Sitting In The Waiting Room

Good Morning Folks. Waiting Room by Fugazi is not only my favorite song from that band… but one of my favorite songs of all time. Right now I am very much sitting in the waiting room, waiting on the Last Epoch servers to come up and the Tombs of the Erased season to start. I did a very dumb thing. I took the day off work, which almost certainly means that the game is going to be unplayable for large chunks of the day. This is pretty much the rule of game launches… that you never take time off for it. However in this case I have a backup plan, or at least some chores that need to get done around the house. So once I wrap this post I will be going in the backyard and continuing the leaf removal process that we have been doing for the last few days so that we can properly open the back yard and set up the patio off our bedroom.
One of the productive things that you can do while waiting on the servers to come up, is to fiddle around with your loot filter. This is legitimately one of my favorite parts of Last Epoch is that I can customize my filter until my heart is content, and honestly… it is way more straight forward than you might think. It seems like each new league I greatly simplify my process and filter out more chaff. This is essentially the base version of my filter and they are applied from the bottom up so you sort of have to remember the order of operations. As the league progresses I will tighten my filter but right now going into the league this is what I am going to be running with. Since they get applied from the ground up, here is a brief explanation of what each filter does:
  • Starting at level 5 I am going to hide all Normal aka White Items
  • Starting at level 15 I am going to hide all Magic aka Blue Items.
  • Starting at level 40 I am going to hide all Rare aka Yellow Items… and at that point I will probably delete the first two rules to free up some space. Later I will tweak this rule to remove the level requirements and start hiding Purple items.
  • The next rule is to hide all Idols, because most of them are absolute trash.
  • The next rule is a Recolor rule, which will show and color any Idols with at least two affixes that I care about on them. I trigger the Emphasis bit which puts the item names in all Caps so that I can know for certain it was triggered by a rule and that it did not just somehow slip through the cracks of my hide rules.
  • The next rule I am looking for any item that has an affix that I care about coloring it blue. This is my shard fodder rule allowing me to build up crafting resources that I need through salvaging items.
  • Next up I am looking for any item that has at least TWO affixes that I care about on it and then coloring those purple.
  • Lastly is my “good item” rule where I am looking for any item with at least 3 affixes that I care about and a total item weight of at least 20 tiers which I color Red.
You can do a lot more but for the time being this is what I am going to roll into the new season with. As the season goes on I will start caring about only wanting specific base types which will further limit the visual clutter from mapping.
In other filter news… Neversink/Filterblade has been updated with a brand new theme called Cobalt. I spent some time last night running with it and I really like it quite a bit. Sure it is going to take awhile to train my brain on what is and what is not something that I care about, but the colors that are being used feel fresh and new. This is in honor of the 10th anniversary of Filterblade, which really is the site you should be using for your item filter needs in Path of Exile and Path of Exile II. In a perfect world I would have EHG hire this team to rework their own item filter visualizations. The thing I miss most when playing Last Epoch is the “tink” sound from a great drop.
I’ve made it to T10 maps after spending two days hunting for another nexus of corruption. I’ve also started to actually see this again, since the T10 mobs are a bit rippier than the T9 and below ones were. I am wondering if I need to tweak my gear to add on more survival bits, or if this is just the point at which armor begins to be ineffective against damage. I’ve tried to do my third ascendancy a few times and I just can’t. Either I need to spend time farming lower tier Sanctums looking for honor resist idols, or I need a really good run of RNG in the Trial of Chaos. If I can get my next two points I can buff all of my resists up to 89. The thing that is super brutal though is there are these plants that spawn from certain monsters that throw out a ton of chaos balls… and they will just fucking rip through you and if there is too much mob density on screen you cannot even see them.
