Druid PvP guide

General
The druid's greatest strength is also its greatest weakness. Shape-shifting allows for extreme versatility, allowing you to fulfill any role and react well to any situation, but it often makes what you are about to do next very obvious to the enemy. Expect this, and be ready to change your plans at a moment's notice.

Feral Druid
Almost always, you will want to start the fight prowling and use a Ravage, or a Pounce with Mangle or Shred. Always incapacitate the enemy when you are healing yourself: before you shift out to heal, Maim or Bash (Brutal Impact helps). If they break the stun, use Cyclone or Barkskin. If you're running low on mana, use Innervate. How you fight will depend on your opponent.

Pro Tip: A player or mob/NPC that is sitting or lying down results in an automatic critical strike from your first attack. Ravage is thus generally the superior opener against drinking/afk/sitting players, especially against squishies like Mages, Priests and to a lesser extent, Warlocks. YMMV against Plate-wearers, and depending on your opponent if you expect the opponent to be expert in counter-attacking or getting out of melee range before you manage to land a second and/or third attack.

Vs. Melee:

In Wrath of the Lich King, 1 on 1 Feral vs Melee situations, you will generally stay in cat form unless they severely outgears you. When you are low on health, make sure you insta-cyclone them or bash them before you heal, you can also use an inferior Entangling Roots on melee classes.

Below level 62, Cat Form fares poorly since the druid lacks stunlock capabilities.

Vs. Casters:

You will spend most of the fight in Cat Form, as the armor from Bear Form makes no difference against casters. Keep it up close and personal. Get in their face. Most casters will do anything to keep their distance, and will slow you down in all kinds of ways. Almost ANY movement impairing effect can be done away with by shifting, notable exceptions being a Paladins Seal of Justice and a Hunter's Frost Trap. Keep a powershift macro handy as you'll want to use it often for any slows/roots that get thrown at you.

Bear Form does have its uses against casters. If you have the furor talent, a quick Bear Form > Bash can buy you time to heal or cast a cyclone for a re-opener in cat form.

Balance Druid
Take account of the value of Moonkin against some classes.

In the world of resilience, the ability to heal yourself outweighs the extra crit given by Moonkin Form, and as such you should only use Moonkin when the extra armor is necessary or you need protection from Polymorph. Going into Moonkin Form against casters such as shadow priests, warlocks or elemental shamans is going to use some mana and you won't be able to heal yourself with anything other than bandages during this time. That said, starting from Shadowmeld in moonkin form is the best way for Night Elf Druids to open against any class.

Moonkin truly shine in PvP. Starfire and Wrath can quickly chip away at an enemy's health while the DoT from Moonfire finishes off anyone who runs away. One thing that should be taken to heart: Moonfire spam is fun and ticks a lot of people off but absolutely destroys your mana supply. Moonfire spam should only be used to finish off a fleeing opponent, or as a last ditch effort to survive. Also, by spamming Moonfire, you never allow its DoT to run its course, because every time you cast Moonfire, its timer resets. If you insist on spamming Moonfire, cast your highest rank first then switch to your second highest. This still deals massive damage but it also allows your DoT to run its course. Also, Insect Swarm does decent damage per point of mana and its marginal reduction in hit chance isn't too shabby. Entangling Roots, unfortunately, is becoming less useful as time passes because more and more classes are being given ways to escape snare effects. If anything, it still delays a player from reaching you, which usually will give you the time to cast a Starfire/Moonfire combo.

Most players will suggest beginning fights in Cat Form, which adds surprise to your openers. If you are a Night Elf (and patient), simply shadowmeld and wait for your target to come in range then surprise them (hardly anything more surprising than a Moonkin appearing literally out of nowhere, then nailing you with a Starfire). Attacking from a feral form is quite a risky business however, as there is a large chance to miss the target without feral gear, and you will do very little damage. Try opening a fight with treants and/or starfall. Then root them, and nuke. Do not start by using moonfire, as tempting as that is, as it will detract from initial burst damage. When fighting a stealther, Typhoon is a great spell to knock them out of it if you know their general location.

Restoration Druid
This guide assumes you pvp in a group, because there are few instances where you can solo anyone as a healer.

Players will usually attack or CC a healer first if they see one. Your best defence against this is to stay in cat form and stealthed until you're needed. Often once a player starts attacking a target they will get tunnel vision and stay locked to that target, so if you pop up and start healing after a fight begins you often won't be noticed. You can also bait stealthy players in to attacking what they think is an inferior force if they can't see you.

Often your best option when being attacked is to use travel form and hots, round corners to break line of site and throw instant cast heals when possible. Tree of Life increases your armor and gives you instant cast Entangling Roots, so is a potent defensive as well as healing cooldown.

