Earlier today we received some insight into Blizzard’s plans for Elemental in Patch 8.1, and news that the PTR will be arriving soon (planned for Friday the 21st of Sept). This post will discuss each point briefly, with some more in-depth discussion and analysis to come when the PTR is available for play.

Shifted some damage from Earth Shock to Lightning Bolt.

Elemental Shaman is the only lightning based spell caster. However, over time, Lightning Bolt has gone from being a significant portion of your total damage to one of your least damaging abilities. It should be a powerful and effective spell for you to cast, and not something that feels like a burden to your rotation. Earth Shock will still be your hardest hitting spell, but Lightning Bolt should feel a bit better as part of your rotation.

This particular change is subjective and centred on Blizzard’s vision for the spec. There isn’t much to comment on here, as it is best to form one’s own opinion of whether the fantasy of being a lightning caster is important enough to warrant shifting our damage from our spender (Earth Shock) to our filler (Lightning Bolt). A few gameplay implications of this change are:

An increased relative power of talents that rely on Lightning Bolt damage, such as Storm Elemental, Totem Mastery, Stormkeeper.

An increased reliance on stationary damage versus movement, as giving Lightning Bolt a higher percentage of our total damage will punish movement to some extent.

Lava Burst has had its functionality changed behind the scenes to allow an in-flight Lava Burst to gain a guaranteed critical strike from a Flame Shock cast after the Lava Burst has been cast.

This change should help your initial spells cast against a monster, boss, enemy player, or whatever else feel much better. You can cast Lava Burst before combat, and when it finishes, cast Flame Shock, and the Lava Burst will gain the critical strike benefit from your Flame Shock.

Allowing Lava Burst to be cast before Flame Shock has some positive gameplay implications that Blizzard covered quite well here. As it seems the Flame Shock and Lava Burst guaranteed crit linkage is something Blizzard wants to continue with, this change just helps with a bit of quality of life.

The level 15 talent Elemental Blast will now always pick a different secondary stat buff when causing a Mastery: Elemental Overload proc.

This is another quality of life change, but less noticeable. Currently the way Elemental Blast works is you gain a random secondary stat buff from the spell cast, and if you get a Mastery: Elemental Overload proc, it will grant you another buff. However, this buff can be the same you got from the initial cast, so the buff is simply overwritten (duration refreshed) with no benefit. With this change, you’ll guarantee more value out of Elemental Blast Mastery: Elemental Overload procs.

First, the Master of the Elements change. This is a step in the right direction, but feels like we’ve only been given half of what is needed for this interaction between Lava Burst and Earthquake to be worthwhile. The introduction of Lava Burst into AOE is a great idea that will help to add complexity to our otherwise very simple AOE priority. However, this change alone does not solve the fact that we won’t cast Lava Burst in AOE. With Master of the Elements being the only incentive, it’s clear to see that Flame Shock and Lava Burst casts will be hard pressed to compete with Chain Lightning. The Lava Surge mechanic is great, but with the cooldown on Flame Shock, there’s no real way to capitalise on this Master of the Elements change. This is compounded when considering the alternative talents in the same row: Aftershock and Totem Mastery, both of which have significant power in AOE.

As for Stormkeeper, the change is explained in the blue post. The most relevant situation where this is beneficial is in dungeons, where you want to take Stormkeeper for its AOE usage but still need to deal intermittent single target damage (bosses). Whether or not Ascendance can remain ahead in single target is dependent on the numbers, but this change should help with the loss of reliable (Unlimited Power) and burst (Ascendance) single target damage when taking Stormkeeper.

The level 15 talent Exposed Elements has been removed, and the level 90 talent Earthen Rage has taken its place.

A basic change that makes sense. Exposed Elements saw a few iterations in the Alpha/Beta, but the one that stuck never felt very engaging or impactful, especially for priority targeting. Earthen Rage is a passive, so not much to say there.

The level 60 talent High Voltage has been removed.

High Voltage is a good example of negative change from Legion to BFA. It’s a talent that exists solely to fill a spot on the tree, and its removal is welcomed. There’s very little to consider about this, as the talent is entirely passive and uninteresting.

New talent in the level 60 row: Call the Thunder

Your maximum Maelstrom is increased by 30, and the Maelstrom cost of Earth Shock and Earthquake is reduced by 10.

Once Earth Shock had its cost changed to a fixed 60 Maelstrom, a common complaint was that it felt like we could benefit a lot from having additional Maelstrom to pool two Earth Shock casts. This talent not only allows us to do that, but with a significant (30) Maelstrom buffer so we can continue to make priority choices for a few casts before deciding to dump Maelstrom on one (or two) Earth Shock casts. In the talent tree however, this talent feels out of place in the Level 60 row. If it instead switched places with Master of the Elements, it would result a better thematic and gameplay trade-off as the level 30 row would be more focused on Maelstrom generation/spending and the frequency of Earth Shock / Earthquake casts. This would require some adjustment to talents in the level 60 row so there’s no clear best choice in every scenario between Master of the Elements and the two existing Storm Elemental / Liquid Magma Totem.

The best description of this new talent is Blackout Combo, but for Elemental. It looks a bit overwhelming at first, but there are clearly defined functions for each effect: