I did that, only I deleted just one and then remade an evoker and have kept that one since.
I don’t play it much because it’s kind of clunky to me. It has a lot of detail to it’s spells/talents and such that I try to ignore.
I just want to know what hits hard, what’s going to hit all the time, what do I have to use to ramp up enough juice to use a smack down talent, etc… and then fill my bar slots accordingly.
So it’s taking me awhile.
One class I just can’t get the hang of is warrior. Too hard to get rage and too hard to maintain/keep it so I’m always starting over.
BM Hunter dude.
It’s a starter class, easy enough to pick up and go, it’s a lot of fun, I love my BM Hunter!
Pally is also simple enough once you’ve had some practice, which is the key thing tbh.
We’ve all stared at our action bars before, it’s natural until you have the muscle memory and keybinds down.
Eventually you shouldn’t really need to look at your keys much, just keep playing, you’ll get it.
Good luck!
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I found protection and arms warriors you spend a lot of time waiting on rage to build up.
Not so much with fury. I still have a few protection warriors, most are fury and I just don’t like arms at all.
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Try some follower dungeons and take your team experimenting. The AI are the nicest WoW players ever.
Ret Pally is literally build, spend, mash glowing button. It doesn’t get much easier than that homie…
Bloat management is a skill indeed.
For simplicity’s sake, you’re better off playing BM Hunter (range) or Fury Warrior (melee). Frost Mage also has a simple rotation, if you really want to be a spell-caster.
of all my healing toons, I would have loved Evoker but too many keys for me.
Pally - 5
Druid - 4
Monk - 3
Shaman - 3
Priest - 4
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Evoker - 1
For ease, play tank. Whatever tank works. Or DK whatever spec really (prefer frost)
Your class picks aren’t helping. You could have picked half a dozen other classes that don’t require such attention.
I would look at how you have your key binds set up, then look at your rotation. I have very small hands so I set up my key binds to be super easy for me to use. Set up your things for how you play not anyone else. Then learn your spells/ abilities, what you use on cooldown, what is used only when procced. From there hit up a training dummy and get to work.
It is less stressful to practice with the training dummy. I normally will use a dps meter for this part to gauge where you are and see if and how you are improving. I need to hit up the training dummies myself. Also don’t forget if you are not gemmed, enchanted, flasked, and fed you will not have the “best” dps on the dummy.
It’ll be ok once you get used to it–just be patient with yourself, get some practice, and maybe spend some time on the target dummies if you’re feeling it. Nothing is ever perfect when you first begin, but one day when its all second nature, you’ll look back at all of this and smile at how far you’ve come.