Memphis_Bill

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  1. Quote:
    Originally Posted by IanTheM1 View Post
    Kheldians purposefully get more powers in their primary and secondary than normal in order to make up for the lack of APPs.
    /this.

    APPs are supposed to help "fill holes" in the AT. For instance, blasters get holds, immobilizes and shields, tanks, brutes and scrappers get ranged damage and a bit of control and the like. (Yes, there is some overlap, I'm aware - just ask my Elec/Elec/Fire with multiple holds.)

    Khelds? They have ranged damage. Melee damage. Control. Resist Shields. Mez protection available (dwarf form, Light form for PBs.) Heals. End recovery/management powers. Self rez. Phasing... What would they really put in an APP for them? (And yes, I see the "new form" comment, but as an APP? You'll have the form and multiple powers - and at 41, not many slots left for it, its powers, and whatever else you pick up. New forms would probably have to be retrofitted earlier and "lock out" one of the others - say a two form max, just in the interest of slots.) Much of what's left can be covered by existing pools (or the powers you didn't pick up yet from 1-40.)

    As far as the OP - yeah, the VEATs could use more customization. I'm not big on playing them, personally, but you should *still* be able to make them "your own."

    What VEATs would have specifically in the APPs, I'm not sure - but if they had them in beta, I suspect they're just put off (like the rest of the APPs getting a fifth power after the initial round was done, it just took some time.)
  2. The Triform

    Ahh. Now here's flexibility - the accuracy (er, tohit) of Nova, the buffs of Human, and the toughness and mez protection of Dwarf, all rolled into one nice tasty package. This is the MF Peacebringer!

    Well, no. If you've been reading along, you know why I'm not using that name. A Warshade can really take advantage of the forms to buff itself eight ways to midnight. They work together, powers and forms weaving a tapestry of death, destruction and purple fuzz. The Peacebringer - not so much. Yes, you can leverage your strengths by shifting when necessary, but you can also consider each form a separate entity.

    Where they do overlap (and this is true of Warshades as well) is in set bonuses. Bonuses, unlike toggle buffs, stay active between forms. If you've got Thunderstrike slotted in Nova's two attacks, don't ignore them if you're looking for bonuses in Human form's attacks and watching your stacking (the 5 similar buff/percent rule.) Use this for some flexibility.

    The only (click) buffs you really keep an eye on as a triform Peacebringer are human - since that's where they all live. You have a heal in Dwarf, and its built in protections. But it doesn't give you anything (save HP from that heal) to carry over to Human or Nova. Human's buffs - Conserve Power and Essence Boost, plus hasten (you are taking hasten, right?) carry through.

    Be very, very picky about any toggle you consider. For instance, the shields as I've mentioned before detoggle as you switch forms - you may choose to completely ignore them, or just take Shining. Pools like Leadership? Forget it. Imagine toggling up your tank or scrapper, then accidentally hitting Walk and having to do it all over again. Every few minutes.

    I was also going to say think about Stamina here - but with the announcement that the Fitness pool is becoming an inherent in I19 (as I was writing this guide,) that's less of an issue (other than one of slots.) With Fitness inherent, though, you will have more power picks. Remember, though, that while it's one pool you won't have to take (yay! More powers to choose!) you're still stuck with the same number of slots. And as a triform, slots are at a premium. Plot them out carefully - and be prepared to use a second build and re/freespecs, especially on your first Triform.

    On a Triform, if you have anything six slotted, take a close look at what's underslotted. Something quite likely is, or you're low on attacks (or have great recharge.) You're going to love to learn two things - IOs, whether you frankenslot or go for sets, and single slot/skippable powers. If they give you some utility (take Combat Jumping for the immob protection, put a single KB IO in or a LOTG Recharge, same with Stealth) grab them first. Put the next two slots someplace - typically an attack or buff - that need it. (This could also be a reason to take the shields - just take them off of your tray.)

    Single-Slot Gems

    Build Up. Yes, you want some recharge in this. But, if you're going to look at sets, see if you can squeeze in some recharge somewhere via globals and bonuses.

    Conserve Energy. Another with a single recharge.

    Quantum Flight. I really tend to use an END reduction, but that's habit from when it used to have its END ramp up over time.

    Bright Nova. Remember, slot the powers, not the form. (And consider strongly the Performance Shifter +END.)

    Restore Essence. Yeah, you might need it - fit whatever you think will work, or a global/proc that works. Say, a Miracle unique.

    Combat Jumping. Immobilize protection in Human form, though it is a toggle. Useful enough overall to consider.

    Stealth. I know I put it down before, if you're looking for it for the stealth *power* there are other ways to go about being sneaky. But if you're looking for something to put another Defense set unique/proc/etc. in, here you go.

    Thoughts on leveling and powers


    If you're sure you're going triform, plan on a respec at 20. At worst, run a respec trial at 24 (make sure you're in SOs or decent IOs and that the highest person is the leader.) After the respec, when slotting concentrate on Nova first (until you're at least four slots per power,) then Dwarf (I'd alternate between the form and power until you have four slots in the form - three resists, one ENDMOD proc. Remember, stamina doesn't work in form.)

    Don't forget, with Dwarf, that your taunt is NOT auto hit. You'll want ACC in there. (I tend to try to fit acc and recharge, at the least, but it's a very weakly slotted power when I do it.) You also do not have a taunt aura (such as Blazing Aura, Icicles, etc.)

    Personal preference on Nova - I like fitting a Range into Nova Scatter, just to get it more in line with the other three powers. No need to duck in and out to maintain damage output.

    Must have powers

    I'm going to repeat myself here, but there's good reason for it.

    Don't skip or underslot Essence Boost or Reform Essence. You want these up and boosting or healing you as much as you can. You are squishy, when you're not in Dwarf form (and don't forget to slot your dwarf heal.)

    Don't skip or underslot your two heavy melee hitters of Radiant and Incandescent Strike. Give strong consideration to how you're going to slot Solar Flare, as well - not only is it PBAOE (fits as Peacebringer AOE, too, doesn't it?) damage, but if you need a breather, this will knock whatever is around you away.

    Hasten. Especially when you're in light form, you're going to be very aware of having a limited number of attacks. Hasten, even with its crash, is a godsend for you. Low to medium slotting, and your attacks and heals are up faster - carrying over to forms? Yes. You want it.

    Build Up, Conserve Energy and Quantum Flight. Yes, these were in the single slot gem list, as well. They're useful enough utilies to be considered "must have," as well as letting you shuffle slots where you need them.

