Monday, April 30, 2012

DS2 Enchanting

An interesting idea...if it hadn't already been used by Diablo 2. If I were to sit here and point out similarities with the Diablo series, we'd be here all night. Regardless, it's a fun aspect of the game and it allows you to make some interesting pieces of armour and weaponry. Yet, you always want to go for those legendary pieces for the maximum amount of slots available, which means that anything less is practically useless. I also tend to want to try and BREAK enchanting rather than create kick-ass items.
Started out innocent enough, trying to create pieces of armour and weapons useful for my characters. The two 35% physical damage reflectors got me wondering how far I could go with some of the enchantments. After all, this was 70% physical damage reflection...so what if I could achieve 100%? So far, I don't believe it is possible. I haven't finished the game on champion yet, so I technically could find an item that could work. The only problem is the reagents appear to be getting BIGGER. Since I only have a 16 square (4x4) space to work with, playing tetris with reagents becomes difficult. Yet...I manage to pull off stuff like this:
With 8 15% chances to find magic items (120%), I am more than guaranteed to find magic items. Excessive, but I felt it needed to be done. I also wonder if percentages over 100 mean you find more unique and rare items. I should look it up (or if someone knows please comment and tell me!) and see if I can break it more. Considering my human character has a base chance of 10% for finding magic items...that's 130%, not including what other characters have. I also wonder if the magic item drops are for the whole party or just the character that kills them. Considering I haven't seen a "normal" item in quite some time, that tells me it may just be party-based. That said, enchantable items technically count as "normal" items so... I also tried this:
I wondered what would happen if the combined reagents raised the minimum damage above the maximum damage on an item. Turns out the overall damage is increased. Down side is that no additional benefits can be added to the weapon (unless the damage range is fairly narrow to begin with, which would be another interesting experiment). I am sure there are tons of ways to exploit this feature in the game...more than my limited creative capacity can imagine. I'll see if I can come up with anything else. In the meantime, I'd love to hear about other combinations and exploits, so feel free to share here or on YouTube. Meanwhile...some other items I've created...including one that Vix is currently using:
Doing another recording session tomorrow.

1 comment:

  1. Oh man I'm so glad D3 didn't put magic enchanting in. Torchlight did and it broke the game because why even bother picking up items when your 80 times manually enchanted item is way better. It did at least put value on in-game gold since you'd spend it to enchant, and the price would rise per enchant. But the whole idea of magic find and boss runs and item gambling is so ingrained in D2 / D3 that it'd be a big change.
    The screenshots you have of DS2 make me want to give it a shot though, looks kinda fun.

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