Screenie Saturday: Fashion and Feels

BROKEN SHORE SPOILERS AHEAD

This week was dominated by WoW and D3, and I never remember to take screenies in D3.

Screenie Saturday: Fashion and Feels

My baby mage looking stylish in Feralas.

Screenie Saturday: Fashion and Feels

Tirion dying horribly without much fanfare had way less emotional impact than the fact that there were horde and alliance raids working together here

Screenie Saturday: Fashion and Feels

I loved the chaos of the invasion events on the first day. What is even happening here?


An Expensive Mistake

I took a break from the land of demon hunters last night to…play a demon hunter. Yeah, I forsook WoW and the promise of easy ilvl 700 gear for all my alts to play some Diablo 3. I’ve officially reached the point in the season where I have all the pieces of gear I need, and now I’m on the very long tedious path towards finding ancient, optimal versions of everything. It is a slow climb from here on out, and squeezing every ounce out of gems and enchanting will matter.
An Expensive Mistake

That’s a lot of work. The despair part is accurate.

One of the ways D3 lets you upgrade is by “augmenting” your gear. This requires that the piece of gear in question be an ancient legendary, the kind with a shiny gold border around its item description and higher stats than normal. You augment it by placing it in Kanai’s Cube, along with some gems of your choosing. One leveled legendary gem and 3 flawless royal gems to be precise. The legendary gem must be level 30+ to augment a weapon, 40+ for jewelry, or 50+ for armor, and the higher the level the more powerful the augment. Last night I did a bunch of rifts with fellow Aggrochat friends Bel and Thalen, and poured all my gem upgrades into an unused legendary gem so I could get it to 50 and upgrade my pants. I was gonna have the fanciest pants of them all! I did one more rift than I reasonably should have, putting me a bit past my usual bedtime, but damn it I wanted my fancy pants. I finally got that legendary gem up to 50, grabbed the mats I needed out of my stash, and ran over to the cube to make my fancy pants.
An Expensive Mistake

Whyyyyyy?

Then this happened. In my haste to upgrade my pants and run to bed, I grabbed yellow gems from the bank. I’m used to playing a mage, and more than once I’ve accidentally put a yellow gem into my gear before realizing that no, demon hunters don’t care about intelligence. It doesn’t help that the in-game recipe tells you that you need 3 flawless royal gems, but doesn’t remind you that specific colors of gems grant specific stat bonuses and maybe you should use the green ones, idiot demon hunter. And so this is how after hours and hours of work, I ended up with demon hunter pants with 250 bonus intelligence. The moral of this story is probably something about not finishing expensive projects when you’re overtired and not paying attention, measure twice cut once and all that jazz. Otherwise you might end up with shitty pants.

Bumbling Around

Yeti Power

After a Tuesday night spent chasing Legion Invasions and being an Illidari, I felt like last night I needed a nice relaxing night of being a completely different sort of Demon Hunter.  By nice and relaxing I mean a night spent pushing rifts and causing anime style rocket explosions as I cleared entire rooms at the same time.  It is strange how Diablo has morphed over the years for me.  Originally it was that game that I wished I could play with friends… but didn’t have stable enough internet to be able to play it.  Then it when the second game was released it absolutely become a game I played almost exclusively with friends.  When three was released, I was in a place where I was largely soloing and found it a less than amazing experience.  Now several years later each time a new season is launched it becomes this focusing force that brings a bunch of us back together for another trip happily through the paragon and gear grind.  For most of the night last night I was joined by my fairly regular demon slaying buddy Grace, and we also managed to snag Thalen and bring him along for the fun.  The night as a whole was pretty great because on our first tag team attempt at bounties… a Menagerist Goblin spawned dropping this extremely awesome Yeti pet named “The Bumble” for me to go wandering with.  Additionally I was able to knock out several pieces of gear off of my list, and I finally managed to get the last of the three legendary gems needed for this build.  The highlight of the night however was getting an Ancient Yang’s Recurve to drop…  which admittedly made Grace super jealous.  However because of this it is now my duty to tag along in any D3 madness to push hard for folks so they too can get their sweet ancient drops.

Bumbling Around

The other thing that happened last night is that I attempted the “Numlock Trick”.  One of the more annoying things in Diablo 3 is that most builds have some sort of buff that they want to cast essentially anytime it is available.  The goal of the build is usually to get enough cooldown reduction so that you can keep it up 100% of the time.  For the Multishot build I am using for my Demon Hunter, it is focused largely around getting keeping Vengeance up 100% of the time… and right now I have it close enough that I maybe have a second without it up at any given time.  The other day I heard something mentioned in a build video talking about “using the numlock trick” on one of these buffs… and I had to investigate to satiate my curiosity.  There is apparently a strange glitch in the game that allows you to essentially constantly be spamming a button press.  I mean in theory you could do the same thing with hardware macros on a keyboard, but this just sort of “works”.  The idea is to bind the 1-4 hotkeys to have a secondary key which relates to Numpad 1-4.  To toggle on autocast for any of the abilities you turn your Numlock key on, hold down the keys you want to autocast and then turn off your Numlock.  Just like that the key keeps repeating over and over… which causes some weird behavior.  Firstly if you are holding any key the cast will not fire… so if you are holding force move or the left mouse button down… just ease up on it to let the next cast go off.  Secondly… it has the strange behavior of interrupt abilities like identification or teleport.  What I do to get past those is to start the channeled cast, and then hold any key.  In my binding I have S set as an alternate bind for Shift… which is to stop moving and hold still.  Holding this down while channeling works well to keep my auto casts from interrupting whatever ability I want to do.