    Light Form. Yes, it locks you out of other forms. But if you're going to spend time in human, get it. It's got pretty decent resist right out of the box. And pulling numbers from Mids, a single SO there, stacked with unslotted shining shield and unenhanced Incandescence will give you some very nice resists - 85% smashing/lethal, 74% En/NE, 63% to everything else but Psi.

    Other power considerations

    I'm looking specifically at human form here. As you plan your build, consider just how much knockback you want. If you MUST have two AOEs, you're going to find yourself spreading slots thin. Decide if you want more KB or not, and decide between Proton Scatter (cone) and Luminous Detonation (Ranged AOE with KB.) If you start chasing sets, though, having both is a good source of recharge at 50, both with five slots - give one Ragnarok (if you can afford it) for 10% Recharge at 5 slots, give the other Positron's Blast for another 6.25%.

    Photon Seekers
    - the Peacebringer's pets. Unlike a warshade, these are not long lasting bringers of doom. If you've played traps and are used to seeker drones, you'll find these very familiar (and somewhat dumb - I've had them float around a valid target and do nothing for a fight.) They're best used as a melee attack, as they do hit pretty hard and do some serious knockback on their own. Slottable with both Pet Damage and Recharge Intensive Pets.

    Dawn Strike - This is a nuke. You will feel an endurance crash. That said, there's little more enjoyable than just walking up to someone and exploding. It won't tend to kill everything on its own from full health - effect wise, it's more like a Defender nuke instead of a Blaster's - but as a followup AOE (such as after a Dwarf Flare, Photon Seeker, etc.) it can be quite impressive. Have some blues handy for afterward, though.

    A triform Kheld is all about making those trade-offs. By the time you're done - well, a triform Peacebringer is, among other things, a learning experience. You'll probably find yourself looking at slotting your normal characters differently afterward, as well - having to decide just what every slot is for can really open your eyes to things like frankenslotting. It can be a difficult road as you level, but it's very rewarding.


    The Triform and binds

    Binds (also useful as macros) will be a big help to any Peacebringer that uses forms. As many powers as we get, I set these up long ago to have form-specific trays and switch between them as I switch forms. My setup uses the keyboard numpad - 1 for Nova (powers in tray 9), 2 to drop to human (and immediate flight, powers in tray 8,) 3 for Dwarf (powers in tray 7,) 0 for Quantum Flight. You can adjust them for whatever preference you have.

    Essentially, I save this as a file (I have a c:\binds directory) called pbbinds.txt. When I make a new Peacebringer, I just /loadbindfile c:\binds\pbbinds.txt and they're all set up.

    Code:
    NUMPAD0 "powexectoggleoff Bright Nova$$powexectoggleoff White Dwarf$$powexectoggleon Quantum Flight$$goto_tray 8"
    NUMPAD1 "powexectoggleon Bright Nova$$goto_tray 9"
    NUMPAD2 "powexectoggleoff Bright Nova$$goto_tray 8$$powexectoggleoff White Dwarf$$powexectoggleon Energy Flight"
    NUMPAD3 "powexectoggleon White Dwarf$$goto_tray 7"
    They're a little simpler than the Warshade binds, as there's not two differently named Teleports to work with. I'll also remove the form buttons for Nova or Dwarf from my trays - they're just not needed. My layout tends to be form powers in the bottom tray, buffs in the middle, and misc. powers (toggles, if any) in the top, with an extra 6x2 horizontal "floating" tray for temp and vet powers, just to get them out of the way.

    Final thoughts

    The thing about Khelds in general is, there is no "One True Build." Every path has its strengths and weaknesses, and there's flexibility enough in the Peacebringer to "season to taste." And if you think you know Khelds because you've played a Warshade, well, a Peacebringer will open your eyes. You need a very different mindset and approach to how you tackle spawns, or you'll end up face planting far more than - well, more than you should.

    No, they don't have the "higher highs and lower lows" of a Warshade, but the self sufficiency of a Peacebringer can be more attractive at times And a mixed group - well, it's fun all 'round.

    Reading list / References:

    Initial posting and discussion of this is here, at least until the next forum purge. (Once this is posted in Player Guides, please put any discussion/questions there instead.)

    Dechs' The MFing Warshade

    Capn_Canadian's IOs for Newbs, Casual Players and Cheapskates (I9) - some formatting issues, but still good to read. Even for non khelds.

    Plasma's Ultimate Guide to Kheldians (I8)

    ParagonWiki page on Peacebringers (including links to powersets.)
  3. The Biforms

    Biform - aside from what I called "The Inhuman" - is Human and one other form, either Nova or Dwarf. Like I mentioned early on, there's not really the same sort of synergy, the weaving together of powers to create something even more powerful, that there is with the MFing Warshade. That's no reason to discount the bi or triform, though.

    Human-Nova


    You're a person. You're a squid. You're the sushi place's worst nightmare come true. This gives you many of the advantages of Human form with the ability to concentrate a bit more on Nova's blasts.

    Pros

    More slots for powers. Nova's form doesn't really need slotting, and it only has four blasts. That leaves a lot of slots for humanform powers.

    Nova's accuracy. The plus of Nova is, of course, accuracy, and you can just swap form and blaze away.

    Travel synergy. Via keybind, you can drop from Nova to Human with flight toggled on right away - and from human to Nova the same way. No dropping like a rock for you!

    Cons

    No mez protection. Unlike Dwarf, Nova offers no mez protection at all.

    Defenseless form. It also has no defense inherently (not that any Peacebringer form does) and no Resists of its own in Nova.

    Slotting - Nova

    If you go this way - actually, go with either biform - be sure to slot early using the Kheldian respec ability. Start fitting slots into Nova, but plan them out so you don't end up short elsewhere. You'll still be using Human for a fallback when you need to be tougher, as well as buffing yourself. The only specific recommendation I make for Nova is to put a Range into Scatter to bring it closer to the other blasts. Diving in and out always makes me feel like I'm wasting time. Fitting in some recharge doesn't hurt, either. Don't forget your END reduction. Start looking into frankenslotting or sets.

    Powers and slotting - Human

    You're going to need to be a little more stingy than the pure-Human Peacebringer. It's not as bad, though, as the form itself doesn't need slotting, just the attacks. With Fitness becoming inherent, you'll have one less choice to consider - though you'll still want to remember any Stamina slotting you need. Hasten is also going to be worthwhile for you. See how much you can get without slotting, though - again, Conserve Energy, Quantum Flight and Restore Essence, while handy on their own, are going to be slot liberators.

