MrTarkanian48 wrote: »I am relatively new, but at VR 2 I have found provisioning extremely useful. I am a stamina nightblade and bought a recipe for a VR1 level Blue Food item that significantly boosts my Max Stam and Max Health for an hour. This equates to increased damage and more survivability. Now that I have the recipe, I do not loot many drink ingredients. I just pick up game, corn, and millet (the three ingredients for this recipe). I took the passive that allows 4 food items per recipe made. I make more whenever I have all three ingredients and basically can stay boosted at all times.
The effects do not stack. If you eat something, and then eat or drink something else, the effects are gone from the first item you consumed, and you only have the effects from the 2nd item
https://youtu.be/CUzTMIgm02YAll .. the ... time ...EgonSpenglarPhD wrote: »I was just wondering how often most experienced players use food items for boosts
Just a couple of comments related to this
- Many prefer food over drinks because some abilities are affected by attributes
- Even if you don't want to craft, you may want to do to unlock the crafting passives that make food/drink last longer and affect potion use (alchemy).
mklundub17_ESO wrote: »If you plan on doing high level pve content, want to min/max for pvp content or just make money then having provisioning is very much worth it.
- Crafting your own food is cheaper if you have the skills invested to get more food from the same amount of ingredients
- Provisioning daily writs are easy and one of the most profitable ones, recipe fragments sell for a good amount
- The passive bonus makes your purple food last longer, so it's a better investment
- The hirelings are worth as much, if not more, than any other profession hirelings
- Could, if you chose, create Psijic Ambrosia (+XP drink) on the cheap
The major negative is you'll get in the habit of getting into all barrels, sacks, baskets etc and it's hard for me to break that habit, which is a huge inventory killer. I fondly think back to the pre-provisioning days when I never bothered to look into anything other than backpacks, lockboxes, nightstands and desks.