First off, let me apologize if anything breaks, looks odd, or otherwise blows up here. I’m doing some experimenting, and while the majority of my changes are taking place in a safe location, some changes I test here. Usually it turns into a “GAH! BAD! GO AWAY BAD THING!” moment, and quickly vanishes, but just in case, you’ve been warned. ;)

Last night, we proved that we have the Tidewalker fight down. As long as The Boyfriend stays alive, the whole thing is pretty much a cakewalk for us. I have to give major kudos to the healers, as they were on top of things last night. A couple of healers got sent to the Watery Graves right when it could have gotten bad, but quick communication and even faster reflexes kept the tanks alive with barely a bobble. Go team! :D

The Leo fight still is being learned. Last night was my first night there after our very first single attempt at him. Last week while I was out of town, they got a good couple of hours worth of work in on him. We get to work on him this weekend more for I think a good 3 hour stretch, which will either let us get into the groove of the fight and really learn it, or actually see him downed.

I really regret missing out on those learning nights, because I always feel like I missed out on the process, that I’m somehow behind in “getting” the fight, no matter how much I read up on it or watch other people’s movies. It just takes me back to when I first started raiding with these guys, and they’d been doing the instances for weeks. Then me and my total noob-to-raiding self wandered in with an absolute paranoid fear that I will Screw Things Up and kept muttering to myself “oh pleasepleasepleasedon’tkickmeIswearI’mtryingtolearn.” My Class Leader still laughs at me over those memories, and thank heavens she didn’t think that me asking 500 questions over the night was a bad thing (okay it felt like 500, but was probably more like 10-15). I told her later that I’d tried to keep them as intelligent as I could. Apparently, they were reasonable questions, cos they kept inviting me back.

But it kinda makes me wonder: how many people out there have this problem? That tiny niggling fear in the back of your head that says “Omg wth am I doing here? Please don’t let me get everyone killed.” Or is it just me and my paranoia? (Which is highly possible.)

5 Responses to “Raid nights, raid fears and site changes”
  1. I’d say it’s more like who DOESN’T think like that… on the healing end, I’m in a constant state of, “Oh, can I keep him up, am I good enough to keep up with the damage he’s taking, am I playing my druid the most effective way I can and for heaven’s sake, WATCH YOUR MANA USE!”

    So know, you are most definitely not alone, in fact, I’d not be surprised if you were in the majority… :)

  2. Personally, my only fear is in letting down the raid group due to my undergearing. I *know* how to do my job, and have sat with some of the best hunters I know to practice it. Sadly, due to limitations, my gear is meh, and my trap resist is laughable– but that’ll change as I gear up. :D

    I deeply trust my class leader, the people who I turn to for advice, and adore raiding with a certain MT and RL because he always pauses before a fight and calmly explains what he is expecting, and how he;d like it done. Is he perfect? NOPE, but see– this is why I love my guild– he, and everyone in the group laugh off when we wipe… even when it is done by stupidity. And yeah, I have been the stupid, and while *I* was being hard as hell on myself, I got poked to stop being an asshat by others around me. :D

    Now, I’m kinda fascinated in trying ZA and SSC… but think I need a bit more experience OUTSIDE the progression zone the guild is in, where my going “oops!” won;t stop a good run. ;D

  3. [...] Raid nights, raid fears and site changes: “First off, let me apologize if anything breaks, looks odd, or otherwise blows up here. I’m doing some experimenting, and while the majority of my changes are taking place in a safe location, some changes I test here. Usually it turns into a ‘GAH! BAD! GO AWAY BAD THING!’ moment, and quickly vanishes, but just in case, you’ve been warned. [...]

  4. Ah, ‘the fear’. Totally, truly and utterly with you on that. I went from n00b-to-raider very quickly and had the same less equipped problem as Aerye. My first night at any new raid instance / boss fight has my hands shaking to the point I can barely click my mouse. I’m a big softie and take it to heart if I ‘do something stupid’ so despite reading and watching every guide I can get my grubby little mitts on I still go into a raid feeling unprepared / unconfident / sure I’m going to kill us all.

    As for asking questions, though, if you can find someone who’s happy to listen and answer (In my case a wonderful gnome rogue who’d done all of the content way before I dreamed of even doing it) then the fear diminishes a little bit. I find this especially so when your guild has slightly different ways to deal with a boss than the guides suggest due to setup and the like.

    I do find, however, that after a raid or two when I start to get to ‘know’ a fight I relax a bit though :)

    /hug
    /vanish

  5. @Aurik
    Yep! Pestering those that actually will help (and actually listening to them!) proves to be a wonderful method to learn by. I know our guild has a tendency to do boss fights ever so slightly differently than Normal Accepted Strats. Nothing major, just those little tweaks that make the run work for us. At least I had the Class Leader and The Boyfriend that I could ask what to me seemed like an embarressing amount of questions. I don’t have “New Shiny Raider” on me anymore, not after a year and a half of raiding, but I still cringe whenever something bad happens and have to resist the reflexive check to make sure I didn’t bork the raid. ;)

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