    You're going to have to retoggle coming out of Nova as well. Between that, possible END issues (if Nova's burned more END than you thought) and slot crunch, you may want to look into just Shining Shield, if any. Tough is still useful, but it edges a bit closer to "Optional." Quantum shield, for all the Energy damage you may face, can go by the wayside or go with just a default END slot, depending on if you want to deal with the toggle or not. Slip an extra slot or two into Incandescence if you have them to make up for it.

    Most of the "Highly recommended" powers are still recommended here - Essence boost, Reform essence, Conserve Energy, Quantum Flight, Restore, Light Form... the latter especially if you drop the other shields. Incandescent Strike and Radiant Strike are still your go-to powers, and you should have enough slots for your attacks to be quite effective.


    Human - Dwarf

    Dwarf is more slot hungry than Nova. The form itself should take slotting, plus there are more powers to consider slotting. You'll be looking more strongly at set IOs, even if just for frankenslotting, with this setup. This is probably the heaviest Melee-centered form of them all. If you like getting right up in the enemy's face, this is the way to do it.

    Pros

    M-M-M-Mez Breaker! Yes, you get a form that you can activate while mezzed, giving you a nice resist boost, a handy heal and more mez protection.

    Resistance, Resistance, Resistance - Dwarf is very resistant when slotted to everything but Psionic damage. And you'll still be able to use Light Form, though it locks you out of Dwarf.

    Teleport - In dwarf form, that is. Immobilized? Pfft.

    Another heal!

    Cons

    Sensitive to slows - To me, at least, Dwarf feels more sensitive to any -rech you're hit with.

    Synergy? What synergy? - Dwarf doesn't even have the "At least you're flying" of Nova. Swap to dwarf in the air, and you're going down.

    More slot hungry. 6 powers as opposed to Nova's 4, plus slots in the form itself. Plan ahead. Though don't assume they all need heavy slotting....

    No Autopowers in forms - so, again, END management is paramount.

    Special PVP note - Don't plan on staying in dwarf while PVPing and being able to teleport away if things go south. Since I13, Teleport's "suppression" has been "It doesn't work at all."


    Slotting - Dwarf

    Unlike Nova, you'll want to slot Dwarf. I assume 5 slots if possible - three for Resist IOs (I don't care about END or recharge, just bumping that resist up,) one for a Winter's Gift (stocked up on a few last winter to fight off slows) and one, if possible, for a PS +End IO.

    You'll also really want to watch your attacks. Recharge and END reduction most of all. You only have three. You'll also have your heal, a taunt (that can use accuracy,) and Teleport. At least Teleport doesn't need to be six slotted - one to two slots at most (set, or END, or ENd/RANGE.) You can, of course, put PSI damage in the taunt via proc to try to turn it into another attack.

    Powers and slotting - Humanform

    Feeel the crunch. You'll really want to start frankenslotting with one of these, as many of the powers you want hitting hard are going to not have six slots. You can still fit in Tough and Shining Shield and have them slotted pretty decently. You'll like having Light Form later on, though it locks you out of Dwarf's heal. You can, if you choose, underslot one of your ranged attacks (such as Gleaming Bolt/Eye) to move those slots into the melee.PBAOE attacks. Just be sure you're not going to be sitting around offering nothing to your target but conversation. If you're not punching face, tweak a bit.
  4. Forms and You

    So, here you are at 22. Ready for a respec and some nice, shiny level 25 SOs. (Or IOs, or sets. I'm not picky.) Again, we're not just rewriting Dechs' guide with less purple, we're looking at being a Peacebringer - and that means human or multiform.

    "But Bill, you studly tanker/peacebringer/plays everything altoholic," you say, "I'm not sure what I want to be." (OK, maybe you don't say it that way. It's the thought that counts. Stop laughing.) Well, let's go through the pros and cons of the various configurations. This is not simpler to more complex - each strategy has its own tradeoffs. We'll start with... humanform.

    The All Human League

    So, you decided being seafood just wasn't for you. You've got two arms, two legs and don't have people singing B-52s songs when you walk by. Fair enough. If you like the Blapper playstyle, you'll be right at home here - you'll probably think you've gone to Blapper heaven, because that's just what you are.

    Pros:

    No slot crunch. Really. You're not splitting your slots between your human powers, two forms (well, I know you wouldn't slot Nova) and the ten powers that come with them, trying to stretch them as far as you can. No, all your slots go right in your human powers. And you'll like it that way.

    No form switching to buff *clap-point* you up
    . Hasten up? Click it. Essence Boost ready? Autofire? It's going off. All your powers are there at your beck and call, not hidden away in other forms.

    No loss of powers. OK, one word. STAMINA. It will be running eternally. No loss when you swap forms.

    No retoggling. This is a complaint of multiforms. Have Shining Shield? Maybe Tough? You don't when you come back from your other form... oh, wait, you don't HAVE other forms! So long as you have endurance, you have your toggles running.

    Cons:

    No forms.
    Yes, you want to be human, but the forms have their uses. What are you losing? While Nova's not that big a loss, you lose your mez protection and a second heal in Dwarf form.

    Set loss: 1 set type (Taunt.) If you're looking for set bonuses, of course, you can snag the Presence pool for this.

    Power and leveling strategies

    You'll have most of your attacks available. Absolutely don't skip Radiant Strike or Incandescent Strike. Just like the prior section, Essence Boost is a must have, as is Reform Essence.

    To help with the slot crunch (IE, I want a strong heal NOW!) consider Conserve Energy at 24. It's helpful on its own, but doesn't really need slotting - which means you get the slots at 23 and 25 to put right into your self heal. Also, Quantum Flight is a really nice SHTF button - instant phase (30 sec) with max flight speed. Another with no slotting really needed, which lets you spread those out to other places.

    The shields will be more useful to you. You're losing the high resists of Dwarf form, after all, but at the same time, you don't need to retoggle. Shining Shield, the Smashing/Lethal, should obviously be first on your list when you pick them up. Quantum Shield next - you're a Peacebringer, you will face Voids doing Negative Energy damage. Might as well mitigate some of it. Thermal is totally up to you, but really... how often have you said "I really wish I had fire/cold resist?" If you want it for another resist set bonus and have the slots, go for it.

    Light Form.
    It's Invincibility. Yes, it has a crash. It also turns you into a ball of fluff that can beat on your enemies from inside, which I find oddly amusing. Grab and slot. Unslotted, on its own (in Mids) you'll be at 52.5% resistance. Combined with the other shields... yeah, it's nice. Just watch for the blinking icons.

