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Starym

Dev Watercooler: BfA Class Design Overview

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Battle for Azeroth is getting closer and closer, with early testing imminent and Blizzard have chosen to talk to the community about classes in the upcoming expansion. The plan is to continue Legion's design principles of iteration and focus on each classes uniqueness, improve the graphical presentation of abilities and focus on specs that don't match this criteria yet.

Here's the full thing and it's well worth a read:

Blizzard LogoDev Watercooler (source)

The development of World of Warcraft: Battle for Azeroth is well underway, and we want to share some insights into our philosophies and approach to class design for the expansion. While the launch of Legion brought lots of change to all of Warcraft’s classes, Battle for Azeroth will more closely resemble the example set by Legion’s patch content: targeted iteration based on player feedback and data.

The intro cinematic of Battle for Azeroth revealed at BlizzCon 2017 has an underlying theme that resonates deeply with the class design team: “Remember what makes us strong.” With that in mind, our goals for the next expansion are to promote what makes each class unique, focus on making group gameplay the best that it can be, and continue our efforts to improve combat visuals and effects. While we believe some specializations will need substantial iteration to achieve these goals, others will not, and our target is greater stability across the board.

Class Uniqueness and Utility

One area we’re trying to focus on across all classes is to better emphasize what makes each class unique and provide greater distinction among their various capabilities, especially when it comes to utility—tools that fall outside of core role functions like damage, healing, or mitigation. Part of what makes you feel excitement and pride in your class is pulling off a heroic moment and feeling the appreciation of your group when individually contributing to a shared success. That feeling is eroded when so many classes bring similar abilities, and you feel you’re rarely providing something distinctive. More differentiation in this area will create situations where another class can do something that you can’t, but you will similarly bring tools to the table that your allies lack.

 That contrast causes members of a team to be more dependent on each other to succeed, and encourages different group compositions to approach encounters in different ways.

Pursuing this goal will likely involve adding some new abilities (or re-adding previously removed abilities) to give classes a more unique signature where needed. It will also likely involve reining in the availability of certain utility types, especially those that are so widespread that they rarely provide meaningful contrast between classes. As a notable example, Area of Effect (AoE) stuns, some of most powerful utility that exists, are so abundant that most groups have at least one or two. As a result, decision-making around that tool is often less about when it would be best used, and more about avoiding overlap with other AoE stuns. Not only does this sometimes drown out the importance of other crowd control in dungeons, but it means that a class bringing an AoE stun to a group is not the major strategy-defining asset that it should be. Our goal is that whatever powerful kind of utility a class brings, it’s something that group will be happy to have added to their toolbox as they approach a challenge.

The goal of contrast between the abilities of different specializations is not limited to utility. We’re also looking at different specializations’ strengths and weaknesses in their “main role”—damage dealing (or DPS), healing, or tanking—and making sure everyone has something to get excited about and an opportunity to shine. Some DPS specializations are “bursty,” doing fast damage; some live for attrition, wearing away their target. Some specializations prefer to isolate and drill into a single threat, while others revel in blowing up huge packs of monsters. Much of this plays out naturally due to the varying sets of damaging abilities, but we are working more intently than in the past to ensure an appropriate variety and spread of DPS strengths and weaknesses. Likewise, healers and tanks should have a bit more identity through their unique healing and mitigation profiles.

Another part of this approach involves working with our content design teams to collaborate on a world where quests, dungeons, and raids create opportunities for all different types of class strengths to shine. If we’re arming classes with distinct tools that provide powerful answers to different situations, it’s important that the game’s content provides a broad array of challenges that play into those different tools.

Talent System Refinements

The overall talent system will remain largely unchanged, but we will be refining our approach. One of the major challenges in setting up talent rows is that they serve two conflicting desires: choices within a row should be meaningfully varied, but also should not feel like they are simply a test of which is best in a particular setting. 

If a row has three similar area-damage talents, your decision can feel like it boils down to a complex math problem. If a row mixes area-damage and single-target talents, you’ll likely feel you should change talents to suit the content you’re doing, which also rarely feels like a choice. The most successful talent rows are those with options that have a generally consistent role in your toolkit, but have very different delivery and mechanics, allowing players to thoughtfully customize their identity and complexity.

One other lesson we’ve already begun implementing in Legion patches is being careful with the effect that talents have on “pacing”—how frequently you get to press your buttons, and how often you generate resources and cooldowns. Of course, many talents affect the pacing of a rotation, and this will continue to be the case, as these are some of the talents with the most noticeable and fun feel to them. But if you have access to multiple talents that slow down or speed up your rotation, players can end up outside the bounds of what feels good to play (for example, by being resource starved or flooded). As we review talents going forward, we will try to avoid this by having strong resource-generating talents compete with each other, and better limiting the pacing change allowable from any single talent.

Artifacts Here and Gone

One particular challenge for the class design team throughout Legion was handling the introduction and eventual removal of Artifacts. The idea was exciting: design a large set of bonuses with the intention that they would be contained within an expansion, allowing us to make them flashier, more complex, and more numerous than we’d been able to in a specialization’s permanent set of core abilities. But the process of parting with Artifacts produces a complex set of decisions about how to adjust the base classes to play well in their absence.

The largest issue is where the pacing of a spec’s rotation was heavily affected by Artifacts. In that case, removing the Artifact may result in a rotation that’s too slow, or has too much open time where the core buttons aren’t available. In the process of reviewing and updating each specialization for Battle for Azeroth, we want to make sure all of them are paced appropriately after the removal of Artifacts. In some cases, we may do things like increase resource generation or reduce cooldowns to fill in some of the newly opened space.

