Druid - Alacrity Support Healer
Overview
Healing Druid is a support build that provides its subgroup with Alacrity, 25 stacks of Might from , healing, permanent Fury and Regeneration. It can inflict good amounts of CC, high Vulnerability, and tons of utility from various pets and utility skills.
Skill Bar
Weapon Variants
- Longbow provides , a short cooldown and easily accessible knockback. On bosses where pushing or CC is important, you should swap out Staff and use to help your squad.
- Offhand axe can replace Staff for more DPS if you don't need the defensive utility. It also provides for pulling adds on certain encounters.
Pets Variants
You will mainly be bringing these pets to fights:
- Fanged Iboga is the highest DPS pet, which also inflicts good CC with its pet skill . This is the pet you will have out most of the time.
- Electric Wyvern and Rock Gazelle deal mediocre DPS but provides very strong CC from their pet skills, and . You should have one of these as your secondary pet and swap to it if CC is needed.
- Jacaranda is the second highest DPS pet and the pet with the highest cleave damage. It also has an immobilize in , useful if more soft CC is needed.
In certain situations, you might also find these pets useful:
- Red Moa provides Fury with its pet skill , useful if you're struggling with fury uptime.
- Jungle Stalker provides Might with its pet skill , useful if you're struggling with might uptime.
- Wolf provides AoE fear, useful if your group is having trouble with adds (e.g. on Escort towers).
- Brown Bear provides for extremely condition-heavy fights.
- Fern Hound provides Regeneration if you have difficulty keeping it up.
Spirit Variants
Spirits provide pulsing boons around them in addition to Alacrity when their active skill is used. Three spirits are required for permanent Alacrity uptime.
- Regeneration and sustained healing to 10 people in a huge radius. This keeps them from dying, sustains their bonus, and rapidly fills your . provides
- Might and pulsing Chill when activated. provides
- Protection, which again keeps your squadmates from dying and sustains their bonus. provides
- Fury and a small amount of CC when activated. provides
- Vigor. provides
- provides an emergency resurrect that can affect up to five people, including yourself.
You will want for the easiest Might generation. You will generally want to take for your generation. Depending on the fight, many commanders will also expect and .
When not to bring spirits: On many encounters, Druid is expected to bring utility skills to deal with mechanics, for example for knockbacks or for a stun break. In these situations, you will not be able to bring every spirit as a solo Druid and will need to replace one of your spirits. Alternatively, you may realize that some of your spirits aren't doing anything and wish to replace them with other utility skills like .
You need a minimum of three spirits to maintain Alacrity, so be careful not to swap out more than two utilities.
Other Skill Variants
Healing
- is a good alternative to on condition-heavy fights (e.g. Slothasor, Xera). If you take this run .
Utility
- provides a short cooldown AoE knockback and is the cornerstone of many raid boss strategies.
- provides instant vulnerability and 300 breakbar damage, useful on bosses like Samarog where CC is important.
- provides an AoE stun break, useful for saving your subgroup on bosses like Slothasor.
- is a strong safety net for inexperienced groups.
- Stability with
Elite
- on fights where the immobilize is needed.
- if you need more healing and don't need or .
Template Code
Specializations
Trait Variants
- if running .
- if you don't need the safety buffer of .
- to increase your DPS a tiny bit in experienced groups on low pressure encounters.
- to carry inexperienced groups that are going down a lot.
- Stability from might be corrupted into Fear. in fights with boon corruption where the
- if you are using a heal skill other than . does not trigger , limiting its usefulness.
- or is technically better when not running any glyphs, but they don't provide any real advantage so you don't have to retrait if you're lazy.
- Might. This will allow you to spam massive heals on the group. if you don't need to provide
Specialization Variants
Marksmanship
With the loss of the unique buff from
, it is much more viable to bring Marksmanship instead of Skirmishing. This traitline offers boons from , extra CC from and a lot of vulnerability from the combination of and .- On some specific bosses, you will need to use to push and can't afford to have the projectile be intercepted. In this case you can take .
Wilderness Survival
If you're far off on your own kiting a mechanic, you can run Wilderness Survival instead of Skirmishing for more personal survivability. You can also consider traiting
in Druid.
Equipment
Harrier
Harrier
Harrier
Harrier
Harrier
Magi
Magi
Harrier
Harrier
Harrier
Harrier
Magi
Harrier
Harrier
Harrier
x6
- Remember to also get a longbow with the same sigils as your staff.
- The gear above is designed to cap boon duration when using +100 concentration food. If you are not using such food, you can switch some of the magi pieces to harrier.