    You'll appreciate having the Fitness pool as an inherent after Issue 19. Be sure to remember to slot Stamina. (Or don't and throw an assisting Miracle in Health.)

    Optional powers

    Group Energy Flight. It's group fly, with all the plusses and minuses. By the time you get it, though, most everyone else has a travel power. And with jetpacks given out so freely, well, it loses some of the luster.

    Pulsar. It's a stun, which can open up some sets and bonuses, and you'll have the slots. You won't stun bosses with it, though.

    Glowing Touch - If you want to be a khealer, here's your Aid Other. But it looks cooler.

    Restore Essence - It's a rez. It's something else that doesn't really need slotting, and it's useful for what it is. I usually grab it.

    Photon Seekers. Still dumb as rocks, but released in melee, it's not a bad attack, usually. Take Solar Flare first, though.

    Dawn Strike. Do you like exploding? Consider this. Don't forget, though, you've got Conserve Power, not Stygian Circle - you're not doing an instant refill when you're done.

    Power pools, aside from Fitness:

    - Concealment. I mentioned before, I'm biased, I like stealth on my Peacebringers. However, unless you want a Def set, you don't need the power pool. 15-25, Hyper Stealth in Bloody Bay. 20-30, Combat Invisibility (better than stealth.) 30+, Hyper Phase from Warburg. Alternately, you can get the stealth IOs to put in Sprint, Hover or Fly. Plus, if you want a phase, you have Quantum Flight. Concealment is generally skippable.

    - Speed. Just for Hasten. Snag when possible. If you want superspeed, go for it.

    - Leaping. Primarily for Combat Jumping's Immob protection (and/or a place to put a second Karma KB protect IO, if desired.)

    - Fighting. Incandescense works with Quantum shield to boost your Energy/Negative resists. Tough works with Shining Shield. Worth the investment? That's up to you. Me, I like staying alive longer. Three SOs in each = almost 53% resistance.

    Playing the humanform

    You're melee. All the time. Even your ranged attacks, just consider a REALLY LONG punch. You can lean more toward multiple target with Proton Scatter, and Solar Flare will scatter enemies to the winds (so pay attention when you're on teams - stay toward the edges to keep them together.) This is also where my stealth bias comes in - I love to get the drop on a Void hunter. Stealth, fly, follow, queue up Incandescent Strike, finish him when he's down. (Solar Flare can take care of getting the rest of the group off your back right away.) If there's not a mezzer, hit the first target with a quick Gleaming bolt (that -def, remember) before hitting him hard with Incandescent. Mezzers and voids, open with Incandescent (or Radiant to knock them down and away.) There's really no need to ever hang back. You are the front line.



    The Inhuman

    This is just the conceptual opposite of humanform. Yes, you do have a human form, but your focus is on Nova and Dwarf.

    I'll admit, for me this is pure theorycraft. I've never gotten into this particular style, but others have, and it might appeal to you. What you'll end up with is a fully slotted Dwarf and Nova, with some utility in Human form.

    Pros:

    Fully slotted forms. Go with sets if you want. Your blasts, your taunt, everything about your forms will be the best you can make it.

    Set bonuses. Humanform set bonuses still carry over. You can look at some powers for oddball sets or power choices you wouldn't actually use otherwise for set muling, if you choose.

    No retoggling. Since you're concentrating on the forms, you're not taking shields and such - so, no retoggling needed.

    Cons:
    No stamina. END maintenance is going to be something to watch for you, unless you choose to drop to humanform to USE stamina. Otherwise, Conserve Power and Performance Shifter +END IOs will be your END. (Note that Fitness will be inherent after I19, so you'll be able to drop to Human to give yourself a little Recovery boost here and there if needed without burning a pool pick on it.)

    Switching for buffs - Hasten, for instance, cannot be activated in form. You MUST switch to human for it. Same with Essence Boost and Reform Essence. Note this doesn't apply to Accolade powers.

    Boom-Boom - OK, Khelds are noisy when they switch. You'll be switching. If the sound annoys you, this isn't for you. Of course, you'll have more reason to stay in form anyway, compared to, say, the MFing warshade...

    No real synergy.

    Power suggestions

    Hasten. You'll want it, even though you need to drop to human to use it. The other suggestions of Build up, Essence boost, Reform essence and Conserve Energy also hold true here. I'd also suggest Quantum Flight here - again, it's a great get-out-of-jail-free card, and doesn't need slotting. However, if there's something else that fits your needs better, grab it.

    Skip the shields. Barring wanting them for set bonuses, you're not going to want to spend time toggling them on between forms. You're not going to concentrate on human attacks, just your buffs.

    If anyone who plays this form wants to chip in with their experiences, you're more than welcome.

    Quick direct reply from Vessel of Light with their experience:
    Quote:
    Slotting for the most part was simple, Nova and Dwarf are fully slotted except for the dwarf teleport. It works well enough in combat situations with no slots and if I need to travel any real distance I'll switch to human or nova and fly. Hasten, Essence Boost, Build Up, Conserve Energy, and Photon Seekers all have extra slots devoted to them as I found them to be the human form powers I used most.

    I didn't build my PB is mids or go into anything to intensive it came about naturally and I have selected and slotted the powers I found myself using most. I don't really frankenslot and tend to go for the full 6 piece set in my powers So I'm guessing that there are places that my build could still be improved on. I picked sets with an eye toward recharge with the low number of powers available to me in each form having them up as much as possible helps a great deal. Also End was rarely a problem, I could already cap my HP with Essence Boost and Dwarf. Resist bonuses don't seem large enough to be worth the effort ( and on teams could be wasted when in Dwarf ) and at the time I started building up IOs for my PB I didn't think I could get enough defense to make a noticeable difference ( having seen some other players builds I think it is possible now ).

    You note End as being a concern but to be honest I rarely felt it on my PB. putting the +end proc into both the nova and the dwarf solved almost all my problems. Until I got the +End accolades and a couple of random bonuses while slotting IOs I could burn myself out of End by hitting hasten without conserve energy and then go nova and constantly fire off my AoE attacks when they were up and ST attacks as filler. Even this would take a minute or two of constant fire before my end bottomed out though.

    Lastly a bit on how I play, as I find knowing the context of what a player wants out of a PB helps me make more sense out the powers taken. Solo I play simply. start in human, throw up the buffs that are up (with the amount of recharge I have now days build up is almost always up every mob and the others are up fairly often). Then switch to nova, fire off my AoEs then start working on the remains. If I get held or start taking to much damage I'll drop down to dwarf and then ground and pound the rest of the mob. Rinse and repeat with the next mob. Note I love photon seekers. Both AoEs along with some blasts from them is a wonderful way to open up a fight against a large group. And alternately against a tough melee target/group I will summon them and then engage from range, when the bad guys get close to my squiddy self the seekers generally will home in cause some good damage and more importantly have a chance to send them flying away giving me more time to blast in nova before having to drop down into dwarf for the resistances.

