

Drain Soul is the main attraction for a channeled tick bar since you're most likely to interrupt that channel than any others. Since Malefic Grasp is a new spell in the 5.0 game, not all addons (including my cast bar of choice) have updated quite yet for its ticks, but the spell is quick enough that I don't quite care to go hunting for another addon to configure right now. The minorly important part of cast bars for warlocks is seeing the ticks in a channeled spell like Malefic Grasp or Drain Soul. Usually colored differently from the rest of the bar, this part tells you when you could end your cast before it's technically finished and the game will still register it as going off due to your latency (specifically world latency involves casting and combat).
#Elvui profiles warlock mod#
The most important part of the cast bar that you'd want in a mod is the latency bar. Please add your favorites in the comments if I don't name them here. But I'll name some basics and what I personally use.
#Elvui profiles warlock mods#
You can configure DoT timers and resource bars with a cast bar addon, and you can show buffs and debuffs with just about anything, from buff mods to aura mods to unit frame mods.

These addons also overlap in many areas now. I prefer largely visual & symbolic cues myself, with sound cues for occasional warnings, so my UI revolves around what others may regard as pure eye candy.

I'm not going to tell you one's better than another, because different people will react differently. There's plenty of options out there for each category of addons, and I'll mention several choices. I don't even need a boss mod most times, assuming I can pay attention to the fight instead of zoning out on my rotation. I don't need a damage meter to tell me that I'm fantastic (I already know it). I don't need a threat mod because the default UI will yell at you once you get close to pulling threat, which I hardly ever do if I'm being intelligent about my DoT spreads. I don't need a unit frames mod - you can move the unit frames now, and the secondary resource tracking isn't too terrible to live with. When I've played on the default UI - whether it was for beta/PTR or I had to wipe my WTF folder on a dying laptop - I always came back to a big three of addons I wish I had:Ī better cast bar that shows channeled ticksĪ DoT timer that can handle multiple targets I do suggest you try an LFR or a dungeon on the default UI, just to see exactly what helps you most in a PvE group combat situation (or if you can play just fine on it!). However, it's not the most optimal way to play a warlock, at least for most of us. The default UI has gotten better than it used to be. It's really up to you what addons you "need." You can raid on something very minimalistic in addon usage like the user interface of Sparkuggz from Method. You can completely redo your UI using independent addons, like I do. You can use a UI compilation (ElvUI is particularly popular and well-done). It might not be recommended, but you are technically able to. But a good buff to your spellcasting techniques is a well-done user interface, so let's talk about that.ĭo you need 100 addons to raid as a warlock? No.Ĭan you use the default UI as a raiding warlock? Sure. Knowing your class and spec is another, and I promise, I'll get to that. Gear is one important preparation for raiding, and I've set you up with most of those considerations.
#Elvui profiles warlock how to#
Recently, it's been through Twitter, which isn't exactly the best place to explain how to get the most out of your UI. I've been asked several times from either new warlocks or old warlocks who came back to the game about what addons are out there to help a PvE warlock. Laugh all you want her UI is spacious and pretty to play on.

This week, Megan O'Neill does actually have 100some addon folder things in her Addon Control Panel profile. Blood Pact Useful addons for raiding warlocks MONĮvery week, WoW Insider brings you Blood Pact for affliction, demonology, and destruction warlocks.