In totally not ARPG news… my friend Mog/Astella has had the foresight to create a Fediverse Hunter Squad for Monster Hunter Wilds. Since you can seemingly be in a bunch of different squads I joined this morning, and it is going to be an excellent time for anyone on Mastodon/The Fediverse that is also playing the game. Essentially you can search for the squad via the id TA8E48PM and then request to join. Mog had already thrown me an invite so this process was greatly simplified for me. Also side note if you are tired of trying to be normal on social media and want a place almost exclusively populated with fellow weirdos… then check out the Mastodon Server that I help administrate. Right now I am on Bluesky and Tumblr, but the real place I consider my home is The Fediverse aka Mastodon aka Gamepad.club. Anyways! I really hope today’s launch of the new Last Epoch season goes really smoothly. They are getting a ton of press from various ARPG streamers, so I am hoping it pays off massively for them. The post Sitting In The Waiting Room appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

Still Burning

Good Morning Folks. Yesterday I released a bit of propaganda for the upcoming Last Epoch Tombs of the Erased season. I’ve been asked a few times what I plan on starting for the league. I’ve kicked around a few ideas, namely checking out the Forge Guard updates and running something with a Two-hander and Shield to see how that plays. However I think at least in the short term I am going to revisit some familiar territory. Warpath is without a doubt my favorite skill in Last Epoch. I’ve always loved whirlwind builds as a concept and I do love to spin and win. Over the course of various leagues I have played so many different versions of this build.
Each time I have played this build I have tweaked it a bit and improved upon the previous iterations. This video is recorded of that last version of the build and from what I can tell based on the patch notes and updates… it maybe got buffed a little bit. So unless something drastic changes between now and tomorrow when the league starts, I am going to essentially follow the template of this character. There are a few changes in the passive tree that I will navigate in the moment, but I have a pretty good idea of how I am going to path. I will very likely wing it, because having effectively built five versions of this character… I more or less know what I like. Do I suggest you follow this build? Fuck no. It works for me, but I’ve never done any of the pinnacle content on it, and it still requires you to be in melee range making it more challenging than probably literally any ranged build is going to be.
At some point I am probably going to run up some sort of a bow character and play with the brand new Heartseeker ability. I think this is what my friend Ace is going to start, so I will likely lean on their experiences. I have a feeling I am going to be playing Last Epoch for a few months and as a result I will probably run up multiple characters like I did at the 1.0 release. I probably want to lean into cold damage, because I like the crowd control aspect of that element. I think maybe the fire damage version is going to be more powerful though, but given that I am leaning into fire with my “Spin to Win” character I am not certain that I want to do that on multiple characters.
Another build that I have played a lot in the past that is pretty fun is some sort of Necromancer. For those builds I have tended to follow some of the builds from Aaron Action RPG. This is going to be one of those things that I only build if I get one of two uniques. Aaron’s Will is pretty freaking rare, but if I get one as a drop I will very likely go into the Golem build that uses it. More common is the build designed by actor David Harbor called Wraithlord’s Harbor which goes all in on summoning Wraiths. I’ve never actually made this build but I have always been curious about it. The only problem with minions is that you end up mostly just running around avoiding taking any damage while your swarm of minions overwhelm things. Its relatively comfortable but you also tend to not have much survival.
So right now that is my plan, to stick with the familiar and maybe at some point respec into something Forge Guard to play with some of those new abilities. I know that Warpath Ignite is going to give me a solid start to the league and allow me to build up some resources without much issue. Once I start getting some Circle of Fortune rep going and filling my bank with uniques, I might pivot into some other builds for funsies. I know I am going to at the very least play some sort of bow build, so I might add to my item filter some things to support that so I can begin banking useful gear for leveling purposes. There are some really good leveling uniques that you can lean on pretty heavily. The first thing that I am hoping to find is my old friend the Firestarter’s Torch which really trivializes a lot of the early content with my build.
In non-Last-Epoch news, we got another banger of a patch in Path of Exile II with 0.2.0f landing yesterday evening around 8pm. It includes a bunch of quality of life changes, including some stash tab affinities for various items that were annoying the shit out of me and belts being modified to have additional charm charges by default. I still think the charm system as a whole is complete garbage… but at least we might be able to use more than one of them at a time. Flask automation from Path of Exile was just better. The patch however apparently caused some unintended consequences for users with AMD cards so I suppose that sucked. Being able to bookmark nodes on the Atlas is pretty cool so you can mark those unique maps that you cannot quite run yet, or at least that has been my use of them so far. Are you going to be firing up Last Epoch for the upcoming season? If so what are you playing? Are you planning on just sticking it out with what I have personally dubbed “Sad League” in Path of Exile II? Drop me a line below. The post Still Burning appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

You Should Play Last Epoch

Good Morning Folks. I said I was going to talk about Last Epoch this morning, and essentially I am going to attempt to present a case for why you should try the game out for the upcoming Season 2 launch on Thursday. I feel like I should set out some credentials before we go forward. I play a lot of ARPGs and have been deeply engaged in the seasonal model since the launch of Diablo III Reaper of Souls expansion. It took me awhile to get into Path of Exile, but when it did… it grabbed a hold of me super freaking hard and never fully let go. When I say I have played a lot of these games I have played roughly 1000+ hours of Diablo III, 500+ hours of Diablo IV, 3000+ hours of Path of Exile, 500+ hours of Path of Exile II, and 650+ hours of Last Epoch. Truth be told I probably have more hours of Path of Exile than that… but several leagues ago I swapped over to the non-Steam client and lost my easy gauge of time spent and have ground up multiple level 95s and two characters to level 100 since doing that.
