The Immovable Object  

Posted by Bloodgarde in



Ok, I am actually beginning to build a posting schedule for this column because it is really the main feature of the blog. I hope you all enjoy the other columns as I share my experiences through them, and I hope you can gain a bit of insight or a tip or two from them as well. That said, I am here to teach young paladins how to tank. So lets press on...


Today we are going to take a little stroll through our talent trees, and top it off with a look at the skills in our toolbox as tanks. Two things define us more then anything else as tanks. Our gear, and our talents. Those are the two things a good raid leader will look at when you apply to a pug or guild, they are the things other tanks will notice while standing around in Dalaran. So we talked about gear a little already. Lets take a quick overview of our talents...

[0/53/6 +12] Base Build

This is the very basic tanking setup. These are considered to be the “Must Have” talents to be called a Tankadin. This build leaves you with 12 points to use at your will. How you spend those 12 points should be determined by what you do.

A five man tank may want to pick up a few more control talents. Improved Hammer and Guardian’s Favor come to mind; as well as Benediction and 2/2 Spiritual Attunement for mana efficiency.

A Raid Main Tank may pick up Divinity for extra healing, and Seals of the Pure for a bit more threat.

An Off tank might want to go deeper into the ret tree and pick up Conviction and Crusade for extra snap aggro when picking up adds.

How these points are spent are totally up to you. Just keep in mind what you don’t have in your guild or group, and try to fill some of those wholes if you can. Personally I pick up Heart of the Crusader, because my guild does not normally have a ret paladin. It also allows me to pick up Pursuit of Justice for fights where run speed is a factor such as Anub’Rekhan. These two talents fill specific gaps in my guilds make-up. You may not need them.

Here are some of the popular Tankadin build (current to patch 3.1)

[5/59/7] - Resembles the TBC original tanking build.

[0/54/17] - High Threat / Snap Aggro Build

[0/55/16] - Mana Efficiency, Heal Friendly, 5 man build /w Stun

[0/54/17] - High Threat /w Pursuit (My Build)



Now on to our Toolbox! I am going to talk about our primary skill rotation first, then about some of the other abilities at our disposal.

The Tankadin works on what we call the 9696 rotation. The rotation has 5 primary skills broken up into two catogories.

The 9’s...
Consecration – An AoE centered on the paladin when cast; does holy damage to all enemies within its area every 2 seconds for 8 second. 8 Second cooldown.
Holy Shield – Increases shield block chance by 30% for 10 seconds or 8 charges. Returns holy damage upon block, 9 Second Cooldown.
Judgement – Comes in three types. Does holy damage based on the active seal, as well as refreshing its effect. 9 Second Cooldown (talented)
--Judgement of Wisdom – Returns mana to the caster when the caster does damage.
--Judgement of Light – Returns health to the caster when the caster does damage
--Judgement of Justice – Is a PvP ability (snares the target) with limited PvE applications.

The 6’s...
Shield of Righteousness – Does large amounts of holy damage on a 6 second cooldown.
Hammer of the Righteous – Does large amounts of holy damage to 3 targets (4 talented) on a 6 second cooldown.

So the 9696 rotation works like this... You pick a starting skill from the “9” group and cast it. Follow it by a skill from the “6” group. Then, you guessed it, pick another “9” followed by another “6.” Once you have the rotation running, it will look something like this (please keep in mind the global cooldown is 1.5 seconds)...

T 0.0 – Holy Shield (9)
T 1.5 – Shield of Righteousness (6)
T 3.0 – Consecration (9)
T 4.5 – Hammer of the Righteous (6)
T 6.0 – Judgement of “X” (9)
T 7.5 – Shield of Righteousness
T 9.0 – Holy Shield
T10.5 – Hammer of the Righteous
T12.0 – Consecration
T13.5 – Shield of Righteousness
T15.0 – Judgement of “X”
T16.5 – Hammer of the Righteous
T18.0 – This now begins to repeat from the beginning.

As you can see, the rotation runs 18 second before repeating. In that time you will use all of your 9 second cooldowns twice and all your 8 second cooldowns three times. This gives you the maximum amount of threat per second no matter what your talent build is, or how well geared you are.

I think that’s all I am going to throw at you for now. I have dropped quite a bit of information on you for one post, and it’s all important stuff. Check your talents. Make sure you at least have the core build. Memorize the skill rotation. Practice it. Your goal is to have no downtime between skills. I will see you here next time for our situational skills, and a few useful macros to go with them.

