Forum Settings
       
Reply To Thread

Warrior class Q&AFollow

#1 Jul 16 2009 at 1:51 PM Rating: Good
*
60 posts
Source: http://forums.worldofwarcraft.com/thread.html?topicId=18358914172&sid=1


Quote:
Today we continue our class Q&A series with the development team, in which we're taking a look at each class and answering some of the top questions brought forward by their communities. Next up, we explore the most asked questions from the warrior class and find out more about the design philosophy and expectations for the class, as well as what may lie in store for it in the future.

Warrior Q&A with the Voice of the Class Design Team, Ghostcrawler

Community Team: We’d like to start things off by asking a question that players often ask in regard to the very purpose of each class. In this case, we’re looking specifically at warriors, which have been stalwart base for comparisons since the start of World of Warcraft.

Q: Where do warriors fit into the larger scope of things currently and where do you see them going from this point forward?

A: Historically, warriors have always been one of the most dominant classes in World of Warcraft. In Molten Core and for raids afterwards, warriors were THE tank, no question. DPS warriors could also top the damage meters, and were a very potent PvP force. We think we allowed the warrior class to overshadow some other classes, which is probably to be expected given the iconic nature of the plate-wearing fighter in RPGs that long preceded World of Warcraft. We think they are in a fairer place now, in that there is room on the stage for other classes, yet they are still a very powerful and popular class to play. The warrior class has been a very tricky one to balance, largely due to the way rage converts into damage (which converts into rage, which converts into damage...), and we haven’t completely nailed that design just yet.

One of the things we want to do in the future is take a hard look at the Arms and Fury trees. There are several talents which just haven’t weathered the course of time well and pale in comparison to some of the newer Wrath of the Lich King talents. We’re happiest with the Protection tree -- we made a conscious effort to pare down that tree and remove a lot of mandatory talents in order to give the warrior more flexibility to take some more fun or utility-oriented talents. We need to make the same pass on the dps side of things. The reason we haven’t done so yet is that warrior dps is in a pretty good place and we don’t want to have to nerf the class across the board just to make some talents a little sexier. We will eventually do this though. We also need to make some decisions about the difference between Arms and Fury. Traditionally, Arms was the PvP tree and Fury was the PvE tree. We understand some players prefer that model, but we don’t like the way it cuts off such a big chunk of the class from players who might not have much interest in the PvP or PvE parts of the game. However, we would like to reinforce a little more the kits of Arms and Fury. Everyone (I hope) gets the difference between Frost and Fire mages. Arms is supposed to be about weapons and martial training and feel “soldierly.” Fury is supposed to be about screaming barbarians in woad. You get a sense of that, but it could be stronger. With the death knight, we allowed all three trees to more or less be able to tank. There is a desire among some players and designers to see Arms tank with a two-hander while Prot tanks with a shield. We’re still not sure that’s the direction we’ll go -- it’s a ton of re-design and will never work for say the druid or paladin classes.

Q: What is it that makes them unique compared to all other classes?

A: The big ones are stances and rage. Other than warriors, only bear druids use the rage mechanic, and that is pretty much just because that form is intended to mimic warriors. Rage is an unusual resource because it is infinite over the course of minutes, but can be very limiting over the course of seconds. While the basic mechanic of rage is interesting, it has caused us lots of balance problems over the course of World of Warcraft -- sometimes in the favor of the warrior and sometimes not. It’s probably time to give the mechanic another look.

Stances are intended to be a major battlefield decision for warriors, though we realize it doesn’t always pan out this way. You have access to different abilities in different stances, but pay a rage cost as well as sacrificing the potential to use other abilities. More on this below.

Warriors also have some unusual mechanics like say their ability to move quickly around a battlefield, to survive massive physical damage through plate armor and Defensive Stance, and game-changing abilities like Spell Reflect.

Community Team: Warriors have quite a few abilities that are contingent on certain circumstances like Overpower and Intervene.

Q: What is the reasoning behind this and do we have any plans to change that type of gameplay?

A: We like situational abilities. When specs don’t have situational abilities, it’s easy to fall into a very fixed rotation. We call this the metronome. Push button 1, 2, 3 on your keyboard over and over until the bad guy drops loot. We have made more of an effort in all the classes to have certain moments that require players to pay attention a little more and then reward them when they both cause those situations to happen and then execute on them.

Q: What would be the impact of changing those class mechanics?

