Show my buffs: This option will display what buffs you have active and how much time is remaining on those buffs. Show target information: Enabling this option will show your target's name, class, spec, location, and health. Hide tooltip in combat: Choose whether or not to have tooltips appear while you are in combat.
This tooltip shows you which spells you have mapped to each mouse action.Ĭonstantly update: When this is enabled, the information on the tooltip will continue to update while you stay moused over a raid bar. Show tooltips: Enabling this option will show a tooltip whenever you mouse over a raid bar. This screen controls what information is displayed on those tool tips. Tooltips are very useful when you first start healing with this addon (especially if you're still learning where your spells are mapped). Use the sliders to define when you would like this to occur.Īnd finally, we come to the Tips tab. Show buff before it expires: Tell HB to show your buffs as expired once the time remaining on their duration falls below a certain level. Spell to buff: Tell HB which buff to monitor.Ĭheck members: Tell HB which raid members to monitor for missing buffs.īar colours: Adjust bar color to your preference. Monitor for missing buffs: Toggles buff monitoring on and off. This screen will allow you to monitor your raid buffs and alert you to any group members who may be missing them.
Like I said earlier, this is essential for all raiding resto druids. This screen, combined with mapping your cleansing spells to your mouse buttons, make HB a powerful and effective tool for removing debuffs. The bar colors can be changed to your preference.ĭebuff warnings: Options to receive warnings other than bar color changes when a raid member is affected by a debuff. Checking off 'By class' will ignore things such as mana effect debuffs on classes that use energy or rage, etc.Ĭustom/New debuff: This option allows HB to notify you of specific non-removable debuffs that you may want to be made aware of in certain boss encounters (such as Ignis' slag pot or Marrowgar's Graveyard bone spike).īar colours: Change a raid members bar to this color when affected by a debuff. Ignore debuffs: You can set HB to ignore specific debuffs that may not be worth the time it would take to remove them (such as non harmful and short duration debuffs). Spell to remove debuffs: By entering your cleansing spells here, HB will monitor your raid and alert you (by changing raid bar colors) when a debuff can be removed by one of these spells. This option should be enabled at all times. Monitor to remove debuffs: Toggles debuff monitoring on and off. This is essential for raiding resto druids, as cleansing poisons and removing curses are an important job to perform.
It's here that you can setup HealBot to monitor removable debuffs on your party and raid members. (A walk through of the General and Spells tabs can be found in Part 1 of this guide, while Part 2 deals exclusively with the Skins tab.)įirst up is the Cure tab. Here we will walk through the final three tabs of the HealBot options menu. For example, Shift+Left mouse button is max rank heal if I’m clicking on a friendly unit’s unitframe, and it’s Purge if I’m clicking on an enemy.Welcome to the third (and final) installment of the HealBot 3.3.0 setup guide. In that case I’d probably just use Pitbull unitframes, which will show you who has aggro and will make your interface look nice.Īnd I like to use Clique because then I can bind mouse button combinations to handle friendly and hostile units. But you don’t to do that to get benefit out of it.īoth Grid and Healbot are probably overkill if you’re just healing 5-mans. If you’re a hardcore raider, I understand you can take it a step further and set it up to mark people who have important debuffs. The only things I had to change with Grid are purely cosmetic, otherwise it does everything I need it to right out of the box, which are mostly showing who has a debuff I can cure, and letting me know if a mage is taking damage because they pulled aggro, in which case I don’t need to heal them.
My general rule of thumb is that if a mod takes more than 10 minutes to set up and configure, it’s just not worth it.