| Raids are super-groups that allow up to 40 players to link their groups together. You can use raid groups to fight powerful monsters; to organize player vs. player battles; and especially to work with others to share loot, experience, and quests in raid dungeons. Raids allow you to overcome challenges that might otherwise be nearly impossible.
Quest Credit
Raid members cannot earn credit for most non-raid quests. Specifically, they will not receive credit for killing non-raid creatures or collecting items for non-raid quests. This is to prevent people from CHEESING powerful monsters or quests by just attacking them with a lot of players, thus making the battle trivial.
Experience
Raids grant substantially less experience for defeating monsters than normal groups. You can, however, still get experience which normally isn't possible unless groups join up. So while you won't be getting as much experience, you'll at least be getting some!
Raid Chat
Once you're in a raid group you can chat in the raid channel by typing /raid, followed by your text.
Raid Group vs. Party Group
A raid group shares a chat channel, experience, loot, instances, and raid quests. Besides this sharing, other groups in the raid are not connected to your group. You will only see players in your current group on the map. If you use a group or AOE beneficial spell, it will only affect players in your group, not the entire raid.
Finding Raid Group Members
You cannot see other raid members on the map if they are not in your group. If you want to find out where a member of the raid is, the easiest way to find out is to swap them into your group, then back to their original group.
Raid Leaders and Assistants
A raid leader can add and remove people to the raid group. They can move players between groups as well. Simply open up the raid group window and click-drag a player to the new location. You can promote other players in the raid so that they can also invite people to the raid group and move people between groups. This can save you time if you're not able to efficiently manage up to 40 players at once yourself.
The raid leader has "(L)" by their name. Assistants have "(A)" by their names.
Raid UI
You can open the raid UI and drag the name of a class to your gamefield to have a listing of all players of that class be displayed on the game field. Likewise you can drag a group name to your playfield to have the players in that group displayed on your gamefield. In either case the display will show the health, mana and limited buffs or debuffs on each player in the group or class and you can click on a player listed this way to target that player. You can then right-click on the class or group UI element to make some modifications to how the UI displays or to remove the UI element.
Selecting Raid Members
Players can target other players in a raid by clicking on their name in the raid window.
Class Colors
Classes are color-coded. There's no significance to the colors beyond allowing that class to stand out against other class colors.
Group Balancing
It is very important to correctly balance groups. Typically, you want a healer in each group. If a Priest is not available, a Shaman, Druid, or even a Paladin can help out.
Leaving a Raid Group
To quit a raid group, you must leave your current group. If you forget, you'll continue to be in the raid group. Requiring you to manually leave a raid allows people to log in and out without falling out of the raid group.
/raidinfo
The /raidinfo command shows remaining time on saved raid instances. Also shows an ID to compare with other players (if you have the same saved ID as them, you will go into the same instance) |