Hey all! Just wanted to clarify something for you: racial armors will not be available through WvW. We’ve contacted MMORPG.com so they can correct that information.
Thanks, and sorry for the confusion!
Hey all! Just wanted to clarify something for you: racial armors will not be available through WvW. We’ve contacted MMORPG.com so they can correct that information.
Thanks, and sorry for the confusion!
If you ain’t pistol whipping you ain’t doing it big.
Rank -1: Trusted in Arenanet
Thieves are in a great place atm, especially compared to the issues some other classes still have. There is no “hate” at all for our class, at least from the Devs. The stealth nerfs will be GOOD for our profession as a whole as it will drive out some of the bads and spread that population among the other classes a bit. I’m tired of all thieves being lumped into the same group of “ezmode noobs”, we now get a patch that will “separate the men form the boys”. It’s high time for the class to be respectable.
People who say “as X class” and then agree with a nerf don’t actually play that class.
I’m ok with this as long as I can still use BS while revealed as if I am in stealth.
BS should not require stealth IMO — it should switch your skill 1 relative to your position to your locked target. If I’m at the back, stealth or not, BACKSTAB!
So, let’s do that.
In the next release we will adjust the way that world mega bosses award their loot. The current chests will stay lootable once per day per character, but each boss’s guaranteed rare item drop will be moved to a separate chest (visually similar to daily achievement reward chests) that can only be acquired once per day across an account.
Our intention with this change is to keep providing rewarding loot for world mega bosses while avoiding overwhelming participation in boss fights (and overwhelming the economy with rares) from players cycling through each character slot for each boss every day.
So this means the fall damage trait will basically be an automatic Revealed debuff any time you fall very far.
Last Refuge will also become an even more thorough death sentence than it already is.
they’re still going to be insanely overpowered. they will still stealth every 3 seconds and still dish out 8k+ hits.
wait and see.
SHHH, nobody has to know that I’m glad that they adjusted culling since, as a scout in WvWvW, it just made my job harder. Also, I’m glad that they fixed “stealth culling”, so nobody will cry again about thieves. And I will still be able to kill anyone :P
the end of culling and ‘the start of skill lags’
Yeah … it’s truly amazing how many people don’t understand that culling and lag go hand in hand in spite of the several detailed explanations that ANet has given on the subject. There are not in any way separate issues. ANet could have turned off culling at any time … it would have just meant incredible lag if that had done so. The fact that they are now removing culling simply means that they think they have improved their data processing and transmission speeds to the point that the lag will not be objectionable … but ANet’s definition of “objectionable” could be significantly different than ours. We will find out on March 26.
Ah finally, now you can’t blame culling from us thieves killing you anymore. Cheers!
Finally!! ‘L2P’ comment can be justified without culling used as excuse for lack of skills ^^
I pretty much run dungeons every day, what can I say, I just LOVE dungeon speed runs :D And I’m looking for more folks to run with!
I love teaching the runs as well. So if you are interested, you don’t need to be a pro (yet), just be capable. (I can teach CoF, SE and AC. HotW, CM and TA are easy enough. Still working on CoE and Arah).
My only rule: no elitists or folks with bad manors.
Since dungeons can be done cross server, there are no server stipulations. However, the guild is based on Tarnished Coast.
We are also looking for officers and other dungeon teachers, so let me know if you are interested in either of those positions.
Mail me for an invite: Beorn Saxon.4762
Dolyak Express [XPRS]
After vast refinement I’ve come up with this build which is simply amazing for PvE including dungeons. It focuses on survivability and sustained melee AoE DPS.
Its the kind of thief you WANT for your dungeon run because they can dish it and as well as take it.
Traits:
0/30/0/20/20
*Signets of power
*Signet Use
*Executioner
*Power of Inertia (this one is a free slot)
*Assassin’s Reward
*Thrill of the Crime (this one is a free slot)
*Trickster
Utility Skills:
*Signet of Malice
*Assassin’s Signet
*Signet of Shadows (this can be swapped to any Signet you want)
*Haste
*Dagger Storm
Equipment should focus on power and toughness primarily with secondary traits being vitality or precision. Personally, I’m running Emerald Orichalcum Earring(s), Ring(s) and Amulet of the Berserker and am currently working towards a mixed set of karma exotics that specialize in power and toughness (currently wearing some Valkyrie Emblazoned exotics and some of the collected karma gear…it looks really silly especially on my Sylvari)
The weapons ideally would be berserker exotics (I’m not even close to getting my Berserker’s Destroyer Pistol/Sword).