Some good healing tips/combos:

1) "Stun Locked": Cyclone then Regrowth. If you can spare time to cast anything, but you're worried about damage burst or kicks, cast Cyclone (but try to be out of range for kicks) first because it's a faster cast time than regrowth. Once your opponent is trapped by cyclone, you can get away with casting 2 regrowths (one on yourself and one on a partner).  If you want, you can save some time to recast cyclone on your opponent.  Cyclone is affected by diminishing returns if recast, so you'll have less time to cast heal spells the second time.

3) Don’t forget your feral abilities. When defending stealth as cat to avoid being attacked and to track opponents.   Pounce and Bash are still quite usefull.

2) Bash/Maim: It's best to use these in order to give yourself time to cast your longer cast spells, especially when you're worried about being kicked/spell locked. Bash/Maim are instant cast so there's no stopping them (besides miss/dodge/parry).

Vs. Melee: Melee Damage is highly unstable. You want to avoid getting hit by it as much as possible. You must try your best to keep melee cc'd and still manage to keep your health up through blows. If it is unavoidable, hopping into Improved Tree of Life form will reduce the damage you take and (especially when talented into Master Shapeshifter) increases the power of your heals. If you don't need to put any heals on other people or yourself, it's best to stick in bear form till your services are needed.

Vs. Casters: Casters are tricky because you don't have much in the way of stopping them from casting spells on you. Line of Sight is your best friend against casters. You can cast HoTs on the move, while almost all high damage spells need the caster to stand still, so abuse pillars and tight corners to break their spellcasts. In most caster cases, you can cyclone them to keep their outrageous damage outputs down while waiting for a dps partner to kill their target. Mages and to a lesser extent Shamans and Warlocks with Felhunters are the exception because if they counterspell you while casting cyclone, all of your major survival spells and abilities are locked down. The best thing to do while in a lock down is go Bear Form or travel form (if you are near something you can line of sight with). Use instant casts as much as possible, use your instant hots to heal yourself and others. But if there is no mage or felhunter, go ahead and freely cast regrowths, roots and cyclones.

Controlling Healers: Even as resto you have respectable short-duration CC abilities. If you start the fight stealthed, a good high stream of CC is this simple combo: Pounce, 2xClaw(add in a Rake if you desire), Maim, (Go bear form, wait for maim to end use Enrage if you don't have Furor) Bash, (Wait for bash to end) Cyclonex3. Lots of control from that. If you are having a problem killing a healer and you're having a breeze with the healing, charge up a Starfire and hit Moonfire right at the end for maximum burst and some dot damage afterward.

Healing for a DPS partner: You can do all the tricks in the world, but you gotta make sure your dps partner can do his job, because no matter how geared you are, you're not likely to solo anything (and be keeping yourself alive at the same time). If you can keep your hots rolling you can free yourself some healing time and use it offensively.

Healing in Battlegrounds: The most important thing in BG is to not attract attention. An unmolested druid healer can easily turn the tides of nearly any battle, but if two or three opponents start attacking you, and silence/CCing, your won't survive long. When not immediately engaged in battle avoid tree form, either stealth as a cat or use bear, this will prevent attackers from immediately targeting you as a healer. You may want to avoid tree form while in battle as well, as a giant walking tree is far more attention grabbing then an elf-or even a giant cow-running around casting instant cast spells. Tree of Life is very useful when a melee opponent has figured out your a healer and started attacking you, as it significantly boosts your melee damage mitigation and provides extreme healing to you and your party. It will take some practice to determine when to trade the healing power and survivability of tree of life for the subtlety of caster form. In BG such as arathi basin there are many patches of grass which a tree can hide in to help attract less attention (you would be surprised how well this works). HoTs can be powerful here, opponents are less likely to notice slow stead heals then they will if you land a healing touch and take their victim from 5% hp to 80%.

The use of healing addons like Xperl and healbot can be extremely useful in smaller scale battles. Properly configured these addons can tell you who is in range of heals and allow easy targeting and healing of allies not in your group. In larger scale battle grounds these addons can take up a good amount of screen space, but once again proper configuration of addons can minimize this annoyance. It helps to disable the group panels while in battlegrounds.

Even if at full health it can be useful to keep rejuvenation up at all times. If stunned or feared the Hot will provide extra healing through the CC, and allows instant use of swiftmend once the CC wears off. Don’t be afraid to waste mana on inefficient heals on occasion, often a battle for a flag will be over (one way or another) before you have a chance to run out of mana anyways, besides a dead tree with full mana never helped anyone. Of course if fighting opponents with mana drain or while Innervate is down one should switch to more conservative usage of mana.