For the Light,
~Bloodgarde

The Unstoppable Force  

Posted by Bloodgarde in




I am really in love with Duel Spec. Frankly I wish I could Tri Spec. That said, I feel like super man. All I need is 5 seconds and a phone booth, and I can become a completely different person.

So I was in 25man Nax over the weekend. It was great. I was part time off tank, part time DPS depending on what was needed at the time. We did most of military, and all of plague. I really enjoyed myself. I was by no means topping the DPS meters, but on Heigan and Loatheb it felt really good to be productive instead of a well meaning offtank who cant really help much.

So how did I do? So/So. I was in with a pretty good group. I was pulling about 2.2K, but most everyone around me was pulling closer to or over 3. I was brought in though to tank. My DPSing was just a bonus. As a tank I felt I was really competitive with the other two tanks present.

I’m not sure how much more to say then that. I did end up breaking down and buying the [Runeblade of Demonstrable Power] off the Knights of the Ebon Blade. Its suiting me well for the moment. In another 3 or 4 days I should be able to replace it with the epic from the Argent Tournament.



Light be With You,
~Bloodgarde

The Immovable Object  

Posted by Bloodgarde in

I want to talk just a little about Gemming as a Tankadin, or any tank for that matter. Forgive me for changing from my planned “Talents and Skills” post. That is still coming sometime next week.

There are two overall types of tanks in WOW. The Main Tank, and the Off Tank. Now the rules I am about to lay out are not always true, and infact have many excptions. That disclaimer stated, let me describe the two, and how they relate to Gemming.

Main Tanks stack two things above all else; Avoidance/Mitigation and stamina. Before you tell me that is three things let me clarify. The Main tank tries to reduce the damage he takes by the maximum amount possible. This is done by having large sums of avoidance and by mitigating as much as possible through block and armor. Likewise they want to have as many hit points as possible in order to better survive the damage that comes through.

Off Tanks stack a bit of everything. These guys generally are picking up adds, running around protecting healers, all kinds of things. Off Tanks stack stamina, avoidance and mitigation as well, but they also try to maximize threat. They give up some survivability to do that, but it’s necessary for “snap agro.”

So what’s the difference in gemming... Well it comes down to min/maxing.

The main tank will have the best stamina gems on the market in every single socket. The only exception will be a defense or defense/stamina gem in order to keep defense cap.

Off tanks are going to try to match a few useful socket bonus’. They may have any combination of stam, strength, and defense in there gems.

Whats the difference? Well lets look at....

Bolstered Legplates!

Now I am currently (at the time of writing) wearing these. They have 1961 armor, 68 strength, 123 stamina, 81 defense rating, 45 hit rating, a red socket, and a 6 stamina socket bonus. (These drop off Cyanigosa in Heroic Violet Hold by the way).

So the stats we are concerned with...

1 Red Socket
Socket Bonus: +6 Stamina

The Main Tank sees 1 Socket. They put in 1 blue stamina gem to simply maximize their hit points. (Best in game is 24).

The Off Tank sees, 1 Red Socket, + 6 Stamina for matching. They put in a Stamina/Strength gem. This gems gets them 8 Strength, 12 Stamina, and 6 Stamina for the socket bonus. That’s 18 Stamina. While this does not maximize health, it will boost their threat output.

At the end of the day, all other things being equal, the main tank will take just a bit more damage, and the off tank will produce just a bit more threat. If you multiply this across 14 to 16 pieces of gear, some with 2 or more sockets, this difference begins to build. The end result can be a difference of 1500 – 2000 hit points, and 350 - 500 attack power.

Neither of these methods of gearing are wrong. Quite often a main tank will have a threat set, and an off tank will have a stamina set.

There is one more type of gemming that can be done. It is very very rare however. Gemming for Avoidance is unusual but not unheard of. There are times when a highly specialized avoidance set can make an encounter much easier. This is rare however because of the amount of rating needed to make 1% of avoidance. Do to stat budgets, 1 point of stamina, strength of defense is worth significantly more then 1 point of avoidance. This type of gear set should only be built if you already have a stamina and threat set and have encountered a fight where this is needed.

So that’s my take on gemming. There is no wrong way to go about it, however what you do, will help to determine what roll you are best suited for.

Light be with You
~Bloodgarde

The Unstoppable Force  

Posted by Bloodgarde in


So how about a little more about my adventure in the realm of DPS?

