I know it's probably a bit weird to be talking about PvE DPS when the big story for PvE is the new cool stuff we can get by tanking -- but by now, the shine is probably off the apple for many Call to Arms participants. With bugs preventing us from getting bags and DPSers who refuse to follow kill orders or use crowd control, many have decided even the chance at a cool new pet isn't enough.
That's why, for everyone who's gone back to DPS and for everyone who never stopped DPSing, I want to offer a few quick tips for surviving in PvE. Maybe you're dealing with an inexperienced Call to Arms tank; maybe you're still working on recognizing your own threat levels. But whatever the reason, DPSers do die from time to time, and in Cataclysm, they seem to die faster and easier. Many of these tips will be death knight-specific, and some will be a bit more general.
Use your survival cooldowns
While tank death knights get a few unique cooldowns, many of our "tanking" cooldowns are available to any death knight, including those who DPS. Knowing about these cooldowns and how they work can be just the ticket to surviving a particularly nasty fight. Use your cooldowns when you draw aggro or when you're in an AoE-heavy situation and the healer doesn't appear to be able to heal you.
Anti-Magic Shell is, unfortunately, not quite as awesome as it used to, since you need to use talent points in order to allow it generate runic power. That said, it's still certainly a valuable way to avoid some damage. Most forms of magical elemental damage can be avoided with this. If you're being focus-fired by a mage mob or if you're in the midst of a huge magical AoE (even one you were supposed to run out of), hitting Anti-Magic Shell can shed a lot of that damage and keep you alive long enough to get some healing.
Icebound Fortitude is another great damage reduction cooldown. It's only 20% damage reduction, but with huge Cataclysm health pools, that may be enough to keep you alive until the tank takes back aggro. As a bonus, Icebound Fortitude will also provide immunity to stuns, which may come in handy on mobs that do, in fact, have stuns.
Blood Presence is a very tricky thing to use as a survival method, but in a pinch, it does provide some damage reduction and extra health. However, it also provides extra threat. This means that if you're retreating into Blood Presence to soak up some extra damage, you should also stop DPSing until the tank peels the mob off of you, at which point you should immediately switch back to your DPS presence.
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Death Pact is going to be more useful to unholy death knights than to frost death knights, since an unholy death knight is more likely to have a ghoul out, but in a pinch, you may be lucky as frost to have ghoul off cooldown and ready to be summoned and sacrificed. Unholy death knights are also at a disadvantage when they use this if only because a ghoul is a good portion of their DPS, but when choosing between a dead ghoul and a living death knight, the choice should be pretty clear.
Death Strike itself isn't as potent as it used to be (or at least, it has a definite cap to its healing potential), but it can get the job done, especially for a frost death knight. Unholy death knights are going to have a bit of a harder time using it because it throws off their rotation -- but then again, when you're getting pounded on as a DPS, you should be breaking your rotation to focus on survival. If you can, consider fitting a Glyph of Dark Succor into your glyph loadout, at least at the 5-man level. That way, you can be your own healer for at least the incidental damage and occasional threat grab.http://www.zimbio.com/World+of+Warcraft/articles/sunttRAAMu5/Classified+ads+master+game+Yumfries+Myndflame?add=True 15% of max health healed per a strike is pretty great, especially if you have full bar of runes with 2 death runes ready to go. Of course, the big problem here is that you will generate a little bit of extra threat just by the damage put out by the strikes, so this method is probably best used to heal up after the tank has already peeled the mob off of you.
Army of the Dead is perhaps one of the most controversial and misunderstood death knight abilities, and with good reason. Since the ghouls it summons have the power to taunt, it can do more harm than good, knocking a mob out of position and causing it to spew a cone or other frontal attack on the DPS or healers and dragging it across the room, making it harder for the tank to pick back up. We've covered the ways to properly use Army of the Dead in a guide we posted a while back, so I'll just sum it up here. Due to the taunting ability of Army of the Dead, it should really only be used as a survival tool when a wipe is imminent, such as when the tanks and/or healers are dead and there are no battle rezzes available to get them back up. Then, sometimes, Army of Dead can save the day. I have seen it happen. Other times, it'll just delay the wipe for a few more seconds -- but hey, might as well try.
Lichborne We've covered the namesake of this column before, but it's a good tip to remember. Lichborne makes you undead. When you're undead, Death Coil heals you. Therefore, if you need some quick heals, you can press Lichborne and turn your spare runic power into health. It's a handy enough ability that frost DPS, at least, may want to consider using a free talent point to grab. It also breaks you out of a few crowd control methods, which can be handy.