    On teams I fill the gaps. If they need a tank I just happen to do fairly well at that job. I have just enough heals to keep a slightly squishy tank alive ( I admit at 50 this isn't as big of a deal but while leveling a surprising number of tanks struggled and the extra heals kept them going ). And with Nova I put out a decent amount of damage. In most groups tanking is covered and my small amount of healing is not needed constantly so I get to play in Nova alot. So human form before the fight, throw up my buffs, switch and then blast away. I also look to play a protective role. being ranged dps gives me a good view of the fight so I can see problems developing and move to counter them. The most common one being ambushes or extra spawns getting aggroed. fly over blast a couple times then drop to dwarf and hold them up until the group gets around to dealing with them. Fill in tanking also comes up from time to time when the RNG decides it doesn't like the main tank and they drop to a bad string of attacks. Spot healing and mez breaking fall under this umbrella as well. A buffer/debuffer/controller that is mezzed can quickly turn the tide of a bad situation if I can get a stimulant off on them. I don't use the heals a lot most times I float merrily along shooting bad guys all day long but having the extra support options on hand for the rainy day is always a good thing.
  5. Growing Up Squiddy

    OK, we're finally into the meat of the guide. How do you grow from a sea monkey to a white, glowy squid of doom? Well, sit on down and... forget some of what you read in Dechs' guide. I'm going to have you put off your final decision on what you want to be until level 22, and I'm going to make a few assumptions.

    Levels 1-22


    First, even if you really, really want to be human form, pick up Nova at 6 for now. Yes, I know it screws with your RP concept. Believe me, you'll be in Human enough, and people will forget all about that little seafood indiscretion as a kid. (Alternately, well, keep your second build handy at level 10.)

    Quote:
    Aside: The second build and Khelds

    If you're considering forms at ALL, I'd recommend going ahead and starting that second build at 10 anyway. Yes, it's another respec you'll have to burn, but the first time you use it, you won't be able to do the Kheld "respec" trick, where Nova and/or Dwarf powers are available as inherents. Doesn't matter, perhaps, if you want to go all human.
    Unlike Dechs, I'm not going to suggest you respec at level six. No, it doesn't matter which attack you take at levels 1 and 2. Stick a slot in both at 3 if you want. But at level 4 you get your first "old reliable" power. At level 4, Essence Boost comes up. This gives you a self heal and bumps your maximum health (HP) up. It also gives some Toxic resistance - and this early, y'know, you're going to fight Vahzilok. Every little bit helps. Slot for health and recharge. Don't worry about sets right now.

    Pre-22, the shields just aren't worth taking and slotting. We'll worry about them during the respec, when we're near SO levels.

    So, Nova. Leave the form at the default slot, and start sticking slots in the attacks. Don't worry about the slots you put into your initial attacks, we're respeccing at 20 or so anyway.

    Yes, the form gets a tohit boost. Slot your accuracy. Slot at least one END reduction - remember, even though you'll have Stamina as an inherent from level 1 after issue 19, it's not going to affect this form. And I personally like to slot Bright Nova Scatter with a range, to help get it close to the other three attacks.

    Ahh... but don't forget, you're a Peacebringer. You will be dropping to human whether you like it or not. While on your journey, there ARE some powers to keep in mind.

    Radiant Strike - your first melee attack. It comes at level 6, same time as Nova. Snag it ASAP. Good damage, and it does knockback. Good for playing keep away from the squiddy. Third most important during this stage, through the mid teens or so, right behind the Nova attacks and Essence Boost.

    Build Up - Level 12. Fire it off, swap to Nova. Yes, you're wasting some of its duration in the transformation, sorry.

    Incandescent Strike - level 18. Yes, this close to the respec. It's still a "must snag" power. It's one of the heavy hitters of Peacebringerdom.

    White Dwarf - Level 20. What, no respec at 20? Yeah, I know. We can, or we can wait for SOs at 22. Because the other thing we're taking opens up then - Reform Essence. That and we can sell off all the DOs, TOs, and common IOs (if you so choose) all at once to fund your transformation. Pick it at 22, and then...


    Decide your future.

    You're 22. How do you want to proceed? Humanform, the Inhuman (forms only,) Human/Dwarf, Human/Nova or Triform? It's time to decide.
  6. Peacebringers and enhancements

    "Woah, wait, you haven't even started talking about leveling and you're going into enhancements? And I though you weren't giving a build!"

    Yes, I am. And no, I'm not giving a build.

    There are a few things to keep in mind when planning out your Peacebringer (even if, like me, you don't really "plan them out." MIDS is nice, but just letting them grow can be fun, too.)

    If you're going to go multiform, you'll feel the crunch.

    Slot crunch, that is. Human form isn't bad. Bi-form can start getting a little tight. Triform, you'll have to get creative. What does this mean? Really consider your slotting. A Peacebringer, especially your first one, you can expect to burn respecs and that second build on as you "get it right." You'll also find yourself thanking the devs for putting IOs into the game.

    Pre-I9, Hami-Os (available late game) were the Kheldian's friend. Multi-aspect enhancement at full SO power (more, at one point) in a single slot? Obviously, we were dreaming! It was late-game heaven! (Yes, Titan-Os also exist, but faded so fast it just wasn't funny.)

    After I9? Multi-aspect enhancements are commonplace. And really, really useful - often exceeding SO slotting even without set bonuses.

    Required reading. No, really. Capn_Canadian's IOs for News, Casual Playas & Cheapskates. It's an I9 guide, and still formatted for the old forums, but really will show you what I mean. And you don't need to spend a lot! What it boils down to - take advantage of frankenslotting.

    Frankenslotting aside, it's really worth looking at sets as well. The set bonuses carry over between forms - not just for a few seconds, but as long as the set/power is viable. That can be a BIG boost, especially when you start building for bonuses. Fortunately, you have a lot of sets to choose from....

    IO help - Remember everything your powers do!

    The frankenslotting guide was great reading, isn't it? Now, don't limit yourself to which sets you can take. Think of what your Peacebringer does. What sets come to mind?

    Melee.
    PBAOE.
    Ranged damage.
    Targeted AOE.

    OK, think a little more...

    Heals.
    Resistance.
    Flight/Universal Travel.