Runes can be anything that fits your play style. I’m continually debating with myself on superior divinity or superior infiltration.
Sigils should be Superior Sigil of Force.
Enough equipment talk xD
The general strategy is to roll up to your target or shadow step into them (rolling is better so you gain 2 stacks of might), use haste start spaming pistol whip. When initiative starts running low activate a signet of your choice or steal, continue your pistol whip spam. When haste is up use it and continue this loop. If you do it correctly you will not run out of initiative for at least a full minute.
As a secondary weapon set I suggest the Short Bow or P/D (since you have some condition damage).
The highlight of this build is the 48 second cooldown on haste, this means you spam it whenever you can. It is a broken kitten ability and makes you a healing machine of dps doom.
Congratulations. Although I personally do not like the appearance of any of the Greatsword legendaries, I respect the amount of time and effort that went into this. Enjoy your Eternity.
Ok, so I have read a lot of terrible posts about thieves being weak in PvE, so I decided to shed some light on just one of the many powerful PvE builds. Enjoy!
0 / 30 / 20 / 20 / 0
Critical Strikes (30 points):
Side Strike (III) – Critical Haste (X) – Executioner (XI)
Shadow Arts (20 points):
Infusion of Shadow (V) – Cloaked in Shadow (VI)
Acrobatics (20 points):
Power of Inertia (II) – Assassin’s Reward (X) or Quick Recovery (IX)
No power? Why?
Well, the power tree only offers power mixed with condition duration. Condition damage is in a weak state right now and should be avoided. And of course, most of the gear you craft or buy will already have power. The critical strike tree will offer 2 great stats and traits that are downright powerful. The other two trees will offer tons of mobility and most importantly, the ability to survive.
Gearing:
I feel the stats are currently prioritized in this order:
Power > Precision > Crit Dmg % > Toughness >/= Vitality
Take note that condition damage is not listed and that is exactly how I feel about it.
Note: This does not mean you should only build items with the top 3 stats. You must mix in toughness and vitality if you plan to survive the tougher encounters. A lot of people are arguing about which of those stats is better. The answer is neither. YOU NEED BOTH.
Utility Skills: (My preference)
Signet of Malice – Life on hit owns. Thieves hit quite often. You can still use it as a heal.
Signet of Agility or Signet of Shadows – Depending on whether I want speed/mobility or more dmg/de-buff removal.
Shadow Refuge – This will mesh well with the traits chosen. It will provide a small heal. It creates a combo field for allies. It is great for hiding yourself while reviving you downed teammates (something all players should do).
Caltrops – AoE bleed application and a major crippling effect. Less Death Blossom needed – More back-stab etc.
Shadowstep: (Option 1) – To remove stuns and escape all sorts of fun things during boss fights.
Scorpion Wire: (Option 2) – Great at pulling and isolating specific targets.
Daggerstorm: I shouldn’t have to explain this one.
Edit: Thieves guild is amazing. I use it most of the time now. I still got love for Daggerstorm though and use it in spam chain encounters.
Weapons:
I use two weapon combinations – But use whatever works for you per usual.
D/D – I use this most of the time. When I play with my friends I can get away with doing max damage with D/D. Drop Caltops, fly around causing even more opening bleeds with DB. Use dancing dagger for AoE. Cloak and Dagger with back-stab spam works here. Under 50% Heartseeker will own with Executioner trait from the front side. If you run into trouble Cloak and Dagger or Shadow Refuge out (also causing a blind due to traits). Don’t forget to use Daggerstorm/Thieves guild!
D/P – I use this when things get rough and surviving is an issue. Drag yourself to targets and Blind with 3. Use 5 constantly to blind targets for your team thereafter. Sneak in HS whenever possible as the target drops below 50%. Stealth whenever you can to Blind and retreat.
SB – Oh kitten I can’t fight in melee range cause I am injured or scared. Please allow me to create a poison combo field for the team with 4 and Blast away with 2.
I hope this guide helps people find the success that I have found and feel they are contributing more to the group. Thanks for reading.
(edited by Quasi Mota.7390)
A lot of small damage and no killing. :/
<- all my characters are Norn and all of them are max height
That’s Guardian in a nutshell. This is what a Guardian is not:
There is only you, your allies at your back, and your enemies before you. That’s the role of the Guardian.
The Fundamentals of Being A Guardian: Boons/Conditions, Symbols, Virtues
What are boons?
Boons are effects that improve your allies’ abilities somehow. Different Guardian abilities activate different boons. If you want to be literate in Guardian abilities, learn what the boons do. Here’s a quick rundown:
What Are Conditions?
