfortable with the idea of tanking, we'd be fools to avoid using the dungeon finder. Frankly, it's never been easier to level as a tank, with the LFD tool available from level 15 on and with talent specializations available at level 10 that make a low-level warrior feel more like a tank than was the case before Cataclysm. Even if you've been playing a warrior since launch and have never tanked, or tanked regularly but took time off after Wrath and are just now getting back into the game, the LFD tool can definitely help you ease into the tanking role -- keeping in mind all those points we made last week, of course. This isn't to say you must start off pugging. If you have access to a group of friends (be they guildies, RL friends, in-game friends from various sources, etc., etc.), there's no reason not to make use of them to help acclimate yourself to tanking. Frankly, the benefit of a run with people you know is they're usually willing to be patient with you. Furthermore, if you have a friend who tanks a lot on one character or another and you know said friend is a good player, ask him or her to come along in a DPS/healing capacity and give you pointers. (Note to DPSers who have tanks: This doesn't mean you should be second guessing the heck out of the poor tank. Be a resource if/when you're asked.) Do not fear the PuG However, don't be afraid of PuGs. They're not always going to be awesome experiences, true, but if you're receptive, you can learn a lot from them. Even an awful group that wipes constantly because they won't listen, aren't geared enough, or try to pull while you're still tanking the last pull can be viewed as a learning experience. Always take the time to analyze your own performance after a wipe, even if it wasn't your fault. Could you have reacted faster once things went pear-shaped? Should you have been saving Shockwave for those adds? Would a well-timed Heroic Leap have saved your healer? Often, tanking isn't about who made the mistake so much as it's about you and the group fixing it. ![]() Refusing to die is a viable strategy Finally, I'm going to suggest general PvPing in prot spec in other battlegrounds besides AV. Why? Well, it won't teach you squat about holding aggro, no. But that's what runs with friends and PuGs and so on are for. Battlegrounds PvP is more about teaching yourself to use all of your toolkit to stay alive as long as possible, paying attention to as many things as you can. In PvP, people are trying to kill you, and nothing teaches you exactly how to use your defensive and survivability cooldowns quite like someone trying to make you dead. A few weeks of PvP will really help you with figuring out how to get used to situational but awesome abilities like Intervene and Spell Reflect, too. And prot warriors can be awesome for flag defense or carrying, so BGs like WSG and Twin Peaks are excellent places to hone your skills. It's not just about learning to use your cooldowns proactively, although that's a big part of it; it's also about learning to scan the battlefield. Developing that sense of PvP paranoia can significantly help you in PvE content, since a brain trained to scan for danger constantly is far more likely to notice stuff on the floor you shouldn't stand in or a mob peeling. |
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