    We're getting a pretty good little list. But you're missing a few.

    Pet damage.
    Recharge Intensive Pets.
    Endurance Modification - you'll want to remember this!
    Defense Debuff.
    ACCURATE Defense Debuff.
    ToHit Buff, especially good to remember if you take Nova.
    Leaping, if you take Dwarf.
    Knockback
    Holds - yes, you have a hold in Incandescent Strike.
    Stuns - if you take Pulsar.
    Defense - Get a Karma instead of a Steadfast Knockback Protection recipe? Level 10, Combat Flight. AKA Hover.

    That's a pretty damn healthy list, ESPECIALLY if you want to frankenslot! Can't find an Acc/Recharge? Check your "other" sets. You may want to keep this page from the wiki handy. Bookmark it right next to the IO sets page. That way you can see easily what exactly has the combinations you want.

    IOs to watch for.

    OK. There are some IOs, especially for multiforms, that you'll want to go after. Call them high priority.

    All Khelds:
    Steadfast Protection: Knockback protection

    You're a Peacebringer. Even if you go primarily for forms, there's a chance you'll be in melee when you have to drop down to Human for a buff or two. All Khelds get an inherent resist at level 1. Slot this in there for four points of knockback protection. (You can pick up the other shields and put it in them if you want, but four points really does take care of most of the game.) They're (comparatively) cheap - and if you don't want to spend the inf, run some AE arcs and burn bronze rolls in the 15-19 range. Sell everything else you don't think you'll need.

    Forms in general:
    Performance Shifter: Chance for +End

    Even though after Issue 19 you'll have Stamina in human form, that doesn't carry over into Dwarf or Nova form at this time. (Seriously, bring up the Combat Attributes window, Base stats. Watch your Recovery rate, and switch into a form. It will drop in seconds.) Yes, the forms have some END recovery built in to offset the toggle cost. This proc can help. Grab it. Every ten seconds, it has a chance to fire off and give you a small END boost while you're in form. It can help.

    Dwarf:

    Winter's Gift: Slow Resistance.

    Just play around in the ski chalet during the winter event, gather candy canes and get this. Slows are NOT your friend as a Dwarf. yes, you can teleport. You still don't want to sit there with no attacks and your heal taking forever to recharge.

    IOs to keep in mind


    These are more "if you have the slots." Not needed, but they might give a little extra kick now and then.

    Overall:


    I'm not going to give a big list here. There are a LOT of procs in the sets we can take that give a chance for specific damage types. Khelds, by default, only do Energy damage (except for Radiant and Incandescent strike, which also do Smashing.) If you meet an Energy resistant foe, a chance for Smashing or Lethal damage can't hurt... if you have the slots for it. There are also those that give a Chance for Build Up or Chance for Recharge. They can't hurt. But don't sacrifice a needed slot elsewhere to fit it in.

    I will suggest, at least in AOEs, an Achilles' Heel Chance for Resistance Debuff. You're already making them easier to hit. Why not give yourself a chance to hit harder at the same time? Alternately, again in AOEs, Force Feedback: Chance for +Rech. Another luxury slot choice.

    Dwarf:

    Miracle +Recovery. For the same reason I suggest Performance Shifter: Chance for +End. This will fire off any time you use the Dwarf heal and give you a little Recovery boost. (15%)

    Perfect Zinger - Just in general, as four slots will help your recharge a little. If nothing else, grab the Psi damage proc for a chance of more damage. Turn your taunt into an attack. Don't forget, though, the Kheld taunt benefits from Accuracy as well.

    Nova:

    You can get away without slotting the form, generally. However, if you have extra slots - a Kheldian luxury - there are a few you may want to look into.

    Freebird: +Stealth. I like stealth on my Khelds. In your Nova form, you're going to be squishy anyway. If you can get a little closer before being spotted, it helps. It doesn't, of course, add to your defense. And if you have to escort someone, you'll have to drop form in many cases for them to follow. Still, after I18, the Stealth from this drops as soon as you detoggle (no 120 second timer.)

    Rectified Reticle: Increased Perception. Another personal choice, primarily to deal with ghosts that vanish and run away. Keep them in sight and slap them around.

    Gaussian's Synchronized Fire Control: Chance for build up
    . Who doesn't want a chance at more damage? It's admittedly 5% every 10 seconds, but still. It's a luxury slot purchase.
  7. Posting so I keep working on it, and to get commentary as we go. Several reply spots will be reserved as this is a work in progress. Initially meant to be a companion to Dech's "MF Warshade," it got scrapped and restarted. New effort follows.

    How to Raise a Peacebringer

    I was going to write this guide initially while riffing from Dechs' "The MF Warshade" guide. It's a good guide overall to compare and contrast, and I strongly recommend anyone considering a Warshade to read it. But the more I wrote, the more it came back to me just how dissimilar a Peacebringer is.

    That said - go read Dechs' guide. Take a few minutes to do so. We ARE going to do some contrasting here, and if you want to try both Khelds, you should know how the other half lives.

    What this guide is not

    I've got a philosophy that Dechs' guide works well with, and which I'm going to adhere to here. I am not going to give you an "uber lvl 50" build. You may spend thousands of hours at 50, and I hope they're enjoyable hours on your Peacebringer. (They certainly are on mine. I have, at time of writing, two at 50.) What I am going to do is give you tips and things to look for on the journey.

    We're also going to split things up a bit when we hit 20. That's really where you've got a decision to make. (You can always go back through the magic of dual builds and respecs if you change your mind, of course.) I'll go into considerations for human, bi and triforms at that point.

    I will also mention helpful IOs, slotting suggestions and such - but again, don't expect a build. (I will, however, point out "Don't miss" and "Seriously consider" powers.)

    The Peacebringer difference.

    "What's the difference between 'shades and Peacebringers? Insult a Warshade in a bar, they'll go out, slash your tires and put sugar in your gas tank. The peacebringer will just break your face." -Me.

    That simplifies things a bit. It's a good attitude comparison (though the 'shade goes from sneaky to demigod later.) But at the same time, it simplifies things a bit too much. So we're going to do some comparisons here.

    1. Secondary effects. A Warshade slows their enemies with their attacks. Easier to keep together, a little safer with -recharge. A Peacebringer debuffs defense, making them easier to hit with followup shots (and thus easier to kill.)

    2. Steady state versus rollercoaster. A Warshade has incredible highs - and low, low lows. Their self buffs, self heals and the like rely on enemies, alive or dead. (This is the balance which lets them get such nice buffs off of Mire, for instance.) A Peacebringer is entirely self contained. When Build Up or Restore Essence come up, they're going to do the same buff for the same amount at the same level with the same slotting. No worries that you're down to fighting one tough boss versus a crowd of minions. Your buffs are always there for you.