I replaced my tanking cloak (with this) and neck (with this) last night, and finished getting some basic enchants put on my items. I don’t want to pay for the big big budget stuff until I have an Epic I will keep for a while. In all though, I have one tanking ring left. I have DPS enchants on all my gear, and the only gem I am missing is my meta. Not to bad. I am now sitting at about 3000 attack power; I don’t know my other stats off the top of my head. I would guess they are mostly the same.

So last night I ventured into Heroic Utgarde Keep with a team from my guild. Our Bear tanked, we had a shaman healer, a BM hunter, and an affliction lock for DPS; as well as myself of course.

As soon as we walked in the door, I proceeded to rip agg off the bear on the very first pull and DIE painfully while our healer laughed at me. After they cut down the mobs, and got me back on my feet we proceeded to pull number two... where I did the exact same thing.

At this point I started thinking about what I was doing. As a tank, as soon as I make the pull I drop my AoE in order to make sure everything is collected. As DPS I found I was doing something like this....

1) Bear Pulls
2) Bear starts doing whatever it is bears do.
3) I run in and drop Consecration
4) I pop divine storm
5) Everything but the bear’s main target turns to me and rips me to shreds while the healer laughs and makes jokes about how fast I drop.

So I changed up my skill order. I made sure to check on the first kill target by asking on vent (sometimes we mark, sometimes we don’t), and I started to wait an extra 3 or 4 seconds before joining the melee. It went something like this...

1) Bear Pulls
2) Bear starts doing whatever it is bears do.
3) Bear continues doing whatever it is bears do.
4) I run in, and cast Judgement on the first kill target.
5) Cast Exorcism on the first kill target
6) Cast Crusader Strike on the first kill target
7) Consecrate
8) Divine Storm
9) Start playing "Wack-a-Mole" with my cooldowns
10) Own face

So this pattern worked pretty good. I worked the guilds somewhat undergeared offtank (aka The Bear) to the max, tried to keep one eye on omen and one on my cooldowns, and was generally more carefully with my AoEs. The instance proceeded pretty well for a while... Then something else happened...

Our Hunter... pulled agg. My tank reflexes kicked in immediately, and before I even thought about it I was pressing “1,” aka Hand of Reckoning. Well... the bear saw the wayward mob, saw it turn around and start coming back, and assumed the hunter had used feign death. Well needless to say, I quickly found myself taking my third dirt nap. This time however I did find it amusing.

The same exact thing happened one more time before we reached Ingvar. So for those keeping count, that’s 4 deaths to me for the run... all four basically self inflicted. The warlock also died once. No one was quite sure why, but these things happen. All in all not a bad run though.

So final outcome? Ingvar dropped the epic bow... “This is not the epic you’re looking for.... move along.” It got sharded. I put out a very respectable 1950 DPS for the instance coming in second to the hunter at nearly 2100. To be fair to our warlock, he can blow both of us out of the water, but we where killing things so fast he could never get all his DOTs up. Repair cost, 16g. I’m not complaining. 4 deaths in my Prot set would run me close to is not over 40 easy.

In all I was pretty happy; I went in hoping I would at least beat The Bear. I came out number two with what I consider to be a very respectable DPS for someone who has been ret for 3 days.

I’m looking forward to giving it another go tonight. Ingvar has a Belt and Legs that I want. I also installed all my glyphs last night... AFTER the run... and I should be getting my meta installed today, so I want to try those out as well.

So that’s all I have for now. For the Light
~Bloodgarde













Hail in the Camp  

Posted by Bloodgarde in

Ok this is my last post for today... Honest it is. I just want to explain a bit more about how I plan to run this blog.

First things first, it is very unlikely you will see another “4 post day.” You don’t want that much of me rambling, I don’t get any work done at... work... it just isn’t going to happen.

That said I started 3 different categories of posts today, and one Monday. Those will be staple categories. Look for 2 posts per week to each category. Sometimes there might be more, sometimes there might be less.

“Hail in the Camp” is effectively my version of “Letter from the Editor.” It’s just a general post with no specific bearing on anything.

“The Binding Light” will be my holy paladin column. Look for ramblings, guides and general information about healing there.

“The Immovable Object” will be my tanking column. As I am primarily a tank, expect a lot of deeper concepts, and game mechanic based posts here. Likewise I will be actively using the column as a teaching tool for upcoming Tankadins I know.

