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Re: Warriors and spells

Posted: Sat May 17, 2008 3:43 pm
by Parrafin
I find bob extremely useful for an elf warrior. It can suck to have heavy as hell equipment and try to go anywhere without leaving yourself in danger. Almost necessary for traveling long distances.

Re: Warriors and spells

Posted: Sat May 17, 2008 4:40 pm
by Andróg
Parrafin, if "armour-management" is supposedly the key to playing a caster (as a famous bn once wrote), then move-management is possibly the key to playing a warrior who walks solo (or simply without a following/leading bobber). So probably you'll just have to practise it some more. ;) Besides, I cannot see how elves who have access to such great mounts can have such movement problems.

Re: Warriors and spells

Posted: Sat May 17, 2008 8:21 pm
by Wobbler
It's called "track".

Re: Warriors and spells

Posted: Sun May 18, 2008 1:15 am
by Elestir
Playing an elf warrior as a bobber is actually not that bad idea. It's one of the way to utilize the elven manaregen. And bob is handy for elf, because moveregen is not really where elves excel.

Re: Warriors and spells

Posted: Sun May 25, 2008 2:30 pm
by Orix
Whats the lowest INT, WIS where a warrior could still get bob? And how many practice (%) should be put in to work?

Re: Warriors and spells

Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 2:24 pm
by Singleton
Concerning antidote/remove poison discussion some above: Antidote ingredients are trivial to get and one antidote lasts quite a while, so where is the trouble to mix one bottle from time to time and have it ready in case of need?

Re: Warriors and spells

Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 8:31 pm
by Andróg
In relation to what Singleton wrote I have a question too.

Is it true that some herblores are easier to mix and some harder? Meaning that, lets say, wis10 will fail some herblores more often than others because they're considered "more complicated"? (I've never got a straight answer to this before.)

Re: Warriors and spells

Posted: Tue May 27, 2008 9:01 pm
by Caerroil
Yes, some herblores, like drake-slumber, are much harder to mix than others, like baker, which very rarely fails.