Imperial_Archmage wrote: »Where did I say that heavy attack builds originated with the Oakensoul ring? I specifically said that it only precipitated their prominence. Heavy attack builds tend to appeal mostly to more causal players and those who don’t have the reflexes or good enough hardware and internet connections to handle constant bar swapping. How is Rakkhat’s going to help them since it requires constant uptime on Empower plus at least half of the buffs Oakensoul provides?
If you want a real world analogy, to a causal ESO player giving them Rakkhat’s is like giving a pickleball player a tennis racket.
Imperial_Archmage wrote: »Where did I say that heavy attack builds originated with the Oakensoul ring? I specifically said that it only precipitated their prominence. Heavy attack builds tend to appeal mostly to more causal players and those who don’t have the reflexes or good enough hardware and internet connections to handle constant bar swapping. How is Rakkhat’s going to help them since it requires constant uptime on Empower plus at least half of the buffs Oakensoul provides?
If you want a real world analogy, to a causal ESO player giving them Rakkhat’s is like giving a pickleball player a tennis racket.
it's literally the light attack test from march 2020
https://forums.elderscrollsonline.com/en/discussion/517545/pts-patch-notes-testing-ideas-for-light-heavy-attacks-in-combat
as a game wide system change it was universally hated, but clearly one of the devs liked the idea and they brought it back as a mythic.
I'm not against it, it's a good idea for a mythic.
DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
Imperial_Archmage wrote: »That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
Pixiepumpkin wrote: »Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
Exactly this.
HA builds were mildly used in PVP and Arena as pointed above, hardly representing even 5% of the playerbase. HA did not become popular until Oakensoul as you pointed out. The chain nerfs you aslo pointed out were due to the fact that HA became so popular.
But to your OP. The mythic seemingly makes no sense. Since U46 dropped I have seen ONE MoL trial in group finder. Its an easy dungeon to run, easy to farm the gear, does not take a lot of time and yet few are running it. The mythic has limited appeal.
it's literally the light attack test from march 2020
https://forums.elderscrollsonline.com/en/discussion/517545/pts-patch-notes-testing-ideas-for-light-heavy-attacks-in-combat
as a game wide system change it was universally hated, but clearly one of the devs liked the idea and they brought it back as a mythic.
I'm not against it, it's a good idea for a mythic.
MasterSpatula wrote: »I just think it's weird to create a whole new heavy attack build while heavy attacks themselves are in such a disastrous state. Perhaps they should focus on insuring that standing right in front of an enemy with that enemy in your crosshairs and holding down the attack button actually does something.
Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
MasterSpatula wrote: »I just think it's weird to create a whole new heavy attack build while heavy attacks themselves are in such a disastrous state. Perhaps they should focus on insuring that standing right in front of an enemy with that enemy in your crosshairs and holding down the attack button actually does something.
That would definitely be nice.
HAs have been broken in that regard since ZOS silently removed one of the damage tics from the channel, bringing it down from 4 tics total to 3. That was NEVER included in any patch notes, just done without admission or explanation.
Pixiepumpkin wrote: »Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
Exactly this.
HA builds were mildly used in PVP and Arena as pointed above, hardly representing even 5% of the playerbase. HA did not become popular until Oakensoul as you pointed out. The chain nerfs you aslo pointed out were due to the fact that HA became so popular.
But to your OP. The mythic seemingly makes no sense. Since U46 dropped I have seen ONE MoL trial in group finder. Its an easy dungeon to run, easy to farm the gear, does not take a lot of time and yet few are running it. The mythic has limited appeal.
The mythic having limited appeal may be a result of the phenomenon I’ve noticed in which people have become immensely attached to oakensoul. Even if rakkhat is better, even if its better for one-bar, there is a nonzero amount of people who will defend oakensoul against any criticism because it looks better to them and because of the history of oakensoul.
Pixiepumpkin wrote: »Pixiepumpkin wrote: »Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
Exactly this.
HA builds were mildly used in PVP and Arena as pointed above, hardly representing even 5% of the playerbase. HA did not become popular until Oakensoul as you pointed out. The chain nerfs you aslo pointed out were due to the fact that HA became so popular.
But to your OP. The mythic seemingly makes no sense. Since U46 dropped I have seen ONE MoL trial in group finder. Its an easy dungeon to run, easy to farm the gear, does not take a lot of time and yet few are running it. The mythic has limited appeal.
The mythic having limited appeal may be a result of the phenomenon I’ve noticed in which people have become immensely attached to oakensoul. Even if rakkhat is better, even if its better for one-bar, there is a nonzero amount of people who will defend oakensoul against any criticism because it looks better to them and because of the history of oakensoul.
But it's not better. It has the potential to do more DPS, but DPS does not equate to "being better" unless the only metric you are measuring is damage output except that is not the only measuable metric regarding a classes build.
Oakensoul is popular for a number of reasons.
1. It does away with bar swapping. A mechanic that many people hate and or, a mechanic many people can not use for a variety of legitimatge reasons.
2. Oakensoul allows for the solo player (the vast majority of the playerbase) to do content they would otherwise have a hard time doing solo (mostly due to Oakensouls defensive buffs).
3. Oakensoul allows for more casual gameplay (again, the majority of the playerbase).
4. Oakensoul does not require rebuffing your character over and over and over and over, every 6-20 something seconds during a lengthy boss encoutner. You might like buffing, many people hate it and cite it as one of the primary turn offs of ESO combat.