I lay out my credentials mostly to say that I am very much a purveyor of the loot explosion and a connoisseur of full screen clears. Essentially I love these games for a few reasons. I love getting loot and I love clearing huge packs of monsters… and there is something that I find satisfying about progressing a character and seeing where I can push it. I love the subtle art of gearing and even playing the same build… how each specific instance of a character has its own feel to it. I love the various things you can to do tweak endgame strategies, and I love how I can effective turn my brain off and just fall into a trance-like flow state when I play the game. I do not claim to be particularly skilled at any of this, but I do find it deeply enjoyable and I regularly am listening to some audio-book while I grind away in peace and harmony. There is something about that combined experience that uniquely satisfies my cravings like nothing else.
Before I talk about Last Epoch, I am going to talk a bit about Diablo games because be it Diablo III or Diablo IV they have some of the same pitfalls. They are essentially relatively shallow experiences and are fun for a weekend or two before I really lose any desire to keep moving forward. In both cases it is relatively easy to get your character set up and functional… but absolute unobtanium to actually get perfectly optimized. In the case of D3 getting a set up and running and then upgrading it to ancient legendaries is pretty straight forward and is just a matter of spinning the loot wheel enough times. Getting Primal Ancient Legendaries however… is effectively not something you are ever going to see. Similarly in Diablo IV getting a set of Ancestral gear is pretty straight forward but acquiring Mythical items is damned near impossible to get your full set without dipping into trade… which is its own ridiculous experience.
Path of Exile on the other hand is not straight forward at all… in fact you would pretty much be lost if you were not following a guide. After around 2000 hours of gameplay I finally reached the point where I felt comfortable building my own characters relatively successfully. I understood the fundamentals of defensive and offensive layers… but the whole process of gearing the character was its own problem. The game has a deep and rich crafting system but it requires a freaking degree in craftology to figure it out. Maybe if you started back at the beginning and learned each system as it was introduced… it was not that big of a deal. It also requires you to understand what feels like a bajillion different unique currencies, all of which do different things and can be used at exactly the right time to influence the outcome of an item.
Because of the complexity of crafting and the very low odds that you will ever find an item that has exactly the stats that your build needs to succeed… it pushes you to utilize the trade system. Even thousands of hours into the game I find this system to be deeply obtuse. Essentially you price an item and stick it into a stash tab… which causes it to show up on the trade website where you can search for items and then whisper a player… hoping that they are actually paying attention and willing to stop what they are doing at that moment to teleport to their hideout and invite you there to trade in person with them. Its a bad system… but it is the best system that the game has and ultimately is the only way that people can get exactly the items that they need for the builds that they are trying to build… which require VERY specific stat breaks in order to succeed by out-mathing their way through problems. I love Path of Exile with every fiber of my being… but even I can admit it is a giant cluster-fuck of gaming experience.
I would never ask you to sit down and play Path of Exile without a predetermined build in front of you, likely on your second monitor in Path of Building… a third party tool which keeps track of this information. However with Last Epoch, my suggestion is just to play the game and figure things out as you go. Going into Season 2, the only permanent decision that you cannot undo is your initial choice of class. In the current version you cannot change Ascendancy, but they even made that flexible with season 2. It is very easy just to “fuck around and find out” what you like and what you want to build. Coming from games like POE1 and POE2 where there are a handful of viable builds at any given time… I am consistently shocked at just how many options there are in this game. Shit I have built the same effective build idea five different ways, and all of them were relatively successful in their own ways.