Bumbling Around

The other “strangeness” that happens is that any time you shift games, and sometimes when you just downgrade difficulty it can turn the autocasting off completely.  In this case you just flip back on numlock, hold your keys down, and turn it back off to set the glitch back up.  Now that I know this exists…  I am wondering what other uses can be had for it.  Supposedly folks use this regularly for Taeguk builds on the monk side to keep the stacks.  In theory I could do the same trick to make sure I am evasive fire shots in with my hunter, to build hatred and keep up the damage shield.  For the time being however I am keeping it simple and only using this to try and keep Vengeance up as often as possible as well as my Companion ability.  I was always horrible at using these cooldowns, and tended to save them until I reached a point where I had a lot of elites to attack rather than just constantly using them knowing that I had another cooldown just around the corner.  I need to spend some time working on achievements so I can catch up to the point Grace is currently in the seasonal journey.  I am still not sure if I am going to go for the stash slot this time around…  but for the moment I am going to keep playing so long as the game feels fun and fresh.  Tonight however I have earmarked to go do Broken Shores scenario on my various alts… because I have yet to actually see the new cinematics.

Palladium Find

Unsorted Madness

After sitting at home due to the outside generally being rainy and icky Saturday, we ventured forth yesterday out into the extremely muggy world left behind.  I managed to wrap up the podcast and get a blog post made all well before my wife made it home from church.  By the time she got home I was essentially ready to go do whatever she might need to do.  When she told me that she wanted to go to Gardener’s I admittedly had some mixed emotions.  For the uninitiated Gardner’s Used Books is this massive place here in Tulsa  It takes up the entirety of an extremely deep strip mall and almost every inch of it is covered in bookcases and or collectibles.  The problem being that they are also notorious for reorganizing trying to fit new stuff in the store, which means that often times you have to spend thirty minutes roaming the store trying to find it again.  The biggest problem I have had recently with Gardner’s is that their stock seems to be aging horribly.  When I go to a book store I almost always make a beeline to the pen and paper gaming section, and then from there I wander out into other things.  This section at Gardner’s had been shrinking and it felt like slowly, bit by bit we were just picking through the bones of a carcass that had been there since the early 90s.  The thing you have to understand about this store is that it is essentially designed to be run at a loss.  The Gardener’s “real” business is a Tax Service, and a really damned good one.  It has been rumored for years that the family owns several buildings just like this one full of books, that were bought in bulk to dilute the profits to whatever level they needed for tax benefits.  Over the last year or so they have been opening up one of these buildings located behind the main store on the weekends, and letting folks sift through the new arrivals.  The above image is a single quadrant of this second building… and what you are looking at is completely unsorted books.

Palladium Find

So you might see a Chilton manual to a 85 Chevy Pickup, next to a Danielle Steel, sitting beside an oddity like the book in the photo above.  “The Ewoks Join the Fight” was part of a series of books that included a record that went with them.  The idea was for you to read along with the narration, but the narration itself was this amazing radio play style thing.  I loved these as a kid and had them for several different franchises… and I think I even remember there being a set for the Gremlins movie.  Now the part I am not remembering is if they came from a restaurant as a limited time giveaway, or if this was something that I ended up getting from the scholastic books catalog.  Regardless they were cool and it was a trip down memory lane to see one half buried in a pile of unrelated books.  We came with a purpose in mind of trying to find pre-calc books for my wife, who now has that as a prep this year.  So as I started going through the piles I started pulling books out because you could walk past the same table three times and see slightly different things each time.  Unfortunately nothing I pulled really interested her, but she did find a seemingly nice book on forensics.  The challenge of this Gardner’s Annex is the fact that there did not appear to be any air conditioning.  We went extremely early in the morning, and it was already getting a little muggy in there.  I would hate to go there in the full on Oklahoma summer heat, considering it is basically a giant metal building.  The coolest thing in the annex however was this really neat full sized Han Solo in Carbonite sculpture that was hanging on one of the walls.  I am not sure exactly where it came from, or if it was an official prop for maybe the re-releases of the original movies back during the mid 90s.  Whatever the case I wanted to take it home with me, but like so many of the bigger things they have…  like the life sized Hulk statue… it didn’t have a price tag on it.

Palladium Find

When we made it over to the main building, I have to say I got more than a little excited.  One of the things that I “collect” for lack of a better word to describe it… are Palladium games books.  I have talked about this a bit in the past, and it seems like folks tend to either gravitate towards GURPS or Palladium when it comes to a “universal” system for gaming.  Later Wizards tried to do this with the d20 system, but the idea is that you have one set of rules that cover lots and lots of different genres.  As someone who used to love genre bending in gaming… it would allow you to give players the leeway to play quite literally anything they wanted to in almost any setting.  The downside is there are only so many character backstories that can make this work apart from a “band of adventurers” or “mercenaries”.  For a period of time Palladium books released a quarterly “magazine” for lack of a better term, filled with various bits of information related to all of the different systems called Rifter.  They originally sold for between $10 and $15 in game stores, but over the years I have picked them up whenever I happened to find them cheaply.  Sometimes they have really good stuff in them, other times not so much.  It seems as though someone had just unloaded a stack of them on Gardner’s sixteen in total.  The negative being that they were mostly priced around $6 a piece, which is fine if I only found them one at a time… but more than I would want to pay for a large bulk lot of them.  After my wife didn’t find much of anything she wanted from the main store, I decided to see if they could make me a deal on the entire bundle.  I had it in my head that I would be willing to pay around $50 for them all… and when the guy said he would sell them to me for $45 I had to stifle the excitement.  There are some huge gaping holes in the numbering… and apparently they released physical copies of this up through the 40s so it is far from a complete set.  However I have a lot more of them than I did before hand so life is pretty good.  I’ve not really done much more than thumb through them, but if nothing else they always have really cool artwork.