Conditions are the opposite of boons. Conditions debilitate, weaken, harm or otherwise reduce your enemies’ ability to fight you. Here’s a quick rundown of all the conditions:
Guardians have access to nearly every boon. Might, Retaliation, Aegis and Regeneration are probably your most common, but you have easy access to Vigor and Stability too. Fury is a bit harder to come by.
(edited by Eveningstar.6940)
Table of Contents
1) Introduction
2) Boons and Conditions
3) Symbols
4) Virtues
5) Combos
6) Weapon Overview
7) Hammer
8) Greatsword
9) Staff
10) Mace
11) Sword
12) Scepter
13) Offhands
14) Healing Overview
15) Utilities Overview
16) Consecrations
17) Meditations
18) Shouts
19) Signets
20) Spirit Weapons
21) Elites
22) Traits Overview
23) Making A Build
24) FAQs
Change Log
12/19/12 – Minor description changes in accordance with recent patch notes.
11/5/12 – Changed description of Renewed Focus to reflect recent changes.
9/21/12 – Added mention of the DoT component of Binding Blade. Thanks Aseyhe.2948!
9/16/12 – Added section on Sword
9/16/12 – Began first round of corrections and small edits.
9/15/12 – First draft of the guide completed and posted.
9/15/12 – Finished Table of Contents.
(edited by Eveningstar.6940)
As for Conditions, we spread Burning like nobody’s business. But that’s about all we have. Guardians do have some strong Blind abilities, one or two Immobilizations and access to limited Vulnerability. But our most common condition is by far Burning.
Okay. So what about Symbols?
So, Symbols are a mechanic peculiar to Guardians. A Symbol is an area we create on the ground that damages enemies and provides a boon to allies in its radius. Later on I’ll discuss traits that improve Symbols, but for now, here’s a list of all our symbols:
And how about Virtues?
Guardians have access to three Virtues, which are our Profession skills. Virtues come in two flavors: Passive and Active. As long as you don’t activate a Virtue, it’s in Passive mode, and gives you a small boost of some sort. When you activate the Virtue, you lose the Passive bonus and get the Active bonus. The Passive bonus returns once your Virtue is off cooldown.
Think of Virtues like signets that you always have. They give you small, constant bonuses when not in use, and if you activate them, they grant bigger bonuses to your entire team. Here’s a quick overview:
How to use it: Leave it on, for the most part. Virtue of Justice essentially makes your fifth strike deal more damage. A strike is defined as any time you hit your enemy. So any weapon or skill that has multiple, fast strikes is going to activate Passive Virtue of Justice more frequently, right? I’ll cover Justice synergy more thoroughly when I get to specific weapons, but the rule of thumb is: The faster your weapon attacks, the more damage you get out of this Virtue.
Activate Virtue of Justice when you have several allies around you. Every nearby ally’s next attack will set the enemy on fire for five seconds. So if it’s five of you attacking one champion, that’s 25 seconds of burning. Not too shabby.
Virtue of Justice comes off cooldown pretty quickly, so feel free to use it liberally if you have allies around you.
How to use it: Leave it on. You won’t notice it, but it’s there to help you. Virtue of Resolve grants you a small amount of health back every three seconds, but it does add up over the course of a battle.
Because of the long cooldown, activating Virtue of Resolve just to heal yourself is not recommended except in a pinch. Use it when you need to spread a modest heal to your nearby allies. It’s strong enough to save them if they’re starting to get low.
How to use it: Again, leave it on. The cooldown on this is way too long to justify using it except in particular situations. Courage gives you a free Aegis every 40 seconds. That’s a free block every 40 seconds. Every 40 seconds, you’ll totally negate one attack. Activating it gives Virtue immediately to every ally around you. It can be a great lifesaver if you’re expecting nearby allies to take a big amount of damage, or if you just want to give them some mitigation in anticipation of a lot of damage.
Either way, rule of thumb: Leave it on. Use Courage if you desperately, absolutely need to block something NOW. Otherwise, save it for when you’ve got allies around you who are under attack.
Hang on. What about Combos? Guardians have all these Combo Fields…
We sure do. So, Combos are one of the underrated mechanics of GW2 at the time of writing this guide. People tend to glaze over it, or ignore its efficacy when discussing an ability. I honestly cannot understand why—Combos are wonderful. Combos add so much to a Guardian’s group dynamic. But how do they work?
Combos are pretty simple in theory. A combo is created by a Combo Field + Combo Finisher. Every Combo Field has a particular type. The type of Combo Field you create determines the effects of the Combo Finisher. Let’s take Hammer for example.