In Strand of the Ancients a resto druid will generally want to main towers or seige engines through the fight. Healing is all but worthless during offense (as all dps is focused on Siege engines which can not be healed) and has limited use even on defense. By taking one of the seige engines or turrents you can still be effectively contribute to the battle.

Rogue
Rogues can be tough to beat if they get the opening move. If you see them before they see you, immediately drop a DoT. Doing this will eliminate stealth and most of their high DPS moves. Although Vanish can break things like snares, faerie fire will eliminate that, so cast it quickly. They can use Cloak of Shadows to remove faerie fire and go back into a vanish, so if you can try to slip a bleed on them as well.

As Feral
This fight primarily goes in one of two ways; either you open on the rogue, or he opens on you. How you fight the majority of the battle depends on that.

If you can get the opener on the rogue, your best bet is to open on him with pounce which not only stuns him, but puts a long duration bleed on him so if he vanishes and tries to run off, he'll shortly come back out of stealth. If he tries to run off with Sprint and Cloak of Shadows up, immediately go Bear Form and Feral Charge, and lacerate him once to keep an extra bleed dot up, go back into cat form and continue tearing into him. If he turns around to fight you, it's generally safe to stay in cat form unless he pops Evasion. If he does, go bear form until it has run out. If he outgears you, you probably want to stay in bear form for the remainder of the fight. If not, you can finish him off quickly in cat form.

If the rogue opens on you, or if the rogue vanishes right away and you think he is going to try to re-open on you after you've opened on him, go bear form and after he opens on you pop Barkskin. You can typically remain in bear form for the remainder of the battle and win.

For duels, your best bet is to just go bear form the entire fight. It's usually not worth playing the "find each other in stealth" game, because if he opens on you in cat form your chances of winning aren't very good, however if he opens on you in bear form and you remain in that form you'll probably win.

As a general rule, save your trinket for their Blind ability. They usually hit you with blind before running off to bandage and later re-open on you. Deny them this opportunity.

As Balance
Nothing yet!

As Restoration
If the rogue gets the drop on you in caster form you're very likely toast. As with all specs Barkskin is your first go-to ability when stunned. Nature's Swiftness + Cyclone is a good way of buying yourself some time quickly when the stunlock ends or you trinket out of it. Nature's Grasp is a good instant for rooting the rogue, though rogues have several ways of breaking roots. Tree of Life will give you extra armor and instant regrowth and entangling roots for healing and controlling a rogue despite their attempts at spell interrupts. Otherwise instant casts such as rejuvenation and lifebloom will help to keep you up. Try to put faerie fire on them to force them to use cloak of shadows if they want to vanish.

Warrior
Warriors are not one of the more challenging classes for a druid to face. Unlike most melee, Warriors are very susceptible to roots as their only way out of it is to use their PVP trinket. Use this to your advantage.

As Feral
Feral Druid's can easily bring down Warriors. Given that Warriors are a plate class, direct damage isn't ideal. Your best bet is to use your bleeds to their fullest since they completely ignore armor. Don't bother opening on them with ravage as it does very little damage to them. Open with pounce, keep rake up, and get combo points as quickly as you can to use a 5 combo point Rip. Once you've landed your rip, go bear form and stack lacerate. After your rip has run out, go back to cat form and do it again.

If the Warrior outgears you or is otherwise doing a lot of damage to you and you find your health dropping, pop Nature's Grasp and run off in travel form, hot yourself up, re-stealth, and go back at him again. Rinse and repeat.

As Balance
Nothing yet!

As Restoration
As restoration a warrior is usually not too tricky. Fury and Arms Warriors are quite vulnerable to roots and have far less ways of breaking them than other melee classes, so a combination of rooting, cycloning and travel form kiting while healing yourself with HoTs can keep a warrior ineffective unless they are well geared enough to burst you down within an Intercept stun. Shapeshift to break Hamstring if they try it. Remember warriors can spell interrupt in melee range, so get some range before casting roots or cyclone unless you make it instant with Nature's Swiftness or Nature's Grasp. Protection Warriors can be more of a pain because while their dps will not be high enough to overcome your hots, they will be trying to disrupt you rather than kill you, which they can do fairly effectively with Concussion Blow, Shockwave, Shield Slam, Shield Bash and Heroic Throw. Protection Warriors can break roots more easily with the Warbringer talent and a skilled warrior will try to reflect a root or cyclone with Spell Reflection.