    3. Fluffies of Doom vs Fluff.
    OK, this doesn't make the Peacebringer come out quite so well. The Warshade's extracted essences are reasonably long lasting, ranged attackers that add seriously to damage for a while. The Peacebringer's Photon Seekers are... um... well, a melee attack. Don't drag them behind you and expect them to explode. They had an AI upgrade a while back that upgraded them from "Dumb as dirt" to "Just somewhat dumber than an earthworm." I've had them float harmlessly right on an enemy's head through an entire fight, apparently deciding to make them die of embarassment ("Oh no, dandruff!") instead of explodiness.

    4. MF for strength versus MF "because I want to."
    If you read Dechs' guide like I said, you'll see how the Warshade's dwarf mire, human mire, Eclipse and pets all work together to make a Warshade an engine of purple destruction. Bi and humanform are still viable - but you do lose out on some power, depending on combination. The Peacebringer? The idea of "Self contained" carries through here. If you go human form, you don't lose much by not having Dwarf - no mez protected form, no second heal.

    5. The Chosen One brings Balance. Similarly to the Warshade, your Inherent - Cosmic Balance - buffs your stats. Every Control (Controller/Dominator) character helps your protection from Control effects, and every other Epic AT (Hero or Villain) gives you Slow resistance. However, everything else is turned on its head. Are you protecting squishies? Every defensive AT (Tanker, Mastermind, Defender or Corruptor) helps your ability to protect them by giving you a damage boost. (OK, tanks and masterminds in bodyguard aren't generally squishy, but they are classed as defensive here.) Every offensive AT, such as sweaty Scrappers, BO Brutes... eh, wrong kind of offensive? Anyway, Scrappers, Stalkers, Brutes and Blasters all help you stand on the front line with them by buffing your Damage Resistance. "A Peacebringer is what the team needs; a team is what the Warshade needs." -Dechs

    These aren't all the differences, but it's part of what we'll focus on as we grow our Peacebringer.
  8. Memphis_Bill

    Loading Screens

    Loading screens are in the process of being updated. There's also a contest going on (or recently ended) to create them.

    See also COHSplasher - quick search should bring it up, though I *think* it has issues in Vista and 7. Don't quote me on that though.
  9. Quote:
    Originally Posted by Fulmens View Post
    So if it was me I'd run the Spider or the Blaster.

    ... New powerset. Spider Blast!
  10. Memphis_Bill

    New n00bs

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Eva Destruction View Post
    You guys and your "complementary powersets" and "all tanker teams" and "buffs/debuffs" and all those silly unneccessary things.

    I tried to get my static team to agree on an all-Blaster team for our Preatoria run. But we're going with all buff/debuff because they are all wusses. So we will have to resort to my Plan B: an all-drunk team. No, it's not on Pinnacle.
    Bah. If you're going for an all drunk team, go with the pros!

    (And an all-blaster team is great... have an all Elec/Elec team elsewhere. Team-TP in and watch everything else suddenly start twitching while draining all their END - it's fun.)
  11. Memphis_Bill

    Longer Buffs

    You don't get that YES, the buffs would be seriously decreased in some fashion if changed the way you want. It's called 'balance.' Sticking your fingers in your ears and going "la la la I can't heeeeeeeeeeear you" doesn't change that fact.

    Sets and powers that are underperforming get buffed. They need good reason to do so. (Example, Stalkers AS no longer breaking hide if they miss, and providing a chance for AOE Fear if they do, plus Hidden status taking less time to come back. Or /Energy Aura getting a heal added to their END drain. Or Dominators losing the damage bonus from Domination, getting it transferred to an overall damage buff while having individual powers rebalanced and END costs overall looked at.)

    "I don't like doing this" is not a problem with the powerset. And that is your "strongest" argument, no matter how you try to dress it up. You've been given suggestions on how to modify your playstyle to make it less of a "chore" for you. You are choosing to ignore them. That is on YOUR head. Not the fault of the powerset, not a problem for the devs.

    You don't like the buffing playstyle, don't play a buffer. End of story.
  12. Memphis_Bill

    New n00bs

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Zaion View Post
    There is no such thing as an incompetent team or player. Everyone is playing the game to have fun and as long as they accomplish that then they are successful at everything they do. To suggest otherwise is jackassery. Yes some people have a better understanding as to how their powers work, but those who don't aren't to be avoided or insulted.
    Oh, there certainly *is* such a thing as an incompetent player - and you can usually tell when the rest of the team starts complaining.

    No, the people who don't understand how their powers work shouldn't be avoided, I agree. However, those that don't want to *listen* and *learn?* Yes, they should, after they make that blindingly obvious. This is not "telling someone how to play," before that's brought up. I don't particularly care for micro-managers, either. But I'll take someone who's willing to hear "You know, Speed Boost does more than just make you faster," "You may want to make sure you're not casting your AOE Immob on top of so-and-so's Ice Slick, as it pretty well cancels it out," "I know it's not 'fun,' but you may want to pick up Practiced Brawler since you're about to hit 30" or "Might not want to try pulling with fireball" and learn from it over someone who just keeps doing it anyway.

    I've done my share of mentoring, both in-game and in the forums (in replies and guides.) I'm more than willing to put up with mistakes as part of a learning process - I make them too. But if someone's unwilling to learn and drags down the rest of the team - and I don't mean in DPS or some other damn set of numbers, but in *having fun* and wanting to keep playing? Yes, they're single-starred, with a quick note on what happened, and booted if it goes on too long.

    (Edit to add, RobertoLyon pretty much has the right way to do so, too. They'll know - in tells - why. Though they'll probably have been getting feedback long before.)
  13. Memphis_Bill

    Longer Buffs

    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Zaion View Post
    As to the comment about defenders not being needed after casting their buffs and leaving, that's ridiculous. The main point of a defender is to heal or debuff, that's why you bring them and that's where their attention should be while playing. Not on watching everyone's buffs and constantly reapplying them.
    So you bring a Defender, put shields/buffs on everyone...

    Quote:
    Any buff that is relatively cheap to cast and has no real recharge, but only lasts 1-4 minutes, needs to be changed to 20-30 minutes or even made into a cheap toggle aura effecting every team member within 100yds.
    ... and what's the point of keeping them around for the next 20-30 min instead of swapping out to a blaster? Two missions later, hop back on, rebuff, swap back out.

