Well its an long way to morrowind so you can enjoy the ride and have high cp then it arrives.MethTheMadman wrote: »OtarTheMad wrote: »I am also an alt-aholic so my opinion is obvious.
I don't think it hurts to have more than one character, try all classes and see which one you like the most and then stick with it. Try stam, try magicka, tank, dps, heal, support etc.
But this is coming from someone who is excited about Morrowind chapter for the Warden class and two more character slots purchasable soooo... yeah.
I think I've already decided I'm going to make a warden who will wind up being a tank come Morrowind. That's part of the reason I want the cp160. Speed up the process a little while still being able to enjoy the content.
Templar is only boring in the begining, almost any class is. When you reach higher levels, you get a lot more flexibility in terms of skill and build setups. True at start you will mostly be using jabs/sweep because it is a good spammable skill, but later on you will get a array of ranged, support, heal and other utility skills that will spice things up, making you a force to be reckoned with. Bosses, dungeons and other things will become easy as you learn your class if you manage your skill rotation well, and trust me, it includes a lot more than just using a few skills.
I have to disagree. I get SO easily bored with my max level Magplar that I rarely play him anymore. I've found that StamSorcs for me, offer the best variety and versatility. Magplars tend to have the same rotation, same skills, why, because they work extremely well. A Magplar, IMO, is the best balance class because you have both range and melee options within the class. However, this also means that typically you have certain skills that just work and work well, so why mess with it? Perhaps it is because I just don't enjoy the actual skills, unlike with my StamSorc that I just enjoy using Bow/DW because they are fun skills to use.
https://youtu.be/j_QLzthSkfM