“The Unstoppable Force” is my adventure in the world of DPS. I have never played my paladin as DPS in the past, and find myself enjoying it. At some point I will be going back to my Prot/Holy setup, but I don’t see myself abandoning Ret anytime soon. WTB Tri-Spec, Will Pay 10000 gold.

As I go on and get into the swing of things, I will start adding more links and some art to the blog, but this will take time. Feel free to ask question in the comment section. I will try to answer them as I can.

I will be attempting to update this blog daily in one of those three areas. Some days may see two posts, some may see none. I will also create other categories for gear guides, FAQs, and other ramblings as needed. In general I hope you enjoy the blog. See you tomorrow.

For the Light
~Bloodgarde

The Binding Light  

Posted by Bloodgarde in

Playing a Holy Paladin can be as easy or as hard as you want to make it. Some people like to use addons like Healbot, or Grid to fill all there needs. While this is all well and good, I highly suggest learning to heal without these tools first. A day may come when these addons no longer function. Then where will you be? I personally wont be left in the dark.

So I wont lie. I use healbot. Its an amazingly useful tool, especially in the raid environment. That said; let me tell you how I learned to heal.

Healing 5 mans is an interesting juggling act for the paladin. Its simple in raids. The raid leader will point you at the main tank, and say go to it. In 5 mans however, you not only have to keep the main tank up, but you have to keep the group up as well. Beacon of Light, our bottom tier talent, makes this easier then it use to be. Cast beacon on the tank, heal the group. Allow me to suggest a few practices that will make your life easier though.

Creat Focus Macros for Flash of Light, Holy Light, and Beacon of Light; make additional macros for anything else you think may need this functionality.

Beacon of Light Macro
/cast [target=focus] Beacon of Light
/sw 59
/script Stopwatch_Play()

This macro will case Beacon of Light on you focus, and start an on screen countdown timer to tell you how long before you need to recast it.

Other Spells
/cast [target=focus]

This macro simply cast spells on your focus.

Now the above two macros can be written such that holding a modifier key (ctrl, alt, shift) will cast on your focus, and no modifier will cast on your target. If you want that option though, you will have to find someone smarter then me.

So set up your UI to show two bars, one above the other. Put all your “Focus” macros on one, and all your other skills on the other. Now when you go into an instance, remember to /focus the tank. Once that is done you are ready to heal. Anytime the tank needs healing hit that focus macro. It doesn’t matter who or what you currently have targeted, the heal will go to the tank. While a bit complicated to set up, this is about as close to healbot you can get with the base UI, and a standard mouse and keyboard.

I personally used this method of healing through most of Burning Crusade. It was only in the final months that I switched to healbot and believe it or not, I do look back.

Healing is about the only thing I don’t use a ton of keybinds for. Because of this it is a bit alien to me. I Tank and DPS with a mouse a finger board with a Thumb D-Pad. I heal with nothing but the mouse. I don’t even need the keyboard. It just feels strange. In another post I will talk about how to set up the n52Te and other Similar Devices for healing.

I challenge you though. Run with your guild, turn healbot off, and try healing the old fashion way. Youll be a better healer for it.

Light be With You
~Bloodgarde

The Immovable Object  

Posted by Bloodgarde in

So the whole point of this blog is to help up and coming paladins learn the ropes. While I will do the best I can with Holy and Ret, Tanking is my specialty and I will probably spend a lot of time on the subject.

So where to start? Paladin tanking has come such a long way since I started playing. Back in that day being speced anything other then Holy would be met with ridicule. WoW first expansion, The Burning Crusade, changed all that. Paladins became viable tanks, ok (good at higher gear levels) PvE DPS, and continued their tradition of strong healing. It was amazing to watch the paladin evolve over the course of the expansion; suddenly we where in demand, it felt good.

Then Wrath came along. WOW. The class got a complete overhaul to several of its main mechanics. Ret came into its own as a DPS spec, and Prot truly began to feel comfortable. The boots finally fit so-to-speak. So lets take a look at the basics of paladin tanking in the current game world...

Buffs...
There are 4 things you should ALWAYS have on your buff bar as a Tankadin.

(Greater) Blessing of Sanctuary
I use greater because my other buffs all last 30 minutes. It is therefore convenient to use my greater blessing and have everything go out at once. Why do we use this blessing? The mana return in vital to keeping us running. If you are solo, a paladin without mana is a dead paladin. Likewise, in a group without mana you generate zero threat, this can, and probably will, cause a wipe.