Priest
Unless you are a very well geared Feral Druid there is little to no hope of damaging the priest faster than he can heal, so to beat the priest you will have to exhaust his mana. Feral Druids have the definite advantage in this fight since they have much higher Melee DPS which will allow the Druid to do his damage indefinitely rather than being tied to mana. Caster druids have the problem that priests can Mana Burn and dispel Innervate, meaning you will likely lose a mana endurance battle with one.

Tips by spec

Balance druids will find it very hard to kill discipline or holy priests, they can heal themselves far faster than they can be damaged. Discipline priests will also be able to do a decent amount of damage and healing, but your mana may outlast theirs by way of Innervate. Shadow priests are less stellar healers and if in shadow form they can't heal themselves, try to nuke them early to force them out of it.
 * Heal Early. If you are fighting a Shadow Priest he will be capable of some serious bursts of damage and a good priest will be saving Silence, Psychic Horror and or Psychic Scream for when you allow yourself to get low.
 * A smart Priest will regularly use Dispel Magic to remove the HoTs from your healing spells. Whenever possible use Lifebloom to save mana. Lifebloom can be dispelled, but doing so only does you a favor as it triggers the "bloom" component which is the major portion of the heal. Use it as much as possible. Priests that don't know what they're doing probably don't know any better, it costs them 14% of their mana to do so, and you get half the mana cost of lifebloom back when it terminates.
 * Try to get him to blow his Psychic Scream early. Once used, root him with Entangling Roots and cast Force of Nature on him. Remember to cast Faerie Fire and Insect Swarm to maximize damage. Priests have no other crowd control or stun abilities, so Psychic Scream is the best time to use your Barkskin against a priest.
 * Interrupt heals whenever you can, make sure you can follow up the interrupt with a big burst of damage. Typhoon will interrupt a cast straight away and Cyclone will cast faster than a large heal. Force of Nature may give you enough hit interruption to make time for some extra damage.
 * If the priest is able to consistently Mana Burn you, you will definitely run out of mana before he does.

Feral druids have become very adept at killing priests as of patch 3.0.2. You must have Berserk specced to make this work, but start the fight in prowl if at all possible.
 * Begin the fight in Prowl, you want to be able to stun him with Pounce, you need the time it gives you to recover energy with Tiger's Fury, then use your combo point to activate Savage Roar and blow Berserk to become immune to fear. Priests will almost invariably mash Psychic Scream when attacked in this way. You now do about triple your normal damage so spam as many attacks as possible.
 * Save your combo points for Maim. Wait for the priest to cast Power Word: Shield and start casting, and then maim him - the damage will be absorbed, but the stun will still be applied to interrupt the heal. Use the time it gives you to burn down his shield, hopefully he will have used his shield after his fear has failed. If you fail to destroy the shield, he will heal and you'll have to start all over again.
 * Shadow priests will die rather quickly to your attacks if you can catch them in shadow form and unable to heal. However, beware their DoT spells, Feral druids lack the mana or spell power gear to heal economically and you can easily blow your entire mana supply healing through the DoTs.
 * Cat Form has a 1.0 attack speed which can be very effective for slowing a priest's spells dramatically due to interruption. If you are level 62 or above allow him to continue casting and uses Maim against him as the heal is about to go off, if you have enough combo points this gives you enough time to cast a heal of your own.
 * If the priest allows himself to get low on hp, drop into Dire Bear Form and Bash him to interrupt his heal. This is especially effective if you have Furor.
 * If you have it, Feral Charge can also be used to interrupt a heal, though the smart priest won't let you to get the necessary distance to use this ability.
 * In real world PvP and in Battlegrounds harassing the priest can be just as important as killing him.

Restoration This battle can be tough if not impossible against a well played priest, but if you play as well as he does it will either be a never ending battle or you can possibly win. If the priest tries to mana burn you, switch to cat form, which is immune to mana burns, and start dealing damage with bleeds. When he switches to damage spells heal yourself and apply spell dots. Alternate in this way until you run low on mana, then cyclone the priest and innervate. Cover your innervate with as many hots as possible to make it difficult to dispel and chain cyclone the priest or run away in travel form until innervate has run its duration. The main danger is being psychic screamed in caster form, because he can then mana burn you repeatedly while feared.

Warlock
Defeating a Warlock can be a really mixed bag, as the fight depends heavily on your spec and his. In general, you want this battle to be as short as possible, as the longer it goes on, the worse your chances of winning are.

As Feral
Most warlocks tend to be easy to defeat as a feral druid. You want to avoid allowing him to cast as much as you can, so your best chance is probably to open on him with pounce rather than ravage. Save your PVP trinket for his Death Coil (warlock ability). Try to melee dance as best you can to avoid his direct damage casts. Use skull bash to interrupt his fears. Save your berserk for when he actually does manage to land a fear on you.

