myrrar wrote:
Sorry for the essay. If you don't care at all about druid mechanics dont read the first three paragraphs.
I understand what you are saying, but I don't think its unimportant. While marginal upgrades may be small, they can still be upgrades. I am obviously most familiar with a resto druid's situation, as that is what I play, so I will speak to that end. You want 4 piece, but which piece is your offset piece seems to be a bit up in the air. Crit is far less valuable to a resto druid than spellpower/haste is (I'm speaking in pre 4.0 terms here, the whole picture has changed now) so you want to keep the set pieces which have haste, and sub out a set piece which has crit, for an offset piece which has haste. The two slots which fit this criteria are the shoulders, and the chest. The leather shoulders from BQL (I think) have SP/Haste, exactly what you want. The cloth chest from Blood Princes has SP/Haste as well. So which do you take? Well, turns out, with gem slots, and the pure numbers, you end up with around 10 more haste and like 10 more sp by taking the cloth chest over the leather shoulders as your offset piece. (I dont remember the exact numbers off the top of my head). You could argue thats marginal, but its still an upgrade, and makes the selection of gear a viable topic of discussion.
If you disagree on the stat values, say for a resto druid crit being near worthless while SP/Haste are close to tied up to a certain point, you will not agree with the previous analysis of gear choice. However, through number crunching, and just straight up logic, you can determine these stat values to be true in the vast majority of situations. In the case of druids, we don't have spells we typically cast in vast quantities that crit. If you do end up casting nourish, talents make it crit like christmas anyway. After the T9 set, which allowed rejuv to crit, that stat became effectively worthless.
The main strength of druid healing is the ability to buffer incoming aoe damage on a wide variety of targets, aka spamming the shit out of rejuv. Clearly this isn't all you do, but many of your GCDs are spent on casting the rejuv spell, and you want to put rejuv out as fast as possible. Hence, haste is the most valuable stat for a resto druid until you can hit your haste cap, the magical number where you lower the GCD to its minimum amount, 1 second. After that, spellpower. Haste beyond the haste cap for a resto druid can still be somewhat useful if you glyphed rapid rejuv, which would make the rejuvs tick faster, but at that point you see so much more of a benefit from spellpower.
This knowledge came from people talking about it, and yea, maybe several of them were pretentious pricks, but a knowledge base is a good thing to have around. Again I can only speak this strongly about resto druid, but other classes can follow similar thought patterns to determine the value of stats/specs/etc. Yes, there are always special cases due to encounter mechanics, but often times you find a general best case scenario, with tweeks in areas that need special considerations. I also think that you will find that the higher skilled players operate at near maximum potential even when mechanics would normally put that class or the general best case build/spec/whatever at a disadvantage.
Places like EJ are not something to be followed blindly, but a good place to find people talking about numbers, sharing what they are observing and their findings. Then you can take that information and do what you will with it. I have no problem with putting up with somebodies pretentious, snobby shit if I know I have a chance to take something worthwhile out of it. You'll find ignorant cockbags on any forum, doesnt mean that the place is automatically just a worthless pile of shit.
Haste and SP are eminently superior for a resto druid to a far greater extent than most stats are for most classes, for reasons that no one needs to play a resto druid to understand.
Crit/haste/AP-SP/ArP/MP5 are in far closer parity for a rogue or holy priest or ret paladin than haste and crit or mp5 are for a resto druid. My point about the futility of BiS lists was in the context of normal progression and classes with a greater diversity of stats in relative parity, and regarding healer classes, druids are in something of a unique position so far as min-maxxing goes given their exceptional lack of mana supply issues.
When you talk about "higher skilled players", you aren't speaking about something particularly alien to me or many patrons on this forum: this isn't trade channel and we aren't naive or inept, and quite a few of us have experience on that level. I also know that "higher skilled players" don't have a crystal ball when it comes to theorycrafting, and execution is quite discrete from theorycraft: one player might itemize completely correctly and have an intellectual understanding of the mechanics, but fail at execution; another might not know, care, or be intelligent enough to understand theorycraft, but has the pure skill to execute efficiently by pressing buttons better. Obviously the apex of player ability is to excel in all regards, but its not so simple as to equate "higher skill" with "better theorycraft".
It's easy enough to pull up armories of players well progressed in PvE and PvP and see clearly they are doing something wrong in the strictly theoretical sense, but the error is marginalized because they have a faculty for execution. Conversely we have posters (on other forums) like Theck and Xayton who are piss poor tanks and don't ever analyze issues empirically but make their theorycrafting contributions of varying levels of utility nonetheless. My point in this and the prior paragraph: I don't agree with the connection you make between elitism and being dialectically sacrosanct when it comes to theorycraft.
My initial point, however, was more directed at the character of the moderation of the site and the nature of the discussions. I don't think anyone in this thread said EJ was without value or nearly. Implied in your viewpoint is that snobbery or pretentiousness and insight come hand in hand: you are mistaken. Snobbery is an impediment to meaningful discussion, and it is not an inevitable byproduct of ability but an attitude common to flawed individuals of all skill levels.
As I said, the stickies and knowledge base are useful, but the discussions are largely a swamp. I don't deny EJ is a useful resource and typically authoritative, but the information density is low and asinine moderation makes it a parody of itself and sharply caps its utility and relevance.