A: I think if anything, abilities like this need to be more prominent. You should be less effective at your job if you ignore them, and ideally you’d also be less effective if you just macro’d them in. We like macros (obviously, or we wouldn’t have them in the game), but we like for them to simplify chains of things that you have to do often without making decisions in between point A and B. We don’t like it when playing your class becomes how clever your macro can be to the point at which you are pushing one button to play your class. That’s not playing an RPG -- that’s programming a robot.

Community Team: Stances have long been a debated aspect of warriors’ gameplay from the pluses and minuses each one offers to the restrictions they apply on what abilities are available for use.

Q: What is the overall purpose of stances and how are stances intended to be used?

A: The purpose of stances is for warriors to have to make decisions in combat. How badly do I want to Intercept now? Should I pay the cost of Spell Reflect? Ideally, we want warriors to switch stances in combat -- not every few seconds, but a few times over the course of a battle. Now we realize it’s going to be harder to enforce this in raid fights unless you have a battle with a lot of movement or other unusual circumstances.

We get a fair number of suggestions from players trying to basically slip the stance concept out of the warrior class: make it not take rage, or let them do more abilities per stance so they don’t need to switch stances so often. That’s not really what the warrior is all about though. You should care what stance you’re in and it should be a decision to change stance. Note that if you pay too high a price to change stances, that counts as there not being a decision though.

Q: Has there been any thought on moving away from restricting abilities based on the stance a player is in?

A: No. The design intent of warrior stances is that you change your toolbar when you go from one stance to another and that that decision isn’t a trivial one. Now, the third part aside from the rage cost and ability limitations is the penalties (such as 5% damage taken in Berserker). We cut those in half recently, and we’d eventually like to get rid of them altogether. We just don’t want to see Arms warriors in PvP in Defensive Stance 100% of the time. We have seen DKs stick with Frost Presence in PvP despite losing 15% damage, so I don’t think you can just argue “Oh, no warrior would EVER do that.”

Community Team: There has recently been a growing number of concerns with warrior damage, as a whole.

Q: What are our thoughts on the overall damage for warriors in each of the three specs?

A: Warrior damage was too high in Naxxramas and then a little low early in Ulduar. We think it’s in a pretty good place now and warriors will get a small damage buff in 3.2. Part of the concern here is we used to exempt warriors from the design philosophy that pure dps classes should do more damage than hybrid dps classes. We try to no longer play favorites here. Warrior damage should look like that of Feral druids, Enhancement shamans, Retribution paladins, and death knights. If their damage isn’t at that level, then it’s possible our numbers need some tweaking. However don’t always assume that you can’t possibly improve your gear or your button mashing either. =) Also remember that some fights just favor one class or spec over another. We’re totally cool with that, so long as it isn’t always the same exact class or spec that gets to shine.

Community Team: Warrior shouts have added some unique utility to the class in the past, but now they tend to be used very sparingly.

Q: What is the reasoning behind their short duration and do we have plans to improve the duration similar to the buffs other classes already provide?

A: The shouts are supposed to be buttons that warriors push in combat. They aren’t intended to be pre-fight buffs like Arcane Intellect or Prayer of Fortitude. We had a discussion about this recently and decided with glyphs and talents that the duration isn’t a problem. If you lack Booming Voice and the minor Battle Shout glyph, it might be more annoying.

Q: Demoralizing shout tends to have a very minimal impact in most situations, are there plans to improve this ability?

A: I think by “most situations” you must mean “PvP.” Demo Shout has a massive benefit against raid bosses. It’s probably 20% less damage from a typical boss and literally like 50% against say Thorim’s Unbalancing Strike. However, removing 400 attack power from a Feral druid with 9000 attack power, or a Shadow priest who doesn’t care about attack power at all is of much more limited use. Monsters and players use pretty different combat formulae (which is one of the weird things about the old design of say Vindication). We would like Demo Shout to be more useful in PvP, at least against characters who rely on attack power.

Community Team: The rage mechanic as a whole is very unique, but sometimes leads to situations where players aren’t able to perform due to lack of resources. A prime example of this is when a tanking warrior’s gear is much higher than the content they are at, by taking less damage they get less rage which results in less threat and therefore cannot perform at a higher level.

Q: Are there any considerations in store for improving this mechanic and allowing more rage generation in these situations?

A: Yes. In 3.2 we changed Shield Specialization to provide a little rage on a dodge, parry, or block. This will help in say the 5-player dungeons or in the first few seconds of a raid boss fight. It does not solve the problem of the Prot warrior who is not being targeted (because they are there to pick up adds later in the fight or something). We want to solve that problem by letting Prot warriors generate more rage through doing damage. It could be in the future that we shift most of rage generation to damage done and have little or none in damage taken (and we would have to change a lot of other mechanics to make this work obviously).