Essentially the only permanent decision you need to make is which of the five base classes you are going to play. From left to right you have the Sentinel which is this games tanky heavily armored Warrior/Paladin type character that also has a path which makes it more of a Deathknight/Shadowknight type character. Then you have the Rogue which tends to excel at light melee and bow based combat so your Ranger/Thief/Assassin type character. In the middle we have the Mage which is your finger wiggler deluxe that wields elemental magic and also has some hybrid magic melee builds. With a bear companion we have the Primalist which serves the dual roles of Barbarian and Druid and features some Hunter style companion gameplay as well as nature and transformation magics. Lastly we have the Witch that fills the role of the dark caster either diving into Necromancy or deep Cthonic magics. The only real negative about this line up is that they are gender locked, and that you have no real choice as to their default graphical appearance. Eleventh Hour Games has said this is on the roadmap but no clue if and when it will ever happen. Right now the models they are using do not support any real customization.
From there once you hit around level 15 in the campaign you can choose a mastery for your class. This allows you to further specialize your character and ultimately determines which abilities you will have access to. For example if you choose Sentinel you can begin to draw on abilities from the Forge Guard, Void Knight, and Paladin trees… with there being a chain that locks off access to half of the tree for any of the masteries that you did not choose. I will talk about that in a few, but essentially this allows you to further shape the type of build that you want to craft. Each mastery gives you access to four abilities that are unique to that tree which then dictate what types of builds you can make. This used to be a permanent choice, but with Season 2 launch you will be able to respec this with gold which is the common in game dropped currency. I believe they said that at max level this caps out at requiring 500k gold to respec… which is a decent sum but also pretty easily obtained if you are doing endgame content.
The character build itself is effectively divide up into two pieces… the passive tree and then your skill specializations. Once you have chosen your mastery you gain access to the three other trees for your class. For example this is a screenshot that I took from one of my Void Knight characters which shows that I have full access to the entire tree. If I were to look at my Paladin and Forge Guard trees I would have a chain down the middle of the screen which locks off access to anything in the later half of the tree. As you spend points you unlock abilities along the bottom, which means that in order to really flesh out your build you need to dump points into the tree in order to get some of those abilities. However this also means that some of the abilities are pretty easy to get allowing you to effectively multi-class in abilities from the other specs. All of these abilities have detailed tool-tips, with hotlinks to an in-game wiki explaining what every term actually means so that you don’t have to keep shelling out to a third party site.
The other part of your build is which skills you chose to specialize. You can use ANY ability you have unlocked but you only get five slots for you to specialize those abilities unlocking a detailed skill tree for each of them. For example the above tree is for an ability called Warpath which is effectively this games equivalent to whirlwind or cyclone. The tree allows you to tweak how it works for example I have gone down a path which allows me to convert all of the physical damage to fire damage, but I could have just as easily gone down a different path which converted all of the damage to void damage. Essentially specializing your abilities allows you to lean into various synergies between the abilities on your character and the types of gear that you are using. My warpath also casts Smite automatically… which then leans upon the Smite spec tree which allows me to customize those automatic procs even further. As with the passives, all of this is in relatively easy to understand language and has definitions that link back to the in-game wiki.
The campaign pulls you through a Chrono Trigger style story as we time travel between different eras of the same world known as Eterra. We acquire a device called the Epoch which allows us to shift back and forth through reality between different times… and potentially different dimensions as we attempt to stop events from happening that ultimately destroy the world. Right now the game dead ends at Chapter Nine, and fair warning the game is not finished currently. If you are a “one and done” player who considers getting the campaign to be your engagement with a title… then you might want to wait until later. However I tend to use the campaign as a gauge for how successful my character is doing. There is a bunch of side content that you do not have to engage with as well as a number of campaign skips that you can use if you know where they are, but this ends up dumping you into the endgame really under-leveled so I am not going to explain how to do any of that. It is a fun campaign though and I do not mind repeating it with each new character, which is not something I can say for many ARPGs.
Where the game really shines is its crafting system, and last year I wrote an entire primer on how it works. Effectively at its base level items drop with a stat called Forging Potential, and each action that you take upon an item uses some of this potential. When the item hits zero potential, then you effectively have locked the current state of the item and can do nothing more with it. Runes and Glyphs along with Affix Shards allow you to modify and upgrade the stats on an item slowly improving it to be a bit more ideal for your build. You can absolutely get through the campaign by just throwing on whatever happens to drop on the ground, but as you progress into the endgame you are going to need the correct stats for your build and the crafting system allows you to manufacture the items that you need. Generally speaking you are going to start with an item that has two or three abilities that you want, add a fourth that matches your build, and then attempt to improve it until you run out of potential.