Righteous Fury
This is your second most important buff. As a tank your job is to hold the attention of MOBs. This is done by generating more threat then anyone else in the group. Righteous Fury increases your threat from holy damage by 90%. As a Tankadin, almost everything we do causes holy damage in some way.

Your Aura
Your Aura is important. You should always have one up. Which one will depend on your situation. If you find yourself having trouble holding threat, use Retribution Aura. If you are in a magic heavy fight, use the appropriate spell resistance aura. I generally default to Devotion aura if nothing else fits.

Your Seal
This like your aura is somewhat dependant on what you are doing. When tanking I use Seal of Vengeance (Corruption) almost exclusively. The only exception is that in a fight where I am significantly mana starved, I will switch to seal of wisdom after establishing threat. This is a common problem for me in non-heroics as I out gear them.

So these buffs should never go down. They all last 30 minutes, and your aura should never go down. Personally I buff as soon as I log on, and keep myself buffed until I log off. It doesn’t matter what I do in-between.

The thing I see new paladins struggle with the most, and admittedly I had a problem with myself is keeping Righteous Fury up. I can not stress enough how important this is. Without Righteous Fury, you are over armored underperforming DPS. Teach yourself early to rebuff it and rebuff it often. Even when soloing, train yourself to keep this buff up.


Gear Stats...

I will at some point, check/update my starting gear list, and post it here. For now however, let me just run down the stats your looking for...

The Good...
Defense Rating – Cap is 540 Skill. Do NOT confuse Skill with Rating.
Stamina – Once you reach Defense Cap, stack stamina for hit points.
Strength – General comes with Stamina on plate. 2 Strength = 4 Attack Power (Threat) and 1 Block Value (Avoidance/Threat)
Avoidance (Shield Block Rating, Dodge Rating, Parry Rating) – Try to stack Dodge/Parry somewhat evenly. Take Block wherever you find it.
Expertise – Good stat, low on the totem pole. Stack it where you can get it, but not at the expense of anything above.
Block Value – Nice Stat, Stack it if you can. Keep in mind 2 Strength = 1 Block Value

The OK...
Hit – Not supper important, 3-5% is good, more then 8% is wasted.
Agility – OK state, Rare on Plate.

The Bad...
Haste/Crit – Generally come on DPS plate. If you get them fine, don’t go out of your way to stack them.
Intellect – If you get some that’s great, don’t go out of your way to find it. You will be relying on your mana regen to keep going, not your mana pool.
Attack Power – Typically a DPS stat, you should get all you need from Strength. Don’t go out of your way for this.

The Ugly...
Spell Power – Avoid this stat. If a piece of plate has spell power, give it to a holy paladin.
Sprit – Avoid this stat. It does NOTHING for you.
Armor Pen – Avoid this stat. This is a waste of item budget. DPS warriors and PvP rogues are about the only ones that like this stuff.

In short,
Defense (to 540 Skill) > Stamina > Strength > Avoidance > Expertise ~ Block Value

Anything beyond that is Icing. If you find Hit with 2 or 3 of the above stats, take it, you can use a little. If you only find 2 of that list on a piece of gear (Especially Stamina + Strength only) look real close, its probably DPS plate.


So that’s the down and dirty summery. Next time we will look at talents and skills to find out just what is in the Tankadins toolkit. After that we will do a basic sum up and move on to applying all this information to the... “real” world.

For the Light
~Bloodgarde

The Unstoppable Force  

Posted by Bloodgarde in

So, Patch 3.1 hit this week, the servers are not sure wither to be broken or not, and we have new content to explore. I would give you a complete review of the changes, however that has been covered by everyone else in the blog-o-sphere.

So I did something that surprised my guild this week. As soon as my server came up, I made my way to Ironforge to duel-spec Ret and Prot.

Now I have a full Prot set already. I have tanked in both Nax 10 and 25 thought I have never completed either. I have tanked OS 10 and 25 and have kills in both. In my tanking kit I have just shy of 30k health 30k armor, defense cap. I’m not the best geared tank on the server, but I hold my own just fine.

Likewise I have a full set of Holy Gear. I’m sitting at about 1600SP and 35% crit with no enchants. The set isn’t quite as nice as my Prot gear, but it more then gets the job done. I have a few more epics to pick up, and plan to start working on getting it enchanted in the near future.

