Pet magden, petless magsorc, and rangeplar all have very similar dps in raid scenarios. Pet mechanics significantly impact magden dps on many of the fights. They are all clearly outclassed by top level magblades, of course.
Pet magden, petless magsorc, and rangeplar all have very similar dps in raid scenarios. Pet mechanics significantly impact magden dps on many of the fights. They are all clearly outclassed by top level magblades, of course.
Rangeplar are 2nd to MagNB from what I've seen, actually our parsing traditional melee magplars
Pet magden, petless magsorc, and rangeplar all have very similar dps in raid scenarios. Pet mechanics significantly impact magden dps on many of the fights. They are all clearly outclassed by top level magblades, of course.
If you aren't running for score then you can run whatever class you want.
The problem is a nightblade with lesser gear, unleveled skills, class/weapon skills and passives not all accounted for will out damage a warden who put in exceptional effort into their character. I did just that recently and when I can faceroll on the nightblade and pull more dps it's just discouraging. I'm at the point where I don't know if I should put any more time and effort into my poor warden or jump the nightblade bandwagon.
Plus the lack of communication about game/class vision is disheartening as well.
The nightblade>everyone else is felt on all levels of play and becomes obvious once you do a bit of investigation.
It is as if the OG classes were designed with roles in mind and later on the idea of 'play your way' was reinforced. Then you release a 'hybrid' class which was designed to do all roles but falls short do due missing mechanics like an execute.
Working as intended.
Oreyn_Bearclaw wrote: »I will keep it as simple as possible. Every class is viable DPS in PVE if your goal is to reasonably complete content. Every class can break 40k selfbuffed on a 6 mill dummy which is PLENTY of damage.
If your goal is to push scores and potentially compete for a number one spot, it's play NB or GTFO. You might see one stamplar, and you might see one sorc (but sorc is usually the second healer at this point.)
Look at the pad 3 Rakkhat burns on youtube. Group comp is basically 5 stamblades, 3 Mageblades, 1 temp healer, 1 sorc healer, 1 DK tank, 1 Warden/DK Tank.
NB is first place for both ranged (magic) and melee (stamina) DPS. Templar is currently second place for both. They are viable in all but about 4 raid groups.