- Thanks to , cleric stats would provide more healing power than magi, but this will put you at 1159 toughness which may interfere with tanking.
Consumables
Food
Utility
Usage
As a Druid you wear many hats in a raid encounter. This is your priority during fights, from highest to lowest:
- Stay alive
- Do mechanics
- Rescue teammates low on health
- Maintain boons and healing on your squad
- Maximize your DPS
Boons
Your main job for most of the fight is maintaining 25 stacks of Might on your squad. As a Druid you are uniquely equipped to do this with . At the start of the fight, and any time is available, you should go into and do the following might sharing rotation:
- while standing in your squad
- If done right the will explode shortly afterwards, healing teammates and granting you astral force for your next .
In addition to spamming Might and Regeneration, and grant Fury to your Chronomancer who can then sustain it with . You can if you have trouble with boon uptime (see "Quick Draw" below).
you will want to spam on your warhorn. This will top off your subgroup'sCombined with the passive pulsing might from
, you should have no trouble maintaining 25 might on your squad.
Healing
Healing is the secondary role you provide to your raid squad. Many new Druid players focus excessively on healing their teammates and camp Staff for the whole encounter. In reality, you don't need to do this as Regeneration and your rotation are enough to take care of random damage and keep people topped off. You only need to swap to Staff if you need emergency healing or utility.
Healing becomes important when mistakes or mechanics cause your teammates to get dangerously low on health. As a support healer, it's your responsibility to keep them alive, top them off, and maintain their
bonus. You can provide burst healing in any of the following ways:- Go into and spam and
- Activate or
- Drop a water field on your allies with or , and then blast it with or
A combination of these should be sufficient to heal your team back up to full. Make sure to turn on "Thick Party Health Bars" in your options so that you can see who needs healing at a glance.
If your teammates still go down after you babysit them and drop all your healing on them, that's on them, not you. Make a judgment call on whether it's worth putting yourself in danger to revive them, or popping your
to give them a second chance.
Quick Draw
Weapon swap or enter/leave , and it will reduce the cooldown of the next skill you use that has a cooldown. This is usually going to be or . This extra buffer is great for new Druids or for chaotic fights where you can't keep up a regular rotation.
is a very useful trait that provides a safety buffer for both your boons and healing. Every 9 seconds, this trait will activate after youhas a 9 second cooldown, so get a feel for the timing or keep an eye on your skill bar to see if is active. It's better to autoattack for a few seconds rather than accidentally waste on inconsequential skills.
also won't trigger if you are in the middle of a skill cast when you , so remember to finish your cast animations.
Mechanics
As a utility support class, Druid is often called upon to do specific raid mechanics. These are varied and highly encounter dependent. Ask your commander what they want you to do in any given fight.
- Entangling: On many bosses, Druids are asked to bring to immobilize or clear adds. An example is on Gorseval where you have to keep 4 spirits from reaching the center. Generally this boils down to pressing when your commander tells you to.
- Pushing: Druids have 2 reliable knockbacks in
- If there is a risk of your getting intercepted then you should run the "Marksmanship Pushing Variant" traits listed above.
and , which means they usually have the responsibility of handling knockbacks ("pushes"). An example is on Soulless Horror where you will be asked to push Tormented Dead far away from the main group. If asked to do this, position carefully and have your pushing skills ready when the time comes.
- Kiting: As Druids can heal and support from range, they are sometimes asked to stand apart from the main grop to keep a specific mechanic away. An example is on Sabetha where you may be asked to stand further away to kite flak. In these scenarios, you should run as many spirits as possible, drop them all on your group at the beginning, then go to your kiting spot and stay there while dropping heals on the main group. You won't be expected to maintain might (although it's obviously a nice bonus if you can).
- Healing Through: Some advanced strategies rely on ignoring mechanics by having the Druid heal through heavy damage. This generally involves saving and then spamming and .
CC
You can help with breakbars using any of the following skills:
- or or
- or
- from
- Swapping to staff or with traited
- (not recommended as you generally need this skill for other mechanics)
General Tips
- only lasts for 60 seconds and has a very long cooldown. Save it for the phases when people are most likely to go down.
- Place your spirits where all your squad members will be in range of them. This is important if you will be constantly moving (e.g. on VG).
- Chilled and Weakness, which will be a DPS increase for many classes due to traits like , , and . Always use off cooldown if possible. provides
- If you need to cleanse conditions, use . The light field can be blasted with or . If you need a lot of condition cleanse take and . can also cleanse certain conditions like chill and immobilize.