For traits that go beyond simple numerical changes and have their own identity—such as active abilities or the powerful and noticeable procs—we are on the lookout across all specs for a small selection of traits that are worth turning into permanent parts of a class. The bar is high for a trait to become permanent. It’s an intended part of the experience of a system like Artifacts that the bonuses are layered on top of the core functionality of your class. You get to explore those bonuses thoroughly, but eventually move on from them. That leaves space in the permanent classes for new special bonuses from other systems in the future, as we’ll soon be exploring with Azerite Armor. That said, various specs will likely see one or two familiar traits from Artifacts showing up in their talent trees in Battle for Azeroth.


These are the broad philosophies that are guiding our design in Battle for Azeroth, and we were deliberately light on sharing specific examples of change, which are still in a state of flux at this stage. We welcome a community discussion on the principles we’ve outlined, and look forward to delving into detailed and specific changes as we move forward with our beta testing in the near future.

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5 hours ago, Xaethron said:

They mentioned everything except how players really feel about the classes.

And how do they really feel about them? By now everything Blizzard or any other game developer / publisher does ends exactly the same way: A majority of the people rage no matter what and people that dare to say they like a change are accused of fanboyism (what a nice word) or naivety or _______________ (fill in blank here) :-)

For me it is always nice to get to know the reasoning behind decisions Blizz makes. But I might be one of a thousand because I do not rage and blame and so on.

For me Legion brought some of the best class identy changes ever. They made a lot of specalizations viable and enjoyable to play and carved out some real nice class fantasies. I like to give things a try and to find joy in stuff even if they seem to be changes for the worse at first sight. If things (take old raid scaling for example) are really messed up the developers immediately hotfix them.

Often people do not realize what dimensions companies like Blizz work in and with when they claim that this or that problem should be easy to fix. Companies of such scale have to prioritize problems. Sometimes things are important but time consuming or they are easy to fix but not really neccessary right now and so on. And games like WoW have code that is in some parts over a decade old which naturally leads into some unexpected outcome when you change stuff.

Edited by Caeren
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On 1/24/2018 at 12:13 PM, Starym said:

 That feeling is eroded when so many classes bring similar abilities, and you feel you’re rarely providing something distinctive. More differentiation in this area will create situations where another class can do something that you can’t, but you will similarly bring tools to the table that your allies lack.

This.  

There are some classes that just... really provide nothing other than numbers.  Even IV's own guide for frost DK notes they really bring nothing to the table.  

Whereas my Ret paladin has immunities, reductions, movement retainers, cleansing and healing...  

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6 hours ago, PatrickHenry said:

This.  

There are some classes that just... really provide nothing other than numbers.  Even IV's own guide for frost DK notes they really bring nothing to the table.  

Whereas my Ret paladin has immunities, reductions, movement retainers, cleansing and healing...  

It would be amazing if frost DK's had a repositioning tool, something that can prevent even stun immune trash in m+ from getting their cast through, somthing that would help timing aggramar adds. Sadly, they only have dps.

Some classes might be more versatile than others, but every class has something they bring to the table. Interesting tho that you picked out the class that provides the grip mechanic as useless.

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I have heard rumors, that they want to change tanking to be more reliant on armor and get rid of active mitigation, what is up with that ?

Also why can't they just incorporate the essential traits into the classes like they used to do with tier sets ? If they say they won't change too much I'd be disagreeing, because the trais are something the classes now and their playstyle depend on. I just wanna play my class in the same reliable fashion I could in Legion, if they claim it is not gonna change too much.

As a blood dk I wouldn't really want them messing around with the tanking specs too much, I heard they wanted to "even out the viability of tank classes", but I mean the tanks and their different playstyles make out their identity and you play them for exactly that. I hope Blizz knows that and doesn't turn the gold they currently have into ashes.

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14 hours ago, Ilummini said:

It would be amazing if frost DK's had a repositioning tool, something that can prevent even stun immune trash in m+ from getting their cast through, somthing that would help timing aggramar adds. Sadly, they only have dps.

Some classes might be more versatile than others, but every class has something they bring to the table. Interesting tho that you picked out the class that provides the grip mechanic as useless.

Interesting I noted it was this very website with guides provided by top raiders that noted its virtual lack of utility, minus DG that works on ..... how many raid fights again?  MAYBE half?  Whereas I can BOP on cooldown and at least have SOME usefulness throughout most any encounter.  

I'm not saying they're USELESS.  Find that word in my paragraph please.  I B waiting.

Interesting tho you picked an argument I didn't even make to argue against.

Edited by PatrickHenry

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On 26/01/2018 at 4:25 AM, Ilummini said:

It would be amazing if frost DK's had a repositioning tool, something that can prevent even stun immune trash in m+ from getting their cast through, somthing that would help timing aggramar adds. Sadly, they only have dps.

Some classes might be more versatile than others, but every class has something they bring to the table. Interesting tho that you picked out the class that provides the grip mechanic as useless.

This isn't unique to the DK, though. A grip mechanic can be mimicked by any class by just using LoS or out-ranging mobs, which many people do in M+ anyway (see BRH mini-boss with archers), or just silencing/interrupting a caster. Also, having a single target grip is hardly game changing compared to being able to completely avoid mechanics with multiple tools. The blood one or the Demon Hunter one is far superior. Look at CoS first boss, for example. Doing it at +20 or higher without a Paladin just sucks. Freedom completely avoids the damage you receive over the course of jumping, you can BoP debuffs away and this isn't even as a healer.

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