Hammer has Symbol of Protection, which is also a Combo Field: Light. You can tell it’s a Combo Field by the bright, shining borders. Hammer also has Mighty Blow, which is a Combo Finisher. If you perform Mighty Blow (Combo Finisher) inside Symbol of Protection (Combo Field), you produce a Combo effect.
(edited by Eveningstar.6940)
Ring of Warding: One of two wards the Guardian gets. This is an amazingly versatile ability, and one of the few abilities that can force an enemy to stay on you. I don’t actually recommend this, by the way. Forcing an enemy to hit you is about the worst way to mitigate damage. Instead, consider using it as a cage. Lock an enemy in—you’re free to run out, but they’re not. Also, it’s not terribly wide, but you can use it to lock up choke points.
Why The Hammer is Awesome:
Interesting Synergies:
Greatsword: Or, A Lesson In Inspiring Warrior Jealousy
Another highly versatile two-hander, faster than Hammer and a bit more well-rounded, Greatsword is a popular everyman’s weapon, useful in leveling, general PVE, and even support. Greatsword is reasonably fast, at least compared to Hammer, and provides Might in your attack chain. It’s designed for fighting multiple enemies, comes with a combo field, three combo finishers, a distance closer and control.
Greatsword Skills:
Strike/Vengeful Strike/Wrathful Strike: A solid, wide-sweeping attack chain. This chain grants you three seconds of Might at the end of it. For every enemy you strike, you’ll stack another Might. The duration is static, but the intensity grows with every enemy you hit. Three seconds is coincidentally about long enough for another chain, meaning constant Greatsword auto-attack = constant Might.
Symbol of Wrath: The damage is strong and racks up the longer an enemy stays inside the Symbol’s borders. It also provides retaliation, but not for long, so it’s useful to use just before an enemy strikes you. To top it off, it’s a Combo Field. Use it with Whirling Wrath, as detailed below.
Whirling Wrath: Best used when facing multiple enemies, which is exactly what Greatsword is designed to do. Whirling Wrath will trigger Cleansing Bolts off Symbol of Wrath, granting condition removal to nearby allies. It also hits hard, though the damage is variable, and tends to be more reliable when you have more than one enemy beside you. The closer you are to enemies, the more Whirling Wrath’s projectiles will hit.
Leap of Faith: The cooldown is a little long to use this indiscriminately. It is, however, a good distance closer coupled with good mitigation due to the Blind effect. Don’t use it purely for damage, but use it to jump into a group, or leap to an enemy charging at an ally. It’s a Leap finisher—not, in fact, all that great from Symbol of Wrath (your Retaliation might not do much if your enemy is blinded—it has to actually hit you to trigger Retaliation), but the Leap is worth keeping in mind.
Binding Blade: Control and an interrupt. Binding Blade does modest damage and produces a leash on the enemy. Use the Pull ability to interrupt them and immediately drag them on to you. The distance—a medium 600—takes a little getting used to, but this is a useful way to either corrall enemies, punish them for running away from you or create setups for Whirling Wrath. This is a Whirl finisher.
Binding Blade also has a significant DoT component. It isn’t a bad idea to allow the DoT to deal some damage before Pulling.
(edited by Eveningstar.6940)
Hello everyone,
This is my first attempt at a comprehensive and approachable guide for beginners (and curious veterans) to the Guardian class. Guild Wars 2 is a brand new game, and the meta-game is still in its infancy. Many of us are struggling to understand the principles of this game while shedding ourselves of the pre-conceived expectations cultivated by years of playing WoW. There is no trinity, no concept of DPS, no tank-and-spank, no backline healbotting and no “pure support role,” and so we’re all in one way or another learning to play all over again.
This guide will attempt to accomplish the following:
This guide will not do any of the following:
So, here we go!
It’s ANet’s Fault: A Compendium on Complaining On The Forums
Inviable: Why This Class Is Broken And Why You Should Reroll
Schadenfreude: Slaughtering Necromancers And Feeling Good About it
The Light And How to Swing It: By Uther Pendragon
Guardian 101 – A Guide For Beginners
“Blade with whom I have lived, blade with whom I now die: serve right and justice one last time; seek one last heart of evil; still one last life of pain. Cut well, old friend. Then, farewell.”