If he has a Felhunter out, don't bother trying to cyclone him to heal yourself as he'll probably spell lock you. Instead save your Predator's Swiftness procs for an instant Healing Touch.

If he has a Voidwalker (warlock minion) out, beware of his Consume Shadows ability which allows him to see you in stealth at a much greater range. You'll know when he is casting it because the Voidwalker must channel the spell.

As Balance
Nothing yet!

As Restoration
At equal gear levels this will probably be a never-ending battle, because the warlock will have the ability to drain life from you faster than you can damage him, and a warlock has less options to dispel hots and spell lock you than most caster classes, making it difficult to nuke you down. If the warlock has a Felguard out, Nature's Grasp will deal with it for short periods to keep its damage dealing under control. The most dangerous pet is the Felhunter, so we will assume the warlock is using one. Keep hots on yourself; the Felhunter can dispel them, but Devour Magic has a cooldown, so you shouldn't have trouble recasting them as needed. Other than heavy incinerate or shadowbolt nuking, the most dangerous tactic a warlock will do is dot you up and then go for a fear x 3 + death coil + spell lock combo. Provided your hots are ticking Barkskin should give you enough buffer to survive this. If the warlock makes a mistake and gives you a moment to cast, then Swiftmend or NS HT will save you. If he executes it perfectly and it looks dicy then use your trinket. The other crisis point will be when you need to Innervate. You do not want this dispelled by the Felhunter, so wait for the Felhunter to devour a hot, then cast Innervate and cover it with hots. Count 5 or 6 seconds and cyclone the Felhunter before it can cast it again. Felhunters have good magic resistance so bank on casting it twice to be sure. This should give your Innervate enough ticks to keep you going.

Mage
Mages tend to be all about crowd control in PvP. Fortunately as a druid, you have numerous ways to avoid or outright ignore almost all of the crowd control abilities mages have.

As Feral
Using a powershift macro is the key to this fight. So long as you make good use of it, you'll easily kill pretty much any mage. They tend to use frost nova and cone of cold a lot against melee, and slow if they are arcane. Powershift out of these the instant they land on you. Match their Blink with a bear charge. If you have infected wounds and the speed increase granted by the PvP set bonus, you should have little trouble getting behind them for shreds and to avoid them casting spells on you at all. For the few spells they manage to cast, use your skull bash. Save your PvP trinket for Deep Freeze.

As Balance
Nothing yet!

As Restoration
Nothing yet!

Druid
Your talents will feature heavily in this fight, and so it's probably best to treat the different possible combinations separately. Generally balance and resto druids fight very similarly against other druids. Of course druids with hybrid builds will require modified strategies both to play as and to fight.


 * Caster Druid vs. Caster Druid
 * Since even the best-geared balance druids are usually incapable of out DPSing a resto druid's heals, and since nuking is less mana efficient than healing, neither player should nuke much.
 * If either druid continues to nuke throughout the fight he will probably run out of mana and lose.
 * Since neither druid is likely capable of enough DPS to overcome the other's mana regen this fight will last until one druid or the other either leaves or grows bored and careless. Unless the druids are fighting in a very remote location or dueling this fight will probably be determined by the first other player to wander by.
 * Probably the only important advice is not to allow your hp to get low. If you allow your hp to get low enough your opponent may be able to Moonfire spam you to death - especially if he has furor and can get a quick Bash off to interrupt a heal.


 * Caster vs. Feral
 * Balance Druids generally have the edge over Feral Druids in 1-on-1 encounters. The best geared PvP Moonkins have approximately 20k HP and 16k armor - something a Feral Druid will learn to hate. Moonkins can generally out-DPS an equally geared Feral Druid due to their high damage mitigation and powerful burst damage.
 * The feral druid should use cat form for the better burst damage in hopes of outdamaging his opponent’s heals or at least of preventing him from doing anything but healing.
 * The great weakness of the feral druid is his small mana pool and low mana regen. The balance or resto druid should exploit this by rooting and dotting his opponent while keeping himself topped off on hp.  Nature's Grasp is particularly useful for this.
 * If the feral druid shifts forms every time he is rooted he will rapidly consume his mana pool and be unable to heal off the damage of the dots.
 * If instead the feral druid waits for the roots to wear off he will take the full damage of the dots and will likely be forced to shift to heal himself anyways.
 * The balance or resto druid can use Hibernate to buy himself some time to heal and regen mana or escape if he needs to.
 * Balance druids do a little better than resto druids in this pairing since their increased dps allows them to force the feral druid out of feral form to heal more often.
 * The Feral druid should try to take full advantage of Bash and Feral Charge to try to catch his opponent when his hp is low and finish him off.
 * Collecting combo points in Cat Form early for a quick finishing move (much) later can be the key to victory.