    It's also not "constantly," as has been pointed out before. If it is, you're doing something wrong.

    Oh, and...

    Quote:
    Pets die and can be recast, but people die and can be rezed, debt is mostly meaningless so what's the difference?
    The pets aren't paying $15/mo to play a game, perhaps? Or when a pet dies, they don't take the rest down with them, as opposed to the player dying and all minions dying at the same time? Seems to be two rather big differences right there.

    So maybe, just maybe you can ignore other peoples expendable, recastable meatshields, saving some time, and only protect the Mastermind - who can also buff or debuff, helping the entire team, even while resummoning pets.
  14. ... except blasters are already "ranged damage dealers." Not just AOE. Thus my comment that they'll be run over thoroughly by Blasters.

    Besides, having played a Stalker (several, actually,) I hope you're not relying too much on that Hide. After that first attack, it's gone. You've got aggro. And unlike a Stalker, you're going to have no defense. That aside from the fact that several mob types will see through or completely ignore Stealth and stealth like powers.

    I just can't see a reason to (a) make this AT, or (b) pick it over a blaster (or if I want buff/debuffing to go with it, a Corruptor.)
  15. Hmmm.
    Nova - easy enough to slot. Don't really need slots in the form (barring a nice proc or global.)
    Dwarf - dedicate some slots to the form as well as the attacks.

    I'd still say prepare to shift to and from Human a bit, as your HP boost, build up, one heal, travel (well, "emergency button" in QFly as well) and such are there. Unlike a Warshade's Fluffies, Photon seekers are... eh... skippable. They only blow up in melee if they feel like it, as opposed to floating around shooting things.

    I'd look into Conserve Energy when it comes up. Don't want to run out of END mid-fight in dwarf form.

    You may want to look into hasten, in any case. Yes, you'll have to drop to Human to use it. The buff carries over. I would *still* take and slot Radiant and Incandescent strike, even if you don't *plan* on being in Human much.

    (I really need to work up that guide I mentioned.)
  16. A few things.

    First, how high have you gotten - you're mentioning "near 30." More specifically, how high have you gotten with which ATs, and how are you building them?

    What do you *like* playing like? In-your-face attacks, range, support?

    Are you just doing missions, or reading through the storylines? Yes, the maps are a bit repetitive, but for me at least it's a matter of "why I'm there" more than "where I am." And there is some variety - some's getting into the missions (some of the newer Praetoria maps, which you wont' see if you're at 30 unless you've started a Praetorian, and some older like the Freakylimpics last map,) some you'll need to go to task/strike forces for. (Hess, Katie, etc. - you'll *always* remember what's in the volcano, or running the Eden trial, for instance.)

    Grind - This I'll pretty much always disagree with, but I think we're using a different definition. Early on (I've been playing straight since my join date over to the side,) yeah, there was at least one spot with absolutely horrible grind (37-38 to 40) where you just ran out of content and had to stay on someone else's team or street sweep for what seemed like forever. But now? Well, for me "grind" is a game like Aion, where you have to stop playing to work on farming materials, or trying to get enough gold for the next skill book, etc. That, I don't see here in COH. It's part of what keeps me here, actually.

    Which ties in a way to your "none grant new abilities at a slower pace than COH." I don't get that, honestly. No, we don't have gear drop to swap out, but we get a new power every other level through level 32, extra pools opening up at 6. From 33-50, it's every third level, but you're increasing the abilities of the powers you have by adding slots and enhancements. They may not always be "fun" powers (an attack, say,) but they'll usually be helpful, or help you fill out a concept. (The Fitness pool, for Stamina, for instance.) And there are ways around getting some powers which may help out - for instance, if you don't want to wait for a travel power (or dedicate two power picks to it,) you can ignore it, pick up a jetpack recipe, get a jetpack / zero-g "jump" pack from Safeguard or Mayhem missions, or go to Grandville or the Shard to buy one, using those power picks for other things. (Alternately buying the Natural pack to get Ninja run, or using a supergroup base for the teleporters can help.) Plus, we do get *new* abilities - not like (creating a generic power here) getting Ranged Attack I, which is replaced with Ranged Attack level II (not going alongside it, but just a replacement) five levels later, then Ranged Attack III ten levels after that. We do that with enhancements, after all, and give you additional powers to go with it.

    So... What are you playing, what do you like playing, and how are you building - maybe we can change your experience.
  17. Also,
    (a) Both aim and build up? In one powerset? Doubt you'd see it.

    (b) Empathy defenders do not get damage from using Absorb Pain. They just can't be healed by any means for a period of time afterward.

    (c) Seems like it'd either be far too specialized, or be run over thoroughly by blasters.
  18. What *I* would play this weekend? Bit of time on all of them. If I were - well, almost anyone else, since I can't really stand VEATs - I'd say work on getting the veat to 24 and get the "OK, now you're really a VEAT" respec over with.

    If it were me personally, I'd probably be working on the Controller, hitting 22 for stamina and SOs at least.
  19. Quote:
    Originally Posted by Blood_Beret View Post
    You had pets out when you zoned into the map?

    This happens on quiet a few maps. You need to use /releasepets and resummon.
    Yeah, has nothing to do with the map "not being designed for villains," I've had it happen while still redside.
  20. Quote:
    Originally Posted by Neuronia View Post
    Cross-server teaming sounds a lot like I'll be seeing @Neuronia-Champion or something, if so...sounds worrisome. They have made it work with the Markets though...

    Hmm...
    The markets have always been cross server, and don't display your character name/global/anything about who you're buying from or selling to.
  21. Quote:
    Originally Posted by Kinrad View Post
    For 1 or 2 A-Merits, I can obtain just about any specific recipe I want

    Is there a list of of what each recipe costs in terms of A-Merits?
    Last first - see the wiki (at least the Crucible entry has it.) The purple and PVP recipes cost more than 1-2 A-merits (from 25-35, IIRC.)
  22. I'll take a poison/poison. Secondary, modified, of course. Primary? Throw 80s hair band members at enemies.
  23. My biggest problem with Burn is trying to figure out where to retrofit it into my namesake Fire/SS/Pyre tank.
  24. It's still random.

    I was trying to get the last few tips for my (50, not that it matters other than making this easier) Earth/FF earlier today. Dropped her in Dark Astoria (I still love that zone.) Went through 5-6 full spawns of 21-25 DE, nada... then two tips in one group.

    You just hit a bad stretch.

    (Sharkhead... reminds me, have to grab some purples for my Fire/Fire dom and go Scrapyarder hunting. She's only 23. Should be fast tips though. )