Good Reasons To Play A Guardian:
Bad Reasons To Play A Guardian:
The Guardian is a defensive soldier. A heavily armored combatant whose playstyle focuses on contending with enemies while supporting one’s allies with robust boon application, heals and shields. Guardians are remarkably versatile, capable of adhering to a broad range of playstyles—spreading conditions, dealing sudden bursts of damage, being an immovable wall—but a few basic principles define the core of every Guardian’s playstyle:
(edited by Eveningstar.6940)
Why are Combo Fields so useful? Simple: Any ally can activate them. The more allies you have performing Combo Finishers inside your Combo Field, the more Combos you create. Here’s a quick list of our available Combo Fields:
Combo Field: Light plus …
… Combo Finisher: Blast = Area Retaliation
… Combo Finisher: Leap = Retaliation
… Combo Finisher: Projectile = Remove Condition
… Combo Finisher: Whirl = Cleansing Bolts
Combo Field: Fire plus …
… Combo Finisher: Blast = Area Might
… Combo Finisher: Leap = Fire Armor
… Combo Finisher: Projectile = Burning
… Combo Finisher: Whirl = Burning Bolts
This seems like a lot to take in, and it is, but you’ll get used to it the more you play.
Understanding Weapons
Guardians have access to the following weapons:
Every weapon you equip grants you a different set of abilities that provides you with a different set of tactics. Two-Handed and Underwater weapons grant you a grand total of five attack skills. Main-Hand weapons grant you three, and Off-Hand weapons grant you two. You can combine Main Hand and Off-Hand weapons in any way you like.
Before I get into the specifics of weapons, I want to make a few things clear:
1) Every weapon is viable. There is no such thing as an inviable weapon. I’m actually not a fan of the way “inviable” gets thrown around as a word—if you see someone on the forums or in the game complaining about how Hammer or Mace or Greatsword is inviable in such-and-such situation, they’re just whining. Trust me. Now, there is such a thing as a weapon being more useful in one situation and less useful in another. That is important to remember. If you want to deal big spike damage, swinging a scepter is probably not your best option, for example. And if you want range, swinging a mace is probably not your best option. But Scepter sure is.
2) Keep a good copy of every single weapon in your inventory. Seriously. Just because you can switch between two weapons in combat doesn’t mean you should only ever rely on two weapons. You are a Guardian. You have access to an entire range of weapons. Keep all of them, and learn two switch weapon sets when you’re anticipating their use. I’ll talk more about this later, but I want this idea percolating in your minds for a while.
3) You are not defined by your weapon. You are not limited by your weapon. While it’s true that certain Traits do encourage the use of certain weapons, remember that Traits are not at all permanent. Look, just because you have a Trait that gives you +15% Crit with a one handed weapon doesn’t mean you can never ever use a staff or a hammer. Be flexible.
Hammer: Because I May Be A Guardian, But I Can Still Bash Your Face In
Ah, the Hammer. Big. Slow. Ponderous. The hammer is actually surprisingly versatile for something that looks like it was designed for a single ultraviolent purpose. The Hammer is a slow weapon partly because it has a built in symbol in its attack chain. Yes. That’s right. Every three attacks, Hammer creates a big Symbol of Protection on the ground that gives you and all your friends Protection for a little while. It also hits like a truck, if you could swing a truck with both hands.
Hammer Skills:
Hammer Swing/Hammer Bash/Symbol of Protection – This is your auto-attack. The first two swings come out at an average speed, but the last swing is very slow. Time it right and it’ll hit hard and create a Symbol of Protection on the ground, dealing additional damage to enemies and protecting allies. Oh, and it doubles as a Combo Field: Light
Mighty Blow: Learn to love it. Mighty Blow is just straight damage. With Mighty Blow, timing is everything. It hits hard and fast, so use it just after a Symbol of Protection to lay on a sudden spike of damage. Remember that it’s a Combo Finisher too, so use it to activate any combo fields.
Zealot’s Embrace: A long range immobilize. Use it to help close distance or control fleeing enemies. Use it to keep enemies from chasing your less armored allies.
Banish: I can’t get over how much fun this attack is. Despite the relatively long cooldown, Banish deals a modest amount of damage and sends an enemy flying. Use it to interrupt enemy skills, and keep them controlled—an enemy flying through the air and struggling to get back up is an enemy that isn’t attacking. Send enemies off cliffs. Keep them off your allies.
(edited by Eveningstar.6940)
Interesting Synergies
Mace: Hammer’s Healier Little Brother
Mace, like Hammer, is a slow, steady, powerful weapon. Unlike Hammer, it’s highly defensive, built for attrition, blocks and counters. Swinging a mace could help you get through fights that might otherwise leave you plastered to the ground in a big, bloody, vaguely Guardian-shaped mess. Seriously, Mace saves lives.