But the optimization does not stop there, once you have acquired the uniques you want for your build and some reasonably rolled items. You can start collecting uniques with Legendary Potential on them and attempting to slam them together with exalted items… aka items that have a Tier 6 or Tier 7 roll on them and show up as purple… in order to create something called a Legendary. Legendary Potential is a stat that allows you to imprint a certain number of stats from an exalted item onto it. You stick both items in a specific crafting bench called the Eternity Cache that appears at the end of a specific dungeon… the Unique and Exalted item are sacrificed and you get a shiny new Red Legendary item out on the other side. It will have chosen randomly a number of affixes from your input Exalted item up to the amount of legendary potential on that item. The example above shows me doing this with an item with 2 Legendary potential, and the end result is an item that gained two random stats from my Exalted item.
What I love about this system is that it is super easy to get to “good enough” but it is an uphill to get perfection. Though you can easily keep making attempts and incrementally improving things on the same character for a really long time. Coming with Season 2 there is the ability to guarantee at least one stat on your legendary item, pending you run a tier 2 dungeon in order to craft it. This is pretty freaking huge because in many cases you only really absolutely need a single stat to make your gear really good. You can still keep chasing an item with four legendary potential and then chasing a perfectly rolled exalted item to slam into it… but all of this feels like it is way more achievable than doing the same thing in another ARPG. There are also methods to take unique items with no legendary potential on them… and craft them into entirely randomly rolled legendary items… some of which might be really good for your build, but is ultimately a complete crapshoot. Similarly with Season 2 they are adding in a system that allows you to attempt to upgrade the legendary potential on a unique and either end up with a higher amount… or stripping it off entirely… allowing you to throw it in an egg and try and craft a random legendary with it.
When you arrive at the endgame you are asked to make a choice between two factions, that will ultimately dictate how you interact with loot going forward. You can choice the Merchant’s Guild with opens up the ability to sell items on the market and buy things from other players. Or if you are like me and would prefer to acquire your own loot if reasonably possible… there is the Circle of Fortune. This faction essentially allows you to improve your chances of getting better loot outcomes and spend favor on items called prophecies which allow specific types of gear to drop under very specific circumstances. For example you might have a prophecy that drops 3 pairs of unique boots when you kill a specific boss, that can be repeated 3 times… allowing you to more specifically target farm specific items. Once you start gaining faction and leveling this up, it is immediately noticeable how much better your loot drops become. You can still trade with fellow members of the Circle of Fortune, but it requires you to actually spend time playing with them and build up resonance which you then consume to send them items. Items that drop because of your faction perks though become flagged for that faction and become unusable the Merchants guild, so that you can’t really game the system and farm up a bunch of stuff and then swap factions.
One of the problems with generating large amounts of loot is that you sometimes need a filter to help you organize and highlight items that you actually care about. This is really a concept that showed up with Path of Exile, and mostly you end up relying on a third party filter crafted by someone like Neversink because they are pretty complicated to generate on your own. Understanding this issue the good folks at Eleventh Hour Games built their loot filter into the game itself, and honestly it is pretty straight forward to configure on your own. Essentially I build custom filters for all of my characters and it is as simple as “I am interested in these base items” and that I am looking for at least two of these affixes on the same item. The in game tool actually shows every single affix that can drop on an item really allowing you to drill down to exactly what you are looking for. Sure there are technically some general community supported filters that you can download and import but I have consistently found it easier to create my own. Some build makers will generate a filter and include it along with the guides.
Probably the biggest weakness of Last Epoch was the endgame. The monolith system is good enough but it could get really repetitive. Ultimately I would usually get my characters to 95ish before losing focus and either rolling a new character, or wandering back to Path of Exile. However with the Tombs of the Erased expansion, it is in large part a mostly endgame focused update. This is adding itemized maps similar to Path of Exile, as well as a bunch of extra content that can show up and impact your endgame. There are also a number of unique map types which give you various crafting options, which means you will have specific things that you are chasing in addition to your gearing goals. I am super freaking excited to see all of this new stuff coming, and more than that I am really looking forward to this game finally shifting into a more standard three to four month release model.