So when 3.1 hit what did my Ret set look like? Well... does the Helm of the headless horsemen count as a set? Well then I didn’t have one. As I said in my introduction post, I have no experience with Ret. This resulted in surprise for several of my guild members when I picked it up as my offspec.

Now I don’t want to give anyone the idea that I have converted. I will be offspecing Holy at some point down the road. This however gave me a prime opportunity to experiment in depth without giving up my ability to be the on call main tank for my guild.

So I set up a probably poor inferior talent build and off I went. My level 75 warrior had a full set of savage saronite banked that he not so happily donated to the cause. He was also able to toss in a level 72 blue 2H Axe without to much trouble. Of course upon receiving the axe my paladin said “What am I suppose to do with this?” and headed off to begin leveling the new weapon.

Last night I visited all my favorite quartermasters. I was able to collect a epic chest from the Argent Crusade, as well as epic leather boots. The Sons of Hodir where kind enough to provide me with a nice rare belt and shoulder upgrade as well as a glyph for said shoulders. The Knights of the Ebon Blade let me purchases a nice head glyph. I was also eyeing a nice 2H sword there, but decided to hold off on that for now. Finally the Wyrmrest Accord had nice epic pants for sale when I dropped by. I quickly snatched these up.

My warrior today was able to craft me an Epic helm and a rare bracer upgrade. Finally using jewelcrafting, I pulled together 2 nice trinkets and a ring. For now I am going to continue using my old tanking gloves. They are better then anything I can buy or make at the moment and I have a cloak, a neck and a ring I will be replacing in the near future with crafted epics and rares. I am also lucky enough to have an enchanter in my guild that is supplying me with all my attack power and crit needs.

So as of this posting I am sitting at 21.5% crit, 5.5% hit, 4.5% haste, and 3300 attack power self buffed. Rearmed, I headed off to the target dummies in Ironforge. I quickly found myself putting out somewhere in the 1400 DPS range. Kind of low, but respectable considering I had done all this in two days. I also believe my addon is lying to me. Later, without any changes in rotation, gear or talents, I was killing fire dudes behind the Sons of Hodir area (for epic cloak mats) in about 5 global cooldowns. That’s about 12000 hit points in 7.5 seconds putting me closer to 1600 DPS.

I am really looking forward to seeing my performance after my last four gear upgrades. O yes, my weapon. I will be going after the 2H Sword from the Argent Tournament. Im about 7 days away currently (I think), it might be 9.

So yes, in close, I will keep you apprised as I adventure into the realm of Ret. It should be an interesting adventure.

May the Light Bless You,
~Bloodgarde

P.S. I will not be posting my starting gear list. It is heavily reliant on Jewelcrafting and Rep, and isn’t practical for a "new" 80.

Hail in the Camp  

Posted by Bloodgarde in

Hail in the Camp,

Ladies and Gentlemen, allow me to introduce myself. My name is Bloodgarde, Paladin and Main Tank of the Late Knights of Quel’dorei (US). I have been challenged by several people of late to write a “guide to playing a paladin.” 30 some pages later, I give up. My idea of a paladin guide is somewhere in the 200-250 page range. There is just so much experience I have to share.

I was discussing this with a hunter friend of mine. She was telling me about the blog she recently started over at TheSpikedCollar.net. After a few days thought I decided that a blog may be the perfect way for me to put the information I have learned out there. So here I am. We will see what comes of this.

What are my qualifications you ask? I have played a Paladin for nearly 4 years. I leveled in original wow as a Tankadin back when Tankadins weren’t cool. I played both as a main tank, and main healer in Burning Crusade. During that time I started my own guild and began to grow it with intelligent and capable players. I successfully lead this guild into Karazhan toward the end of Burning Crusade.

In Wrath I once again find myself tanking, and at this point in time, am looking forward to duel specing as a healer. I will admit as of now, I have little experience with Ret. I will however be playing with the spec, and learning its ways so that I may speak with some knowledge about it here.

Also in WOW I have leveled a mage and am approaching 80 on him, a warrior (level 75), a hunter who is currently still level 70, and I have begun leveling a Druid.

I have a long gaming history that I won’t go into here. I the real world, I am a cartographer working in the oil and gas industry. Please read “I am a peon, I have no control over anything.”

So I look forward to writing my experience in this blog, and hope that indeed, someone finds it helpful. Look for my first real post soon.

May the Light be with You,
~Bloodgarde