 * Feral vs. Feral
 * I would think that the form of choice here would be Bear Form since the added hp and damage mitigation are of immense use when fighting against a melee class, and the stun from Bash can be used either to buy time for a quick shift and heal, or to prevent the other druid from successfully healing. However the increased damage in Cat form (and the fact the their Bleed effects ignore armor) ends up making a bigger difference than the increased health and armor of Bear form, so it becomes a Maim-Heal contest.

Hunter
Hunters are not one of the harder classes for a druid to beat. Unlike Warriors and rogues they rely mostly on physical ranged damage to hurt you and deal relatively little melee damage. Don't take them lightly, however, as they have plenty of CC that can't be shifted out of to keep you at bay, and are less squishy than casters. Be particularly aware of Frost Trap as powershifting does little to help you get out of it. If the hunter's pet is bothering you, Nature's Grasp is effective at keeping it away, but don't spend too much time trying to CC it. One thing to note; if you ignore the hunter and try to kill the pet, you WILL die.

As Feral
So long as you can keep within melee range of the Hunter, he will do very little damage to you. This should be pretty easy against most hunters as you can make use of your powershift macro to get out of Concussive Shot, Wing Clip, and any rooting abilities that their pets have. Good hunters will try to keep you away with Frost Trap. If so, close the distance with bear feral charge rather than cat as rooting them in place is rather beneficial. If they still manage to gain a little distance after you charge, quickly skull bash to close the distance again.

One thing to be particularly aware of is Scare Beast as this is a fear that only works against beasts, and you count as one while in cat form, bear form, aquatic form, or travel form. That said, whenever you see them casting it, either quickly shift out to caster form before it lands, hit them with a skull bash, or use this as a good time to Berserk.

Generally you want to save your PvP trinket for his Freezing Trap, although it's often not necessary since after their first damaging attack you can quickly close the distance with feral charge.

As Balance
Nothing yet!

As Restoration
Nothing yet!

Paladin
If you are Tauren use Warstomp once the first stun is gone. Otherwise repeat until you get bored.
 * Feral Druids should have no trouble defeating a paladin, especially if you have Nature's Swiftness. Your DPS (after mitigation) in bear form will greatly exceed theirs. They will need to heal more often, and you can always innervate to extend your mana pool.
 * It's extremely important to take note of the paladin's weapon. There's a big difference between fighting a paladin equipped with the Hand of Edward the Odd and a paladin who is equipped with Sulfuras.  It all comes down to whether you can use Cat Form to kite (only works if you have talents invested in Feral Swiftness and/or 4 pieces of the PvP set equipped) and bleed the pally.  This is a feasible tactic only if the paladin is equipped with a low DPS weapon.  You simply outdistance them, wait for your energy to come back and dash in to Shred, Claw, Rake and finally end it with a 5 point Rip finisher.
 * It is vital for balance druids to keep them out of melee range. The typical moonkin's mana pool is better than that of a damage-specced paladin, and with innervate and a mana pot, kiting a pally should be easy enough.
 * Once again, Force of Nature, Insect Swarm, and Moonfire provide a momentary advantage against one's opponent, especially if it's already rooted.
 * Use travel form to get to range if you need to buy time.
 * Save your Bash or War Stomp for when they're at low health and try to pull off a heal.
 * A Paladin can regenerate mana faster than a Resto Druid can do damage.
 * If you still want to try start with Moonfire, Faerie Fire and Dire Bear Form. At half health shift out, use Barkskin, Regrowth, Moonfire, shift back. Should he ever get to about 20% health then use Bash and spam Moonfire.
 * Restoration Druids are, like always, slow duelers. A paladin-versus-druid encounter can easily take as much as five minutes given the right circumstances, and generally finishes when one of the two parts has run out of mana. A useful progression is to begin in cat form, cast a regrowth with nature's swiftness as soon as your health drops a reasonable amount, and keep fighting in bear form. With the HoT and frenzied regeneration you can keep yourself in good shape for a while. When he's low on health and tries to heal, bash, heal yourself and finish him in cat form. He'll already have some combo points from the initial attack.
 * Heal early; remember Paladins have a stun and (as of 2.0) decent burst DPS. Even if you have nature's swiftness, he may just stun you before you get the chance to cast a healing touch.
 * Remember that their bubble works both ways; you can (and should) heal while they are bubbled.
 * Entangling Roots isn't terribly useful against a paladin, who can break roots fairly easily.