- Use , , or if you need to immobilize things. In dire situations you can use (not recommended).
- blocks projectiles, which is relevant for certain encounters like Cairn.
- Always cast another spirit before . This is so that when you see the other spirit expire, you can manually activate just before expires for extra damage.
- Your pets are dumb and will take damage from enemies and mechanics. Swap them out if they're about to die.
- can be used to blind adds.
- If you have nothing else to do, maximize your DPS and astral force generation by spamming axe/warhorn skills until you need to heal or do your boon rotation again.
Encounter Specific Tips
Spirit Vale
- This fight puts a lot of pressure on the tank, so make sure you keep them healthy.
- Bring for seeker control. You can use to knock them away and to immobilize them.
- If you're healing through greens, save your for it - not having it up right after a green circle will likely lead to a raid wipe.
- In inexperienced groups is really useful for saving people who get ported.
- If you get ported use to quickly dash back.
- The tank will be standing a short distance from the main group, so make sure you tag them with your healing and .
- Pop your spirits during the split phases so that they will be up for the next boss phase.
- Bring to immobilize the Charged Souls. With high group cleave, you can immobilize them very near the center and have your power DPS cleave all the Charged Souls down.
- If you are delaying breakbars, be prepared to spam healing through the breakbar phase so that you can heal your DPS through the retaliation. It's ok to camp in for this section as there isn't any other damage pressure and your will refill your astral force during the split.
- Keep an eye on the squad members doing cannons and be prepared to refresh their Might when they come back.
- can be used to blind the adds so they don't knock your teammates into the flamewall.
Salvation Pass
- can be used against slubling projectiles.
- You can bring for an AoE stun break.
- Bring for condition cleanse.
- can be used for projectile destruction but be careful of accidentally destroying Bloodstone Shards.
Stronghold of the Faithful
- On this fight Druids are normally asked to babysit Glenna. Try to remain as close to the group as possible without putting Glenna in danger. If you can't get close, you can still leave Glenna for short periods of time to stack might with and .
- Use , , and to keep wargs immobilized.
- can be used to blind trash.
- You can bring for an AoE stun break.
- You can bring Wolf to fear mobs as an emergency measure. If you aren't escorting Glenna, you can use it to fear mobs when you go up to the towers.
- On this fight Druids are normally asked to push the orb into the rifts. Just go around with your Staff and position so that your autoattacks will hit it into each rift.
- Make sure you have ready for the burn phase.
- This fight puts a lot of pressure on the tank, so make sure you keep them healthy.
- Bring for condition cleanse.
- can be used to blind adds.
- Due to the very high damage pressure in this fight, a healer should always be on the main platform. If you're solo healer this means you should always go back down if you get ported. If there are two healers, decide who is going back down if both get ported.
Bastion of the Penitent
- You can kite on this encounter without dropping Alacrity if you're good
- Make sure to use all your spirits at the start and dash to the group to use them all again every time there are greens
- Use a mixture of Celestial Avatar, dodges, the special action key and to keep yourself alive
- Don't be afraid to camp in and spam healing if the group needs it.
- You should always take one agony, as you can heal and buff from range, and you can always heal yourself if you get low.
- Use for mobility.
- In inexperienced groups is really useful for saving people who get ported.
- You can bring for immobilizing Rigom and clearing spears.
- is great here, as it provides good CC and allows you to knock Rigom into Samarog during the split phase.
- If a breakbar is coming up, you should save for CCing with and healing the fixated squadmate.
- The puddle kiter takes heavy damage after blocking Deimos's Mind Crush attack, so watch out for this and make sure you keep them healthy. In Deimos CM this will apply to the entire squad.
- Make sure your pet is on the squad, otherwise the Sauls might fixate on it and not come to the group.
Hall of Chains
- This fight puts a lot of pressure on the tank, so make sure you keep them healthy.
- Fanged Iboga is strong here as Soulless Horror takes a lot of damage from confusion.
- As the Druid you are normally tasked with pushing Tormented Dead. To do this you need to equip a longbow and
- When a Tormented Dead walks into the group, do your first push with , wait until the tormented dead is close to half health (often after being hit with a necromancer's ), then do your second push with and knock it to the edge of the arena.
- If using pets like Electric Wyvern or Rock Gazelle, it may be wise to keep them Passive as they can interrupt your knocks on the Tormented Dead.
, and use the "Marksmanship Variant" traits above with .
- , and your blast finishers to cleanse conditions.
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