Do you know how Hunters get ready to raid in the Burning Crusade? So we would like to take this opportunity to go over and describe it in detail. You must pay more attention to the following content.
The first one is to work through level 70 instance. This is important. In some cases, these instances are where you're going to find the gear you'll need. Your Auction House blues and quest greens will not cut it. Those items are great for you to get started doing level 70 instances, but, in them, you'll be made mincemeat of in a raid. To hit up the instances is that it will give valuable experience for you. If you do instances with guilds, you're given an opportunity to learn how they work. It will show you their varying styles of play, how they organize strategies, and how they deal with pressure and surprises. By doing these instances, you're building up a rapport with these people and learning to work as a team as opposed to working as individuals. In a raid environment, a rapport with your teammates can mean the difference between a wipe and a boss-kill.
When the Burning Crusade first came out, there is a guide called Sinister Pack. Remember that five members of Sinister Pack consistently grouped together to complete quests and instances as we leveled and went on to farm the level 70 instances to get our dungeon sets to start Karazhan. It was usually the same five people working together. We got into a rhythm. Targets were always marked the same way, we each came to understand the others' habits, and how each of us instinctively responded to emergencies. Once we and our guild-mates had decent gear, we started Karazhan. This was well before there were many online resources for boss strategies and trash clears so for a lot of it we were just learning as we went.
To make a list actually is a must. Any time you're about to start working on something new, be that level 70 instances, heroics, raids, whatever, know what your goals are ahead of time. Know what it is you're after. It will save you, and your party/raid-members time. You won't have to sit there hmm and haw over a drop, and you can move on to the next thing that much sooner. Wish Lists are your new best friend.
Get familiar with the items that are currently available to you that you may need and where to find them. Get familiar with the items that will be available to you soon and how to get them.
To some extent, farming is a new way to fill your free time. Welcome to raiding! Consumables will simultaneously irritate and delight you. They can be a pain in the butt to farm but they can give you that extra edge to push you through content.
Get out another piece of paper and make you guessed it, another list. Write down consumables: buff foods, pet buff foods, flasks, elixirs, and potions. Write down the materials it takes to make them. Soon, you'll know this list like the back of your hand. This list is, essentially, your Pre-Flight Checklist of things you'll need to bring with you to every raid.
As a former raid leader, a list of consumables was a requirement I had for every one of my raiders. If we got to a boss, and I noticed you didn't have a Well Fed and/or elixir/flask buff going, I took note. It said to me that you couldn't be bothered to make sure you were prepared ahead of time. It said to me: This person wants epics, but isn't willing to go the extra mile to get them. It told me the person was lazy. I don't take lazy people to raids.
The first one is to work through level 70 instance. This is important. In some cases, these instances are where you're going to find the gear you'll need. Your Auction House blues and quest greens will not cut it. Those items are great for you to get started doing level 70 instances, but, in them, you'll be made mincemeat of in a raid. To hit up the instances is that it will give valuable experience for you. If you do instances with guilds, you're given an opportunity to learn how they work. It will show you their varying styles of play, how they organize strategies, and how they deal with pressure and surprises. By doing these instances, you're building up a rapport with these people and learning to work as a team as opposed to working as individuals. In a raid environment, a rapport with your teammates can mean the difference between a wipe and a boss-kill.
When the Burning Crusade first came out, there is a guide called Sinister Pack. Remember that five members of Sinister Pack consistently grouped together to complete quests and instances as we leveled and went on to farm the level 70 instances to get our dungeon sets to start Karazhan. It was usually the same five people working together. We got into a rhythm. Targets were always marked the same way, we each came to understand the others' habits, and how each of us instinctively responded to emergencies. Once we and our guild-mates had decent gear, we started Karazhan. This was well before there were many online resources for boss strategies and trash clears so for a lot of it we were just learning as we went.
To make a list actually is a must. Any time you're about to start working on something new, be that level 70 instances, heroics, raids, whatever, know what your goals are ahead of time. Know what it is you're after. It will save you, and your party/raid-members time. You won't have to sit there hmm and haw over a drop, and you can move on to the next thing that much sooner. Wish Lists are your new best friend.
Get familiar with the items that are currently available to you that you may need and where to find them. Get familiar with the items that will be available to you soon and how to get them.
To some extent, farming is a new way to fill your free time. Welcome to raiding! Consumables will simultaneously irritate and delight you. They can be a pain in the butt to farm but they can give you that extra edge to push you through content.
Get out another piece of paper and make you guessed it, another list. Write down consumables: buff foods, pet buff foods, flasks, elixirs, and potions. Write down the materials it takes to make them. Soon, you'll know this list like the back of your hand. This list is, essentially, your Pre-Flight Checklist of things you'll need to bring with you to every raid.
As a former raid leader, a list of consumables was a requirement I had for every one of my raiders. If we got to a boss, and I noticed you didn't have a Well Fed and/or elixir/flask buff going, I took note. It said to me that you couldn't be bothered to make sure you were prepared ahead of time. It said to me: This person wants epics, but isn't willing to go the extra mile to get them. It told me the person was lazy. I don't take lazy people to raids.
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