Balance Druids will find a fight of moderate difficulty in the Paladin. Against Holy-spec paladins, who have very mana-efficient heals, drop your treants on them immediately. Then shift into bear form and bash, removing their ability to heal for several seconds. You may be able to get their health down very low, but as soon as the stun wears off they will bubble and heal themselves back to full health. But if you nuke with wrath while they are stunned, and if you can stun them when they are at 3/4 health or less, they will sometimes die too fast for them to bubble. If this is not the case, then simply nuke them with starfire(do not use wrath, as it is less mana-efficient) until you are nearly out of mana. Then root and innervate. Starfire will also stun the paladin occasionally. If you are lucky, the stuns will prevent your holy pally from being able to heal long enough for them to die, but this is not dependable.

Against retribution paladins, keeping them away from you is vital. Always stay in Moonkin form against these guys, as without the armor you are like a marshmallow on a hot day. Make liberal use of entangling roots, nature's grasp, cyclone, force of nature, and starfall. While a ret pally can do massive damage, you can too, and with the advantage of crowd control. But if you let them close to you for a moment, they can stun you and deplete nearly half your health or more before it wears off. Be Careful!

Protection paladins are perhaps the easiest pally spec for a Balance druid to defeat. Root them, drop moonfire, insect swarm, and your treants. When they cleanse or break free and run towards you, typhoon is always annoying for them to run into. They will likely heal themselves once or twice, though this is substantially less mana-efficient than a holy-spec pally, meaning less mana for spells against you. He will typically save his bubble until he is almost dead, as any good paladin will. While your treants and roots hamper his way towards you, chip away at his health with wrath. Have nature's grasp on when he gets to you. He may stun you as well, but can't do dangerous damage against your armor. Shift into travel form and put some distance between you and him. Keep DoTs on him, and just kite using this method of rooting and running, with typhoon whenever it is available. Heal if it is necessary, but not unless he is immobile. Cyclone is ideal for this, as he cannot break out in any way, except via an Insignia of the Alliance or Insignia of the Horde. After the first cast however, the duration is reduced to 3 seconds, and then 1.5 after that, rendering it pretty much useless. Before death, he will bubble and heal to full health, and may even use lay on hands the next time death approaches. Use starfall if you are in a hurry.

Shaman

 * Shamans are similar to Druids in a way. They can be built either as Healer, Melee or Ranged DPS; so, you have to adjust a bit. How can you tell the difference?  If they are trying to keep their distance from you, chances are they are Elemental or Restoration (although their shocks, like cyclone, have a 20 yd range).


 * Feral Druids should use cat form against Elemental shamans and bear form against Enhancement shamans. Time your stuns carefully; shamans are just as likely as druids to have Nature's Swiftness.


 * Balance druids should have no trouble whatsoever against elemental shamans - the use of Force of Nature at the correct time keeps them from casting almost any heals. Night elf druids have an exceptional advantage when ambushing shamans from Shadowmeld, a starfire hit or a quick spam of Wrath will normally drain their life a good chunk and get them to where you can use your treants for full effect. Stay in caster form to heal early and keep it up at all times, remember that purging Lifebloom does the druid a service so never have it off you.


 * When ambushed by a shaman, you can easily get out of range. If they decide to pursue you in Ghost Wolf, sleep it; it's a beast.


 * Most Shamans deplete their mana pool quickly which will make them terribly vulnerable, but they can still use Wind Shear to interrupt your heals.


 * A good Shaman can remove all of Regrowth, Mark of the Wild, Rejuvenation, Innervate, Thorns and Nature's Grasp. Purge costs 8% of their base mana and can remove up to 2 buffs.


 * Use Lifebloom or Nature's Swiftness. If Lifebloom is purged it will trigger the "bloom" component; incompetent shamans will do you a favor and purge the spell, granting you a fast heal. Lifebloom is also very mana efficient; so, you don't lose much from it.  Nature's Swiftness is nearly impossible to purge (with any lag or macros, impossible); so, you can quickly use that to gain back life.

Note: You will not lose your combo points when you change targets; however, gaining a single Combo Point on any other target than your last will make you lose any previously gained Combo Points. As such, you can simply use a quick Cat attack to destroy any totem that the Shaman is laying down, as long as you do not make use of a combo point skill.
 * A good Shaman will probably drop totems once you’re fighting him in melee. Most of the totems don't really do that much. Strength of Earth and Grace of Air give him 77 more strength/agility, which is annoying, and needs to be dealt with. Luckily, they have 5 HP but cost very little mana; he may get tired of putting totems down if you just keep killing them. They also have a very short range in which they work. It's not a bad idea to waste a hit or so on them (especially in cat form).


