
I’ll give you all the time you need to get you up to speed - I’ve got a Discord channel set up just for helping folks with stuff like this. If you have further questions about configuring ElvUI, feel free to reach out to me in-game. That’ll show you a number of choices and some of them are not fully implemented as yet (I believe) but the alpha settings seem to work well. But I agree that the default value is a bit extreme. In this video we start out with going through what I've c. I like the idea of a visual queue other than the side indicators to tell me which MOB/Player is my current target though (I’m colorblind and some of the other indicators work better with full color vision). In this short guide we continue were we left off in Part 3 of the ElvUI Guide for first-time users. nameplate scanning is now performed on every update cycle in the FRAMEUPDATE handler - this is required to pick up spell casting information as there is no easy way to. You can now choose to show the weakaura depending on the nameplate's spell cast/channel using spell IDs. I personally don’t turn off non-target-nameplate alpha reduction. M+ Spiteful - Target on Nameplate - Xeraph editv1.1.0-2 SL-WEAKAURA. ec > NamePlates > Style Filter > ElvUI_NonTarget > Actions I couched my commentary in the use of a pair of humorous help-desk tropes (at least I was hoping they were humorous).Įlvie’s command mapping to altering the non-target nameplate alpha percentage is essentially correct. It gets a lot of undeserved hate from folks who give up on dealing with its incredible flexibility (and resulting complexity). The nameplates are so faded that you can’t see them unless its the one you have targeted and the class resources are now all squares that just green. It’s one of the best-maintained addons out there. That’s not to say that you’re in some way lacking in either intelligence or education, only that this is a very complex addon with many, many axes of customization available and the learning curve can be very steep. That wasn’t sarcasm so much as it was a gentle nudge not to blame software for the user’s lack of deep knowledge about how to configure it.