The new season starts on April 17th at 11 am CDT and features over one hundred pages of patch notes. The thing is… while there are a few builds that were nerfed a bit, way more were buffed and even the nerfed builds largely just went from endless amounts of damage to doing reasonable amounts of damage and are still going to be viable. Its essentially been six months since the last major update, and I feel like they did more than six months worth of work in the process. Effectively when they launched 1.1.7 they realized that their original roadmap needed to change. Players were almost universally complaining that there just was not enough to do at the endgame, which forced them to shift gears and really dive into that type of content. Seeing the end results… I am really freaking excited to get my hands on the new content and play it.
I realize that this post comes off as a bit of propaganda, but honestly… it is intentional. I love Last Epoch and I really appreciate the story of Eleventh Hour Games. Legitimately this entire company started as a Reddit thread about a bunch of people wanting to build the ARPG they always wanted to play. Hands down I feel like Last Epoch has the best systems of any game on the market in this genre. I want it to succeed, and I legitimately feel like it sits in this perfect happy medium between the simplicity and often dumbed down nature of Diablo, and the over complicated and obtuse nature of Path of Exile. What it has been missing is a really robust endgame, and it seems like Tombs of the Erased is finally bringing that. Sure there are still things missing like the last bits of the campaign and there is no social construct for guilds/clans but that can arrive over time. I have a blast each time a new content patch drops in this game, and I think you will too. If you want more information from me on this game I wrote a more detailed Primer on the game when it launched into full release early last year. I also created a much more detailed crafting primer around the same time. If you are more video motivated, I record dumb little videos all the time about the games I am playing when I want to talk about a build or something that I am doing, and there is a section for “Bel Bungles Last Epoch” collecting a bunch of these. Lastly there is of course the Last Epoch archives here on this blog where I have collected all of the posts throughout the years where I have talked specifically about the game, as well as any episodes of AggroChat where we discussed it. I know I will be playing the game this Thursday and will very likely be actively blogging about my adventures here. I hope to see you all there as well. The post You Should Play Last Epoch appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.

The Altar of Randomness

Good Morning Folks. I am still playing Path of Exile II, and shockingly still having things to say about the game. I expected that I would be full on engaged in the Last Epoch Season 2 propaganda machine by now. For any you are interested however Steelmage posted a pretty fun video that attempts to explain all the things about Last Epoch while he was playing it. Over the weekend I reached a point where my build finally started to feel pretty comfortable. Essentially I leap slam into a pack of mobs, infernal cry, and then boneshatter to cause a screen wide explosion augmented by herald of ash. When it comes to boss time I alternate between Perfect Strike and Hammer of the Gods until it is dead. I can’t do any of the one-shot shenanigans but can pretty effectively dispose of most encounters. I need more strength so I can get a bigger hammer with more physical damage on it, but otherwise I am doing pretty great.
I’ve mostly been focused on finding Corruption Nexuses to cleanse so that I can keep bumping up my tier of maps and getting more atlas passives. At this point I have cleared a T9 Nexus and am trying to find my way to another one so I can clear it and bump up to T10. Map sustain has been pretty reasonable and fighting a boss I believe guarantees that you will always get one tier higher, giving you a fairly predictable way to keep moving up. I’ve found a few maps on my atlas that require specific tiers of maps, namely The Copper Citadel requires T15 or higher, and the Megalith requires T11 or higher. I’ve also found a Kalandra map and it did not seem to have any specific requirements, but also has little to no relation to the version of that map that we got in Path of Exile 1. Mostly it is just a pretty tileset that grows as you move along the path with an altar at the end that gives you a special item base.
At this point I have unlocked 20 of 40 Atlas passives and have mostly focused on waystone sustain, adding additional rares to my map, and then diving into rogue exiles making them more likely to wear strength gear and more likely to have unique jewelry (rings, amulets, and belts) equipped. The biggest complaint that I have with the Path of Exile II Atlas is that it feels like I really don’t have much player agency. I’m roughly halfway through the Atlas progression and by now in a Path of Exile league I would have some sort of defined strategy that I am following, influencing a specific type of content to show up more frequently… and honestly by this point probably have at least two mechanics guaranteed on every map. It is just really hard to target farm specific mechanics for resources because Tablets feel totally random in the type you get, and there is nothing like a Scarab that you can use to force mechanics onto each specific map. For example I really need to farm a ton of Expedition, but it is a total crapshoot which maps I am going to have access to that mechanic on.