Now, long-term we need a better solution to rage generation. Tying it to damage done is logical in the theoretical world of game design, but has problems in reality. When your gear sucks, you have rage problems. When you have great gear, you are no longer limited by rage. That’s just not a great model, and one of the reasons warriors are overly gear dependent.

Q: Where do we feel warriors fit into the current raid environment and where do we see them progressing in the future?

A: Obviously warriors were the traditional tanks and pretty much the only tank in much of World of Warcraft’s history. Warriors now share tanking responsibilities with three other classes, which can feel psychologically like a nerf. In Ulduar, we think warrior tank balance is about where it should be -- death knights were a little ahead, paladins were a little behind, and druids were about even with warriors. We are making a few Prot changes to 3.2 to help in some of the areas where they fall short, such as damage done. Death knights are getting a nerf, paladins are getting a buff, and druids might get a nerf or stay as-is. There are plenty of guilds progressing through hard modes with warrior MTs on almost every fight, and we don’t see that changing in the Crusader’s Coliseum.

We’re happy with warrior dps in Ulduar. Whether you go Fury or Arms probably depends on whether you need Trauma or Rampage, and we know warriors in good guilds who flip between both specs. There is some evidence that Fury may overtake Arms dps once you get really good weapons. Dual-wield yet again shows its propensity to scale very well. Warriors will get a slight dps buff through Armored to the Teeth.

Community Team: Sticking with raiding content for a moment. Many tanking Warriors have felt the there is little value in both Strength and Block Value attributes.

Q: We have expressed an interest in improving Block Value for tanking warriors in the past; do we have any definite plans to update this?

A: Shield Block Value just isn’t a strong mitigation stat these days. However, the amount it would need to be increased is enormous in order to make a difference vs. bosses that can hit for 40K. The problem with improving shield Block Value by so much is that Prot warriors would be nigh invulnerable -- they literally might take no damage -- against large groups of adds, in easier content where opponents don’t hit that hard, and in PvP. The real problem is that the amount blocked doesn’t scale with the amount of the swing. We think block needs to be a percentage of damage blocked in order for the stat to do what we want. But the trade-off would mean that warriors (and paladins) couldn’t block every incoming hit, especially from large groups. Avoidance might also need to come down across the board, and many talents and abilities would need to be redesigned. This is a major change that isn’t the kind of thing we can crowbar into 3.2 with a clean conscience. It is almost certainly the future for the block stat.

Q: With strength on tanking gear currently providing a very minimal benefit and still using up a lot of stats on items, do we have plans to improve how this stat works for tanks?

A: Strength is good for dps and threat. It’s not a super mitigation stat (through block) but we also don’t know that it needs to be. We have made some big improvements to Prot warrior dps in Lich King, but too many players still view the primary role of the tank to stack avoidance and mitigation and then complain when their threat is low because they avoided all dps stats. Now, we do think the game of survival is more fun than the game of the threat management, but we also need to get players out of the mindset that it’s okay for tanks to ignore dps stats and just do trivial damage. They don’t need to top the charts, but their damage should be a meaningful component of damage done. We’re willing to change the way the game works to accomplish this goal.

Community Team: Let’s jump over to the topic of player-versus-player interaction. Discussions on the survivability of warriors in PvP have been ongoing.

Q: Do we have any plans to make warriors less reliant on healers in PvP conflicts?

A: We have taken small steps with Enraged Regeneration and increasing the healing on Bloodthirst. We don’t want the warrior to be great at healing as say a Shadow priest or death knight. On the other hand, we want healing to be a major part of the PvP experience. We’re okay with the occasional all-dps Arena team, but they need to be rare or a major chunk of the game just gets marginalized.

Not related to PvP, we do think warriors have too much downtime when leveling. Healing may not be the solution to that, but we think it needs a solution.

Q: With strength being the stat that provides the most benefit in dps scenarios, do we have plans to implement PvP gear like cloaks and rings that have strength instead of attack power?

A: Doing that just means the item isn’t of any interest to say leather or mail wearers, which means we have to create twice as many kinds of rings. The problem is that some classes value Strength and some value Attack Power. Things would work better if some valued Strength and some valued Agility, and Attack Power was a useful secondary stat to both. This has the added benefit of solving the whole problem where leather and mail look attractive to warriors. If leather had Agility on it and plate had Strength on it, then it’s pretty clear who is getting what item. Strength for rogues and Agility for warriors wouldn’t be junk stats, but they wouldn’t be as attractive as the other stat. Again, this is a big change. We wouldn’t just gut rogue dps by stripping Attack Power off all of their gear.



