I want to speak honestly for a moment, both to the developers and to the community.
I completely understand why many players feel frustrated when they die to something that appears strong. That reaction is natural in PvP. But I think it's important that we take a step back and look at the bigger picture before immediately calling for nerfs.
When we compare abilities across classes, the current Dragonknight pressure is not as far outside the meta as some believe. For example, a fully stacked Molten Whip requires three stacks before it even reaches its peak damage. If that whip misses, the DK must rebuild those stacks again before reaching that same pressure window.
Meanwhile, other classes have extremely lethal burst combinations as well. A Nightblade, for instance, can combine Incapacitating Strike with two Merciless Resolve aka bow procs and delete a player almost instantly, especially in the current critical damage meta. These types of burst windows already exist throughout PvP.
Right now, Dragonknight may feel strong, but in many cases it is simply on par with the current damage meta, not fundamentally beyond it.
One issue I believe we run into as a community is that sometimes a single loss leads to immediate calls for nerfs. We've seen this pattern repeatedly with Nightblade, Sorcerer, Aedric Spear builds, and many others throughout ESO's PvP history. Every time something performs well, the reaction is often the same: "nerf it."
But Update 49 represents a larger class rework, not a finished balance state.
The developers are clearly moving away from subclass stacking, and the adjustments we're seeing now appear to be part of strengthening pure class identity. Because Dragonknight is one of the first to receive this type of rework, it will naturally feel strong in isolation until the other classes receive similar treatment.
When the Assassination rework arrives for Nightblade, for example, it would not be surprising to see extremely high damage from Merciless Resolve procs. My estimate is potentially
in the 19–25k range for One Nightblades merciless resolve, especially under certain builds. At that point, the same people currently asking for Dragonknight nerfs may be and will be celebrating their own class buffs.
This is why patience matters.
Another factor often overlooked is gear synergy. Many of the moments where something feels "broken" are not purely the class itself, but the interaction between abilities and PvP sets designed specifically to maximize survivability and damage. PvP players naturally build to survive and win, just like anyone else would.
In other words, what people are often experiencing is not simply Dragonknight power, but optimized PvP builds performing exactly as designed.
Balance in a large game like ESO cannot be judged from a single class adjustment in isolation. If the developers are truly moving toward removing subclass systems and reinforcing core class identity, then some temporary imbalance during the transition is almost inevitable.
So before we rush to call for nerfs, I think it's worth waiting to see how the rest of the class reworks unfold.
PvP balance should be judged by the full ecosystem, not by a single update focused on one class.
Sometimes the biggest problem in balance discussions is not the numbers themselves, it's the short-term reactions driven by frustration and sometimes hurt egos rather than long-term perspective.
Taking the bigger picture into account will lead to much better outcomes for the entire PvP community and for us all.