So much of the Path of Exile II design has been about removing player agency and re-introducing pure dumb luck. This is pretty much the opposite of what players generally want, and once you learn the systems in Path of Exile you are able to radically influence the randomness in a manner that fits the results that you are trying to get out of it. So I get that the passive tree from POE1 might be a bridge to far for the POE2 systems teams… but I posit that maybe it is time to port over Idols. Right now there is a limited time event happening in POE1 called the Legacy of Phrecia, and one of its features is to remove the existing Atlas Passive tree and introduce in its place a series of Idols with randomly rolled attributes. You cannot pinpoint things quite as easily as you can with the Atlas tree, but stacking enough of these allows you to at least shape the outcome of your maps. This truly is a better system design than the current Atlas in Path of Exile II and I am somewhat hoping that maybe Idols as a concept was a test for improving mapping.
In other news I “crafted” if you can use that word… what I consider to be my ideal normal chestpiece for my build. I had been picking up every Ornate Plate base I could find and specifically I got lucky and got a three socket corrupt on a perfect 2.5% life regeneration item. Other than that I have also upgraded my Xoph’s Blood amulet to a non-corrupted version and added the Titanic enchant to it for 5% more strength. At some point I picked up a slightly better version of Infernoclasp, which represents the only other unique that I am using with the build currently. I picked up a couple of new rings and got one of them to 20% Chaos Modifiers which essentially fixed my resists to the point of allowing me to drop the Chaos Resistance corruption I had on a previous chestpiece. My next big expenditure of currency is going to be buying enough Fire quality currency to max out 40% on the Breach ring, which might be enough to cap my fire resistance at 90%.
Currently I have 89% Fire Resistance, and 76% for Cold and Lightning. If I ever manage to ascend again I will pick up the point that makes max fire res account for lightning and cold and then be at 89/90/90 and should be able to push up Fire that last point either through quality on the breach ring or picking up another +1% max jewel socket. I’ve been pushing up my block chance and am now at 53% with my next pick adding another +12% and the ability to get life back on block. I am just shy of 200 life per second regen which feels pretty comfortable, and my armor is in a decent place… but I could always use more of it. What I need now more than anything is strength… so that I can start using the higher tier bases for my two handed maces.
In a perfect world I want a Fanatic Greathammer, but the base Strength requirement for that is 212… which gets multiplied by Giants Blood for a total of 636 required Strength. There is no way for me to get to that without going down to pick up Polymathy. So either I need a perfectly rolled hammer with maximum reduced attributes… or a lot more passive skill points. It seems like the lowest I can reasonably get is 137 Strength from 35% reduced attributes which would still require me to have 381 Strength. I am pretty commited to my next choice and other than that I am 12 points away from being able to reach Polymathy, which means I will not be able to get there until level 93. Realistically… there is no way in hell that I hit that before Thursday and the launch of Last Epoch, so without radically shifting my tree I am going to be stuck where I am for awhile. What is even sadder is that even AFTER allocating all of those nodes I will only be sitting at 442 Strength so would STILL need to find a reduced attribute roll on my mace.
Loot still feels fairly anemic, but I am usually finding one or two exalts per map now. I’ve had a few good tinks and at this point I have found two Twilight Reliquary Keys and two raw Divine Orbs. I used one of the Twilight keys just to see what luck I might have, and pulled a 1Ex mace from it… so I sold the second one for 18 Exalts. I’ve spent one of the Divines on getting a better Xoph’s Blood that I could enchant, and am shopping around for various upgrades with the second one. Technically I have seen three Divine Orbs, but one I got during the campaign that I cashed into Exalted Orbs to help with some early gearing. What this game really needs is Harvest crafting… the ability to change resistances on gear and the ability to spam craft items that are skewed towards a single needed stat. That really is my primary method for attempting to craft gear in Path of Exile 1, and would love to see something similar here. Then again… I could not reasonably get Harvest on every single map to even farm the currency so maybe there are multiple problems with that statement.
I’ve reached a point where I am legitimately enjoying myself… but that said… I am so fucking ready for Tombs of the Erased on Thursday. The systems of Last Epoch are just better designed than the systems of Path of Exile II. All that was lacking was the endgame and I am hoping the Weaver faction and itemized “maps” are going to solve that last piece of the puzzle. I will probably fanboy out a bit over the coming week sharing “why you should play” type posts. So unless something drastic happens over the coming days, this is probably going to be my last Path of Exile II post for awhile. The post The Altar of Randomness appeared first on Tales of the Aggronaut.