In the sacred traditions of MMORPG players, there are several heresies you must not commit. You shall not ninja loot, you shall only camp someone's body when it's funny, and you shall not, under any circumstances, click your skills.
In case you're not sure what a "clicker" is, or have never so much as glimpsed an exclamation mark above a quest giver's head, let me explain. In MMOs, specifically ones where you have a hotbar flush with a couple dozen skills, general wisdom says that the mouse is for controlling the camera and the keyboard is for using your abilities.
Killing Tindral Sageswift on Normal difficulty is, typically, nothing to write home about—being a step up from raid finder, but designed to be (as most Normal raids are) a stepping stone to the harder Heroic and Mythic difficulties. That's assuming you have at least 10 times the amount of manpower Durendil has brought to the fray, though—so killing him on his own is a tremendous achievement.
"This was my most technical and most fun solo in 14 years," Durendil writes in the video description. "This boss deals immense damage, so I kept trying to survive for longer and longer, having no idea if it was possible or if I could manage the dps for w69 slot ทางเข้า the enrage."
Just to survive, Durendil w69 slot เครดิตฟรี 188 บาท stacked their character with a toolbox of defensive cooldowns, such as Fyrakk's Tainted Rageheart, while making use of everything else at their disposal—even their dwarven racial came in clutch, dispelling a run-ending damage over time effect: "I spent 20% of my time on this boss analysing my tries and theorycrafting the RT note on the left on an Excel spreadsheet. And it was fun."
Durendil's history of solo achievements goes way back, though. He's contributed and (with thanks to this ) caused some controversy about a year ago when he stumbled into a hidden mount that a for ages because, quote, "Then they all got big mad because he is a clicker and they didn't think he 'deserved' to be the one to find it because they tried (and miserably failed) for so long."
It just goes to show that a poor artisan blames their tools—while a skilled artisan solos a raid boss armed with nothing but an Excel spreadsheet. Who needs ? Not this guy.