Mace Skills:
True Strike/Pure Strike/Faithful Strike: A relatively slow attack chain that ends in a big uppercut and a small heal. The heal might not seem like much, but with a decent amount of +Healing, a steady attack chain, and additional healing, defense and mitigation from your other abilities, it serves its purpose in the aggregate defensive strategy that is Mace.
Symbol of Faith: I love this attack. A little on the slow side, but it punches a damaging symbol of the ground that grants Regeneration to all allies, including yourself. This, along with Faithful Strike, keeps a small but steady stream of mitigation to any allies that crowd around you like the shining, mace wielding, face bashing beacon of defense that you are. A fast recharge makes it a dependable and useful Combo Field as well. Free Retaliation and Condition removal for everyone!
Protector’s Strike: This is what I love about Mace. Every single attack skill works well together. Symbol of Faith and Faithful Strike keep up mitigation through heals, and Protector’s Strike gives you an area block followed by a big counter. If nothing hits you, free Protection for all nearby allies. You can move while you use Protector’s Strike, and any ally inside its radius should be guarded by your block. By the way, the counter attack? Hits everyone around you like a sucker punch square in the jaw. It hurts.
Why the Mace is awesome
Interesting Synergies
(edited by Eveningstar.6940)
Why the Greatsword is Awesome:
Interesting Synergies
Staff: There’s A Gandalf Reference Here Somewhere. I’m not going to make it though.
Don’t mistake Staff for a dedicated healer weapon. Staff is versatile and comes with powerful support abilities, and every Guardian should keep a good staff in their inventory, regardless of your build, spec or playstyle. The Staff provides strong mid-range support and functions best when you’re with allies, but not necessarily in the thick of the fray. Use it to grant Empower and drop a Symbol in anticipation of a big fight, or roll back to the midline, use Empower, then switch back to a more aggressive weapon. Line of Warding may be the single most powerful ability available to Guardians.
Staff Skills:
Wave of Wrath: Rainbow power! Wave of Wrath hits all enemies at 600 range across a very wide arc. Per-hit damage is middle-of-the-road, but the wide range makes up for it. Use this ability to tag multiple opponents in dynamic group events. Use this ability to lay damage on swarms of enemies. Use this ability with a good amount of crit and Empowering Might (Honor VIII) to grant several stacks of Might to all your allies—constantly. Use this ability with Renewed Justice (Radiance 15) to keep Virtue of Justice constantly recharging.
Orb of Light: Moves relatively slow, but has a fast cooldown. In tightly packed areas or with enemies up against walls, Orb of Light can add a lot of damage—fast. Detonate it for a modest heal to all allies in radius. See what I mean about benefitting from fighting in tightly packed areas, or having allies around?
Symbol of Swiftness: Grant a speed boost to any ally that steps in its radius, in addition to being a nice Combo Field. This symbol actually works in interesting ways. The Swiftness lasts eight seconds, and it activates the full duration per pulse (i.e, once a second). So every time an ally runs through Symbol of Swiftness, they should get a full eight seconds of extra speed. Run back through it to refresh. With traits that improve Symbols and reduce cooldowns on Staff abilities, expect to see this symbol in every fight.
Empower: Don’t let the long channel time dissuade you. Use this from the midline to give your front line a very powerful (12 stacks) Might boost and a strong heal. Use it in anticipation/preparation for a fight before switching to an aggressive weapon like Greatsword. Use it with Altruistic Healer to give you lots of health back. The cooldown is sufficiently low that, especially with a trait, you could use it in every significant encounter. This is one big reason to have Staff in your pack at all times.
Line of Warding: Hello, coolest and most versatile ability in the entire Guardian line. Line of Warding creates a line in front of you that no enemy can cross. At all. For a whole five seconds. Use it to block off entire corridors. Use it to force enemies to run around objects or use it to split enemies apart. Use it to block or create choke points. Use it while screaming “You shall not pass!” …kittenit. I made the reference, didn’t I? sigh
Why the Staff is Awesome
(edited by Eveningstar.6940)
But what about Shelter? At first blush, Shelter seems strangely below par. With a mere ten second cooldown advantage over Signet of Resolve (or a paltry two seconds, with Improved Signets), Shelter heals for half Signet’s health return. Why would you ever use it? The answer is in mitigation. Shelter gives you a two second block, during which any and every attack aimed at you is blocked. Depending on how well you time your Shelter, you could be saving yourself a great deal of damage. Therefore, in terms of raw numbers, Signet of Resolve is superior to Shelter. But if your build and playstyle emphasizes blocks, you’ll get a lot of mileage out of Shelter, provided you use it at the right opportunity.
