A lot of people think that way but i'm not one of them. I replace my gear every 4 levels or so and if i have the tempers to upgrade it at that point i use them.So if what everyone said is true, then there is no point in crafting gear until I max out at VR because I will be upgrading my gear every time I level up?
bcbasherb16_ESO wrote: »And the same enchantment will be stronger on a blue than it would be on a white piece.
demonlkojipub19_ESO wrote: »bcbasherb16_ESO wrote: »And the same enchantment will be stronger on a blue than it would be on a white piece.
The enchantment only gets stronger if it is the original enchantment on a dropped piece of equipment. Enchantments manually placed on the item won't scale with the items rarity.
So if what everyone said is true, then there is no point in crafting gear until I max out at VR because I will be upgrading my gear every time I level up?
@RSramI wish the crafting interface had a preview of the crafting result.
So what's the point? In Skyrim you could that a piece of crap and turn it into a legendary armor with increase armor rating, same with weapons.
I didn't notice if the enchantment changed, but I pay more attention the next time I upgrade something, that's a plus.
So if what everyone said is true, then there is no point in crafting gear until I max out at VR because I will be upgrading my gear every time I level up?
In VR I always craft new sets from time to time, higher level items also have better values and you are able to craft better sets as you research.So what's the point? In Skyrim you could that a piece of crap and turn it into a legendary armor with increase armor rating, same with weapons.
I didn't notice if the enchantment changed, but I pay more attention the next time I upgrade something, that's a plus.
So if what everyone said is true, then there is no point in crafting gear until I max out at VR because I will be upgrading my gear every time I level up?
If the improvement attempt succeeds, you'll you'll have higher armor on the new item. (Or higher DPS on a weapon.) If you successfully improve a white 120-armor chestpiece into a green chestpiece, the green might have 130 armor, for example. So, if you're saying that you improved an armor item from white to green but its armor did not go up, that would be a bug. (But you may want to try recreating it and submitting screenshots. I have never seen that bug happen. Armor always goes up with a successful improvement.)
To your second question: The point in crafting gear as you level is to give yourself better gear than you're getting from quests and mob kills. It's not too difficult to keep your crafting on a par with your own level as you go -- that's one of the nice things about ESO's crafting system.