I'm really unimpressed, but then again this is blizzard so I didn't expect a hell of a lot

Edit- Spelling is hard when you're still half asleep

Edited, Jul 16th 2009 5:53pm by Imtar
#2 Jul 16 2009 at 5:09 PM Rating: Decent
That Q&A was...surprisingly disappointing, especially as a Warrior. I might have to just extend my lack of WoW playing into the indefinite category here soon.
#3 Jul 16 2009 at 5:30 PM Rating: Good
****
8,779 posts
yeah, unimpressive is a good word for it. they basically just reinforced how fury (and warrior in general) is going to be balanced around BiS gear. the only potential positive is how they might revamp the rage mechanic, but that could go both ways, for good or ill.

ill be honest, i was really hoping for a "we f*cked up with titans grip, we're going to make amends for that somehow" in there somewhere, but eh, deep down inside i knew it would never be.
#4 Jul 17 2009 at 6:13 AM Rating: Decent
I'll agree with above. Q&A sounded like when someone has to say something, but has nothing to say.
#5 Jul 18 2009 at 4:30 AM Rating: Good
****
8,779 posts
heres a bit of hilarity:

http://forums.worldofwarcraft.com/thread.html?topicId=18358914172&sid=1&pageNo=25

a blizzard CM responding to a paladins comment on how the ret rotation can be done "by a dancing cat".

thats right, a blizzard CM responds in the warrior Q&A thread to a paladin about a paladin issue. made me laugh.

Edited, Jul 18th 2009 5:53am by Quor
#6 Jul 18 2009 at 7:50 AM Rating: Default
Quote:
Demo Shout has a massive benefit against raid bosses. It’s probably 20% less damage from a typical boss and literally like 50% against say Thorim’s Unbalancing Strike. However, removing 400 attack power from a Feral druid with 9000 attack power...

How is it possible for a pathetic 400 AP to equal 20% boss damage? And why would Ghostcrawler imply that this was obvious??

Quote:
Warriors now share tanking responsibilities with three other classes, which can feel psychologically like a nerf.

What also feels psychologically like a nerf is the fact that warrior tanks ARE NERFED compared to the other classes.

The Pull
- Sometimes, the tank needs to pull mobs back before engaging. Pallies and DK's have superior ways to pull, even able to silence at range. The warrior's strongest opening move is to charge, which can lead to a wipe in many instances.

AOE
- Pallies and DK's have superior AOE because it is remains in play. This means once it's down, any mobs that spawn or add in range are automatically tanked. Warriors have to wait for their thunderclap cooldown. This is a severe handicap when mobs are continually trickling in during a boss fight for example.

Damage Mitigation
- I have an 80 blood DK, 80 prot pally and 80 prot warrior. When soloing group quests, the warrior invariably finishes with far lower health. (Typically the pally is not bubbling or casting a heal spell on himself but relying instead on passive healing.) In some cases the warrior is unable to solo the same group quest. Yet, my warrior has the best tanking gear of the three. Also I have the most experience playing as a prot warrior vs prot pally or DK, having levelled entirely from 0-80 as a prot spec warrior. This leads me to believe that warrior tanks require more healing in instances...?
#7 Jul 18 2009 at 10:19 AM Rating: Excellent
***
1,622 posts
CyanCentaur wrote:
How is it possible for a pathetic 400 AP to equal 20% boss damage? And why would Ghostcrawler imply that this was obvious??

Boss AP mechanics and damage are very different from players'. On normal melee damage, I've seen numbers around a 16% damage reduction from demoralizing shout. If a boss has a special move that scales highly with AP, it could be much more for that particular move (Hodir's Frozen Blows for example).
CyanCentaur wrote:
Sometimes, the tank needs to pull mobs back before engaging. Pallies and DK's have superior ways to pull, even able to silence at range.

Heroic Throw will silence a mob for a pull. If you don't have a caster to deal with, Charge can be used after shooting a mob without much risk.

Warriors have superior mobility and have some utility (interrupt, multiple stuns, spell reflect), which a Paladin would kill for depending on the mob (Iron Council).

Pallies and DKs do have superior AoE threat, but I haven't seen any AoE situations where a good warrior really has a ton of trouble tanking (unlike TBC where Tidewalker adds, among others, basically required a Paladin).

In an instance (where damage taken actually matters), self-healing from a Paladin or DK becomes much less important than raw mitigation. To my knowledge (and based on experience) Warriors do fine in the mitigation and avoidance departments.