And finally, we have Healing Breeze. At Signet of Resolve’s base cooldown, Healing Breeze returns less health to you, with the added payoff of returning health to all allies in a cone in front of you. Depending on your build and your party dynamic, Healing Breeze might be your Heal of choice. Use it to top off the health of nearby allies and keep your momentum going.
Remember, you can—and should—change your skills on the fly. If you’re playing solo and just leveling, Signet of Resolve is probably the way to go. But if you’re about to run headfirst into a group event, then why not switch to Healing Breeze? If you’re anticipating a lot of damage, or facing several opponents, or using a Block build, consider switching in to Shelter as necessary.
Guardian Utilities: The Accidental Red Herring
If you’re new to Guild Wars and a veteran of MMORPGs, Guardian Utilities will almost certainly throw you a curve. Nearly every new player—myself included—tend to assume that Utilities are where the heart of our support lies. Utilities should provide the heals, the shields, the condition removal or the boons necessary for us to fulfill our support role. Right?
Well, no.
You see, utilities all have pretty long cooldowns across the board. Even if you wanted to, you can’t use utilities indiscriminately, or constantly. Utilities are trump cards. They’re powerful abilities available every one or two—maybe even three or four—significant encounters. The key to mastering Utilities lies within two basic principles:
So the reason I call Utilities an accidental ‘red herring,’ is because they tend to fool new players into assuming that these are the core abilities of your class. They’re not. Let me repeat that.
Utilities are not the core of your support.
Hang on. I need to shout this one from the mountain tops.
Utilities are not the core of your support. The core of your support is YOU. Support is defined by the aggregate of your utilities, your traits, your weapons, and most importantly, your playstyle!
Anyone who tells you differently is either mistaken or some kind of pernicious curmudgeon who wants you to feel bad because you’re not a dedicated healer. Are you going to let people like that run your life? Snaff did. And now he’s dead.
(Okay, that was kind of mean. I’m sorry.)
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Interesting Synergies
Offhand Weapons
Your off-hand weapons don’t work in exactly the same was as main-hand or two hand weapons. Most of them, with the possible exception of torch, include long cooldown abilities. What off-hand weapons actually do is let you augment your main-hand weapons. I’ve covered main-hand/off-hand synergies above, but to reiterate briefly:
Focus
Focus is a bit of an odd-ball. It provides a pretty huge amount of mitigation through Ray of Judgement—provides a Blind along with reliable condition removal—and Shield of Wrath. For the most part, Focus works well with any weapon you’d like to use in melee. Blind is essentially a free block, and Shield of Wrath comes with an additional three blocks. This makes Focus a strong weapon for a defensive setup. But it can also deal solid damage. A detonated Shield of Wrath hits especially hard.
Shield
Shield provides more passive defense than Focus. With the right traits, and Shield’s inherent stats, you’ll stack more toughness on yourself. Where Shield differs from Focus, and distinguishes itself, is group synergy. Shield protects more allies than Focus. Shield of Judgement applies Protection to allies in its cone, and Shield of Absorption is potentially very powerful. Used at the right time, it completely nullifies all ranged attacks, and can be detonated early for a modest area heal. It’s a free Combo Field: Light to boot, providing potential for conditional removal and retaliation.
Torch
Torch. Set yourself on fire, and then set your enemies on fire, and then take their stuff from their charred corpses. Why settle for anything else? Torch spreads burning quickly through Zealot’s Flame, which doubles as a high damage (if relatively long-cooldown) ranged attack. Cleansing Flame also hits many, many times for a lot of damage, so it’s going to trigger at least two instances of passive Virtue of Justice. Remember, however, that Cleansing Flame does NOT set enemies on fire by Burning.
Healing Powers: How, When And Why
Every class has a healing power. Guardians are no different. Our heals are a little more versatile, including a potent self-heal, a more altruistic group-heal, and a defensive heal that sacrifices some raw health regeneration for added mitigation. So, which one’s the best one? How do you know which one to pick?
The honest truth is, there isn’t a best choice. If you want to look at pure numbers, then Signet of Resolve is wonderful. It returns a massive amount of health, removes conditions while inactive, and enjoys all the benefits of Signet-related traits. You can bring this down to a 32-second cooldown if you’d like, provided you take a few traits in Radiance.