The bottom line is that there are good, darn good reasons for the Oakensoul community to love and defend their chosen mythic, of which for many is the only mythic they can reliably run in game.
Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
I think the old school lightning heavy attack builds, pre-Oakensoul, were solo oriented. Reduce GCD used for damage, and free up those GCD for survival. It was good for sorcerers because pets taking up 4 skill slots. I recall them used to solo world bosses, some dungeons, etc. No one used them for endgame dps.
The whole thing got nerfed once DKs and NB started one-shotting players in PVP with 40K fire staff heavy attacks.
Even with the new mythic, a 130K dps HA build will not be competitive with the 150-170 dps beam builds. Doing random dungeons for exp to level skill lines is ridiculous now, and you do not want to use a heavy attack build because the arcanist beams kill everything before HA channel gets past the first tick.
The nerfs resulting from sub-classing are going to be EPIC.
Pixiepumpkin wrote: »Pixiepumpkin wrote: »Imperial_Archmage wrote: »DenverRalphy wrote: »Oakensoul didn't precipitate the HA build prominence.
That’s just factually incorrect. Before Oakensoul came out hardly anyone played a heavy attack build even though the Sergeant set had been out forever. After Oakensoul heavy attack builds became so popular literally every other person you saw was just spamming the lightning heavy attack and the devs felt the need to nerf not only the ring but also the shock destro staff heavy attack and even the Empower buff itself. Oakensoul was a watershed moment for heavy attack builds.
The fact is, no one enjoys maintenance buffs and sadly that’s quite literally a focal feature of this game. It’s not a question of how easy or hard it is to apply them, it’s just tedious that you have to constantly reapply them and very easy to forget. So anything that makes them permanent will inevitably be extremely popular especially considering that ESO is overwhelmingly a casual game, even more than other MMOs.
Exactly this.
HA builds were mildly used in PVP and Arena as pointed above, hardly representing even 5% of the playerbase. HA did not become popular until Oakensoul as you pointed out. The chain nerfs you aslo pointed out were due to the fact that HA became so popular.
But to your OP. The mythic seemingly makes no sense. Since U46 dropped I have seen ONE MoL trial in group finder. Its an easy dungeon to run, easy to farm the gear, does not take a lot of time and yet few are running it. The mythic has limited appeal.
The mythic having limited appeal may be a result of the phenomenon I’ve noticed in which people have become immensely attached to oakensoul. Even if rakkhat is better, even if its better for one-bar, there is a nonzero amount of people who will defend oakensoul against any criticism because it looks better to them and because of the history of oakensoul.
But it's not better. It has the potential to do more DPS, but DPS does not equate to "being better" unless the only metric you are measuring is damage output except that is not the only measuable metric regarding a classes build.
Oakensoul is popular for a number of reasons.
1. It does away with bar swapping. A mechanic that many people hate and or, a mechanic many people can not use for a variety of legitimatge reasons.
2. Oakensoul allows for the solo player (the vast majority of the playerbase) to do content they would otherwise have a hard time doing solo (mostly due to Oakensouls defensive buffs).
3. Oakensoul allows for more casual gameplay (again, the majority of the playerbase).
4. Oakensoul does not require rebuffing your character over and over and over and over, every 6-20 something seconds during a lengthy boss encoutner. You might like buffing, many people hate it and cite it as one of the primary turn offs of ESO combat.
The bottom line is that there are good, darn good reasons for the Oakensoul community to love and defend their chosen mythic, of which for many is the only mythic they can reliably run in game.
Exactly. People look at the 20 buffs and think it’s better. Here’s the thing, you can choose not to barswap without oakensoul. What rakkhat lets you do that Oakensoul does not is (do cloudrest and) put long or permanent buffs on your backbar. You can put bound aegis, siphoning strikes, grim focus, concealed weapon, cloak, inferno, tomb-bearers inspiration, and more on your backbar and never cast them or even swap to that bar. You can also have access to your second bar to slot cloak or streak or vampire mist or any other unique ability that may help in overland. The only real downside is that you have to find a source of empower, be it from dk, scribing, or mages guild.
Minor Berserk - bird of prey, aedric spear passive. With tank (can be companion), camo hunter. With human healer, combat prayer.
Minor Courage - really not an important buff
Major Brutality/Major Sorcery/Major Prophecy/Major Savagery - theres a lot of ways to get these buffs, from permanent buffs by slotting skills to potions to 20 second skills.
Minor Force - most people probably aren’t even building for crit chance anyways, but race against time is a long skill that gives minor force AND major expedition
Minor Protection/Major Resolve/Minor Mending - unneeded, plus can use a companion to tank
Minor Fortitude/Minor Intellect/Minor Endurance - you’re a heavy attack build, you don’t need this
Minor Heroism - potions, banner, but generally unneeded
Minor Slayer/Minor Aegis - these don’t work in overland and you can use a trial set to get them. I know only one ha set is a trial set but you don’t really need either anyways
Empower - as mentioned, this is the only troubling one because theres no way to just slot something and have it be permanent except oakensoul
Even between some of the harder to achieve buffs, people are weighing the buffs against not having the buffs instead of weighing the buffs against a 50% damage boost to heavy attacks. Try voidmantle before you say it doesn’t work.
Also, I had the most fun in the game and I was a casual in half heavy armor duoing and soloing overland. If you’re being casual, you really don’t need all that. If you’re soloing dungeons, companions exist now & there’s ways to make tankier builds (such as slotting bound aegis on backbar).