At this point, DKs are ahead of Warriors (largely because of chainable CDs), but they're looking at some pretty harsh nerfs in 3.2. Paladins are great, but only have one CD (they're gaining an extra one in 3.2). Druids may actually be the best tank (or at least 2nd best) for a lot of situations at this point, but their representation is pretty fricking low so no one ******* about it.

A Warrior's biggest problems in the current game are (1) lack of DPS compared with other tanks (important for enrage timers and hard modes, also for TPS), and (2) less powerful CDs than DKs and a lower health pool than Druids ("UNBLOCKED HITS ARE THE NEW CRUSHING BLOW!" /grin). Regarding (2), this would be less important if avoidance were chilled out and there weren't so many boss moves that require CDs (internal or external) every 20 seconds to survive. With them nerfing the hell out of holy paladin mana regen and to a lesser extent avoidance, I'm hoping Blizzard is moving in this direction with the game.

Edited, Jul 18th 2009 2:21pm by tabstopper
#8 Jul 19 2009 at 3:13 AM Rating: Decent
***
1,331 posts
Bosses only have ~570 ap. They get a return of anywhere from 1 or 2 ap per 1 dps... So reducing 570 ap (fully buffed Demo shout) you get rid of 285 to 570 incoming dps from melee (~16-17% usually of total dps, when bosses have ~4k dps from melee). Some attacks get much much more from ap returns for bosses.

The mechanic that mobs get much higher return from AP has been around for a while, that a Blue poster has said in the past a long time ago.

It's been proven many a time that mobs have a very limited AP pool. And that demo shout is a HUGE improvement on incoming dps for tanks.


So, if you are a warrior in a raid, even if you are not tanking, keep demo shout on your targets. Your helping out your tank/healers a big deal. Unless you have players with better AP debuffs (other warriors, bears...).
#9 Jul 19 2009 at 7:05 AM Rating: Decent
Thanks for the info guys and you made some good points.

This just leaves one issue open for me... when is blizzard going to come clean about the fundamental ways in which the game works? It surprised me to learn that boss AP works differently than for players. In retrospect it makes sense to do it that way, but it seems sneaky. Why didn't blizzard bother to publish this important mechanic? Letting it slip out slyly in a Q&A does not count. Posting it in some obscure thread does not count. I realize that keeping tooltips updated is alot to ask for but sheesh if they could at least maintain an official mechanics page it would sure be nice.
/rant off
#10 Jul 19 2009 at 7:43 AM Rating: Good
***
1,622 posts
Not to come down hard on you, but there's a thread from 3 years ago at Elitist Jerks that analyzed Demo Shout and monster AP.

Even WoWWiki has the info, if you look up Demoralizing Shout.

You may be new to Warcraft, or you may not dig deeply into theorycrafting for Warrior. But don't go off on a rant about how Blizzard let Demo Shout vs. bosses "slip out slyly in Q&A" -- it's been a known fact for about three years. Whoever made the quote wasn't dropping a bombshell.
#11 Jul 19 2009 at 12:21 PM Rating: Good
****
8,779 posts
yeah, demo shout has been known to be a pretty big decrease in boss dps for awhile now. iirc, you only need 2-3 points in imp demo shout to zero out the AP of most bosses too.
#12 Jul 19 2009 at 12:27 PM Rating: Good
****
7,732 posts
Quote:
Druids may actually be the best tank (or at least 2nd best) for a lot of situations at this point, but their representation is pretty fricking low so no one ******* about it.


I am waiting for a druid specific nerf to come smashing us down to the bottom of the barrel. Druids scale too well off too few stats and Blizz has no idea how to balance the class. I see them easily nerfing both stam and armor scaling again...


New Shield Spec will be a huge boost in rage. Especially when you out class the content by a great deal. Still not a solution to the rage issue but a step in the right direction.
____________________________
Hellbanned

idiggory wrote:
Drinking at home. But I could probably stand to get laid.
#13 Jul 20 2009 at 7:32 PM Rating: Decent
***
1,331 posts
Sorry Quor, but that info was BC, bosses have 573 ap now.

So with 5/5 imp demo shout that's a 574 ap reduction, which is full AP reduction for bosses now.

2/5 or 3/5 is 475 and 508 respectively.


http://www.tankspot.com/forums/f14/42342-level-80-boss-ap.html
#14 Jul 20 2009 at 9:03 PM Rating: Good
****
8,779 posts
ah. figures theyd add more ap just to make demo shout "useful". hate how they do that sometimes.
Reply To Thread

Colors Smileys Quote OriginalQuote Checked Help

 

Recent Visitors: 247 All times are in CST
Anonymous Guests (247)