 * If you are fighting a shaman who uses their Fire Elemental Totem, normal methods of wasting an attack on the totem will not work as the elemental shares a 4-5k health pool with the totem. Your best option is to ignore the elemental and hope you can kill the shaman before either of them kill you. This is a 20 minute cooldown ability and is therefore very tough to survive.


 * Without mana, a Shaman is forced to rely on auto-attack. Windfury is physical damage, which Dire Bear Form seriously negates. You will generally out DPS him because of a catch-22. If he has a shield, his Windfury Procs, on a 20% chance on hit, will be so small, and even further negated by your large armor. Dual wielding shamans are another story, but again their damage mitigation will be poor.


 * Faerie Fire will wreck havoc on a shaman's armor if they use a 2h weapon or dual wield.


 * Earth Shock, Frost Shock, and Flame Shock share the same timer. The shaman's shocks are a large part of his DPS, and they cannot be spammed. Because of this, you get enough time to land even your slowest heal. Force him to not use them, but when he does, quickly pop to caster form and heal. Use Healing Touch and Lifebloom more than Regrowth; Purge is very potent against HoT's.


 * If any Restoration specced Shaman is dumb enough to attack or duel you, use cat or bear form to force him to heal; shaman heals are inefficient and even if they pop mana potions there is little chance they can heal through the damage your forms can do. Resto shamans deal little melee damage and using mana for spell damage will reduce their mana pool even further.


 * If you manage to root him, move to your maximum spell range to avoid his shocks (20 yards). Considering Earthbind Totem, various means to remove roots and diminishing roots, this can only be part of your strategy.


 * Shamans get a spell (Lightning Shield) similar to Thorns. However, unlike thorns, any damage you inflict on them will trigger it. There's basically nothing you can do about it; so, don't let it influence your thinking.


 * Enhancement shamans when low on mana may try to use shamanistic rage and bloodlust/heroism to regain some mana. The way to counter this is to root them or stun them constantly, and keep them from hitting you a lot with melee.

Death Knight
This is a tough fight for feral druids, and depending on their spec, you may or may not be able to beat them. Death Knights have good physical mitigation and can do a decent amount of disease and magic damage to you. Frost and Unholy DKs are beatable, but blood-specced death knights are a serious problem since you'll suffer from a catch-22 situation: Either you go cat form where you have enough dps to hurt them faster than they can heal (but lose your mitigation against their mostly physical attacks), or you go bear form in which case you probably won't have enough rage to deal damage faster than they can heal it. The key to this fight is managing to get your heals off despite the Death Knight's fearsome array of anti-caster abilities. Bashing and healing or cycloning is good, but don't wait too long, as they can pop Icebound Fortitude to become immune to stuns for 12 seconds (18 talented). The best way is to use Nature's Grasp and root them. Be sure to cast Nature's Grasp just before their melee strike hits, as if they see you cast it they can use Anti-Magic Shell to negate it. Once they are rooted run far away from them, beyond the range of Death Grip and Strangulate, before healing or they will interrupt it. They will likely use Death Grip and Strangulate to drag you back to them and delay you healing anyway, so again don't wait too long before healing. Of course if they use Chains of Ice then simply shift out of it.

Balance druids will find this fight much easier, despite the Death Knight's anti-caster abilities, due to the Death Knight having few counters to being rooted barring trinkets or racials. This fight is quite similar to fighting a warrior, with Death Grip taking the place of Intercept. Root them as quickly as possible before they can get the Runic Power for a Mind Freeze or Anti-Magic Shell, then nuke them. Anti-magic zone can seriously hamper this strategy. If they Death Grip you then just run away again while they're still rooted, shifting out of Chains of Ice if they try it. If they trinket and Death Grip then use Nature's Grasp to root them again. Once diminishing returns are up on roots dot and kite them in travel form until you can root them again. If they Death Grip you then bear or moonkin form will give you reasonable protection until you can Bash them to get distance again (watch for them popping Icebound Fortitude and if so wait until it's gone to bash). Alternatively pop Barkskin and nuke them with Starfire to make them blow their Mind Freeze on your Arcane school, then cyclone them. If you heal at any point make sure you're at maximum range so that they can't Death Grip you, as a Glyph of Death Grip can leave you stunned and vulnerable in caster form for 1 second.

Restoration druids will treat this fight similarly to balance when fighting 1v1 but with a few more complications. Lacking the extra armor of Moonkin form will mean that their ghoul will do much more damage to you, but hopefully your extra healing power will make up for it. The main thing to watch out for is that when they Death Grip you it's imperative that you shift to bear form while in the air to mitigate the melee damage that's coming and hope they don't have Glyph of Death Grip. On the plus side your Nature's Swiftness will allow you to instantly root or cyclone them if you're caught out.