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Scepter: Guardian Tennis Club
Ah, Scepter. The Guardian relationship with Scepter is…a lot like a shotgun wedding. You’re pretty much stuck with it. Or else. So you better learn to love it. Seriously though, Scepter’s slow projectile speed and wibbly-wobbly bubbly looking projectile aside, this is a highly effective midrange weapon (long range if you’re against more stable foes in PVE—Champions, for example) that also happens to be our only ranged weapon. And I just cannot say enough good things about Smite.
Scepter Skills:
Orb of Wrath: Slow, bright, shiny. Yeah, it’s pretty much this, except, you know, dangerous and it hurts things. Orb of Wrath’s slow projectile speed really only matters at past the ~800 range. It’s effective against stable Champions at long range, but, surprisingly, it actually does well in melee, especially when compared with….
Smite: I <3 Smite. Smite does a lot of damage. Smite does a lot of damage in a relatively small area. Smite is balanced around the fact that enemies run out of that area and stop taking damage. Smite also has a small cooldown? So what makes smite so awesome? Use it in melee. Melee enemies aren’t going to run away from you despite being kitten-slapped a dozen times by the Gods. It’ll turn the melee vicinity into a death zone. Seriously, try leveling with Smite. Just try the first 10 levels. You’ll be shocked to see how fast things die.
Chains of Light: In order to understand Chains of Light, you need to think about it as a bridge between Scepter and whatever other weapon you’re using. Sure, Chains of Light is nice to stop an enemy and then drop a Smite on them, but it’s even nicer when you’re using Scepter to attack from range and want to keep something locked down while you enter melee. The Vulnerability is small, but significant, and stacks well with Vulnerability from other allies. And, as always, feel free to use Immobilize as a means of mitigation—keep an enemy OFF your teammate.
Why The Scepter Is Awesome
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Interesting Synergies
Taken together, we’re looking at up to three Spirit Weapons readily available in most encounters, all of which cause burning, deal a solid amount of constant, passive damage, knock back enemies, knock down foes, reflect projectiles, spread weakness, remove conditions and heal allies. It’s like a personal army!
A Few Words On Elites
If you’re a total beginner to the Guardian class, you don’t have to worry about Elites right now. You’ve got enough on your mind, between worrying about Queensdale’s bandit problems to internal debates about the peculiar frequency of giant terrifying worms destroying everyone’s crops. Take it easy. Put it aside for a little while.
But by the time you approach your first Elite unlock, you should be excited. These are the Big Guns of your Utility line-up. Your trump cards. You’ve been working toward them for thirty-something levels, and they should change the way you play a Guardian.
Well—hold on.
Elites may be some of your most powerful skills in terms of pure numbers. But your Elite does not define your playstyle. In most cases, you are not going to build around your Elites. Guardian Elites are emergency buttons—long cooldown panic buttons the careful application of which can have the greatest single influence on a battle. But you need to remember that while Elites are powerful in and of themselves, your playstyle should never hinge upon the use of an elite.
Renewed Focus is poorly understood, and at first glance, lends itself to a defensive ability best used to withstand powerful attacks. In fact, the true value of Renewed Focus is not in its invulnerability, but the renewal of your Virtues. Renewed Focus grants you three seconds of invulnerability; attack skills have no effect on you, and any damage you take will be from ongoing conditions, which Renewed Focus does not cure. The key to using Renewed Focus, however, is returning all your Virtues to you and having three seconds of time to return some cooldowns. Renewed Focus essentially presses a reset button on an encounter, returning all your Virtue resources to you. Burn your Virtues prior to using Renewed Focus, absorb any attacks coming your way, and return to battle stronger.
Tome of Wrath and Tome of Courage temporarily transform you into powerful sources of aggressive or defensive magic. Each Tome lasts twenty seconds—thirty, with Elite Focus (Virtues Master Trait). Generally speaking, Wrath spreads conditions on enemies while granting aggressive boons to allies (Might, Swiftness, Fury, Quickness), while Courage heals allies, cures conditions, blinds enemies, and grants protection. Both Tomes include one very powerful spell you’ll only have time to cast once. Might’s “Judgment” deals tremendous area damage, coupled with a knockdown. Courage’s “Light of Deliverance” is a full heal on five nearby allies.
Courage is not going to turn you into a healbot for twenty (or thirty) seconds. Neither is Wrath going to transform you into a condition and damage machine. These tomes should be used in critical moments, as safety nets to catch a runaway encounter from going south. Unexpected adds, downed allies, difficult odds.
Traits: Bringing It All Together
If you’re like me and came to Guild Wars from a background in MMORPGs, traits will—at first glance—seem like the ubiquitous Talent Tree system, a set of available specializations that further define your character, a template for creating builds.
(edited by Eveningstar.6940)
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