VaranisArano wrote: »One Tamriel's smart loot.
Most weapons that can't proc their 5th piece bonus got removed with One Tamriel. Knightmare's 5th piece bonus requires melee damage to proc, so staves would have been removed.
ZOS has generally stopped doing this with later sets because they finally figured out that people really want stuff like Bow of the Viper even though it can't proc the 5th effect. Also, it made more sense back when 2-handed weapons only counted for one set bonus; now it really doesn't.
ShawnLaRock wrote: »For my first 6 or 7 runs of HRC, I asked in chat for AY Bow - and everyone kept saying, “it doesn’t exist.” I thought they meant it just had a really low drop rate... but - doh! It was removed, of course. Oops.
S.

The real question is, why do you want stave weapons for melee proc set ?
VaranisArano wrote: »One Tamriel's smart loot.
Most weapons that can't proc their 5th piece bonus got removed with One Tamriel. Knightmare's 5th piece bonus requires melee damage to proc, so staves would have been removed.
ZOS has generally stopped doing this with later sets because they finally figured out that people really want stuff like Bow of the Viper even though it can't proc the 5th effect. Also, it made more sense back when 2-handed weapons only counted for one set bonus; now it really doesn't.
As I said, ESO is very inconsistent with these things. Did you test Noble Duelist proccing from a staff/bow? Not just "it procs from melee, and there's a staff dropping" but specifically that a staff attack really procs the set?
I assumed, and apparently ZOS themselves assumed that as well, that bow/staff attacks count as "range" even from melee range.
kringled_1 wrote: »The two sets tooltips are written differently. Noble Duelist specifically is written as "while in melee range", which I think includes ranged attacks when you are in range for a melee attack. Knightmare is just "melee damage" so I think staff light and heavy attacks are excluded no matter what the actual range. But yes, the approach from Zos has not been the most consistent.
Dragonnord wrote: »kringled_1 wrote: »The two sets tooltips are written differently. Noble Duelist specifically is written as "while in melee range", which I think includes ranged attacks when you are in range for a melee attack. Knightmare is just "melee damage" so I think staff light and heavy attacks are excluded no matter what the actual range. But yes, the approach from Zos has not been the most consistent.
Light attacks and heavy attacks ARE FROM the staff. There are even passives for that (ie: in Champion Points). So using a light attack with a staff is a staff atack. Nowhere it says it has to be a class or weapon skill using a staff.
In any case, I agree with you that ZOS is not consistent on their descriptions, tooltips and so.
The real question is, why do you want stave weapons for melee proc set ?
There are non-weapon abilities (class and guild) that may count as melee, and you can use them even with a ranged weapon equipped.
It would need testing because ESO is notoriously inconsistent with these things, but let's say you're a Nightblade - you could use Surprise Attack/Concealed Weapon or Killer's Blade, and it should count as melee damage even with a staff/bow equipped. Using a Viper's bow, for instance, is not a far-fetched idea - just slot a melee ability on your bow bar, and you can proc the set.
There are a few sets where it really makes no sense - Soldier of Anguish, for instance, procs on melee light attacks, and you cannot get those with a staff or bow by any means.
But if it's just melee damage, the "smart loot" idea has gone a little bit too far.
Dragonnord wrote: »VaranisArano wrote: »One Tamriel's smart loot.
Most weapons that can't proc their 5th piece bonus got removed with One Tamriel. Knightmare's 5th piece bonus requires melee damage to proc, so staves would have been removed.
ZOS has generally stopped doing this with later sets because they finally figured out that people really want stuff like Bow of the Viper even though it can't proc the 5th effect. Also, it made more sense back when 2-handed weapons only counted for one set bonus; now it really doesn't.
What? And who said a staff can't do damage in melee range? Noble Duelist set HAS staves and procs with melee damage.
Melee means CLOSE combat damage and YOU CAN use a staff in close combat, again, like Noble Duelist that DOES proc.