Dragon Age: Origins Walkthrough :
This walkthrough for Dragon Age: Origins [PC] has been posted at 24 Feb 2010 by .:HoneyBunny:.Z and is called "Dual Weapon Rogue FAQ". If walkthrough is usable don't forgot thumbs up .:HoneyBunny:.Z and share this with your freinds. And most important we have 4 other walkthroughs for Dragon Age: Origins, read them all!
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Walkthrough - Dual Weapon Rogue FAQ+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ ================= TABLE OF CONTENTS ================= 1. INTRODUCTION 2. ORIGINS 3. ATTRIBUTES 4. SKILLS 5. SPECIALIZATIONS 6. TALENTS 7. EQUIPMENT 8. COMBAT HINTS 9. COMPANIONS 10. TIPS & TRICKS 11. CLOSING WORDS +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ =============== 1. INTRODUCTION =============== The Dual-Wielding, backstabbing Rogue is the most highly damaging of the melee DPS variants. I've always enjoyed playing Rogues in Bioware games due to the subtle, treacherous and exotic nature of their combat techniques. In case you don't know, DPS = damage per second, the real measure of how deadly your character is. It takes into account damage per hit and attack speed. Why play this build? Well, as I said before it is the deadliest melee DPS character. The damage output is great due to backstabs and high attack speed. Physical defense is one of the best there is thanks to decent Defense, Evasion and various dodge stacking. Mental resistance is far better than most Warriors due to emphasis on Cunning (explanation later). In the game there is already a dual-wielding rogue companion that you can recruit, namely Zevran. Why shouldn't you just use Zev? Firstly, if you do, you miss the entire early game as he isn't available until level 8 or 9. Secondly, Zev is one way to play dual-wield (high dex with stealth). While it is colourful, it isn't the optimal way from a pure DPS point of view. Finally, and most importantly, backstab rogues are almost impossible to automate properly. If you use Zevran, you'll end up needing to micro-manage him all the time instead of your Warden. I personally like to micro my main character and automating the NPCs using Tactics. I'm trying to be quite detailed in this guide and going into specifics as to what I feel are the best choices. You are of course free to make your own choices based on your own play style and preferences. This guide assumes that you play to level 20. You should already know the basics of the game. It also has a lot of minor spoilers. This is my first published guide, hope you enjoy it. +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ ========== 2. ORIGINS ========== Best fit: Dwarf Noble Different origin combinations affect your starting stats and skills. All Rogues start with Dirty Fighting as a free Talent, which you need anyway, so that part is not important. As a Rogue you can choose any three of the races. For this build, the governing attributes are Dexterity and Cunning which I'll explain later. Elves get +2 to both Willpower and Magic, perfect for mages but ill-suited for this build. Dalish Elves also start with Survival skill which you do not need. City Elves are a much better choice with Coercion skill but still have the fairly useless Willpower and Magic bonus. Unless you absolutely need to role-play Elven rogues, this is not recommended. Furthermore, Zevran your dual-wielding rogue companion is already an Elven rogue. Humans get spread-out +1 bonuses to Str, Dex, Cun and Mag. This is all good although the +1 to Magic is a bit of a waste. You can only choose Human Noble as your origin as the only other Human origin is Mage. It's so-so for this build. Dwarves get +1 Str, +1 Dex and +2 Con. The +2 Con is only semi-important to this build but more useful than the +1 Magic humans get. The important point, however, is that Dwarves also get +10% Spell Resistance. Since this build is a little lacking in the magical defense department I feel that Dwarf is the best choice. Should you go Commoner or Noble? What would you choose in real life? :P Commoners get the Stealing skill while Nobles get Combat Training, which is more valuable to this build early on although you'll likely need both through- out the game. You will also find that the Dwarf Noble origin grants you more cash throughout the game than any other origin. This is both from what's available in their Origin story as well as a huge bonus when selling to a particular merchant. Gender doesn't matter much at all. You can romance exactly 3 of your companions no matter which gender you choose. As a Dwarf Noble I like having a female Warden just because there is a distinct lack of women in that society. Before we continue, let's take a quick look at the stats you get as a Rogue: Attributes: +4 dexterity, +2 willpower, +4 cunning Level up: +5 health, +4 stamina, +1 skill every 2 levels (not every 3 levels like the others) +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ ============= 3. ATTRIBUTES ============= This is what I found to be the optimal choice. Strength (Str): 11 --> 20 Dexterity (Dex): 15 +5 --> 35-36 Willpower (Wil): 12 --> n/a Magic (Mag): 10 --> n/a Cunning (Cun): 14 --> MAX (60+) Constitution (Con): 12 --> n/a Know also that throughout the game you can get permanent bonuses of: Str +4 Mag +2 Dex +4 Cun +5 Wil +2 Con +2 ...so don't manually raise Str higher than 16 Lets go with the obvious first, the stats you don't really need. Magic is a downright throw away attribute. You are no mage, you don't need this. It does improve health poultices but to invest in magic just for that is a waste. Willpower and Constitution are both semi-important, giving you more stamina for abilities and more health respectfully. Investing heavily in them, however, will lessen your damage-dealing focus. I tend not to increase them at all. You really only need them in the early game, but investing in them in early game noticably delays getting your main attributes to a solid level. At higher levels, when your main attributes are solid, increasing Wil/Con will no longer have much of a noticeable effect, so you may as well just maximize your main attributes. Strength affects melee damage and Attack. However, with Lethality, you can use Cunning to increase damage instead. Cunning also contributes to Armor Penetration and other things which Strength doesn't. Therefore keep Strength to 20, which is enough to wear the best Light Armor. 18 or even down to the minimum base of 11 can be passable if you boost it using equipment, but I like to safe myself the hassle of being equipment dependant and just raise the Str to 20. Str also increases Physical Resistance, but so does Dex and Dex is more useful. Next let's take a look at Dexterity. Dex is a pre-requisite to many of your Dual-Wielding and Rogue Talents. In particular, Evasion needs 35 and Dual Weapon Master requires 36, so this is what to aim for. Dex gives you extra damage to Piercing weapons and boosts your Attack and Defense ratings. Dex also increases Physical Resistance to the same degree as Str or Con. Because you need it as pre-requisite for many Talents and since Cunning is only really useful after level 8 or so, Dex is what you will raise first. Cunning contributes to Armor Penetration and, with Lethality, attack damage. Also, many other important abilities like Exploit Weakness and Riposte use Cun in their calculations. Cun also boosts Mental resistance. To optimize this build, Cunning is the stat we want to maximize. Some kind people have done the numbers: http://social.bioware.com/forum/1/topic/66/index/223777 http://i47.tinypic.com/2zz2qo8.jpg The conclusions, pros and cons for maxing Dex or Cun, are: Cunning + Much higher damage output of about 40%. This is the main drawcard. + Better stun chance from use of Riposte. + Better mental resistance. + Able to pick locks without investing in talents in late game. - Forces you to take Lethality as a Talent - You don't have space for utility talents like Stealth and Deft Hands. Towards the end however, your Cun is high enough to open any lock without needing any Talents. - Your Attack and Defense rating are much lower. Defense issue can be mitigated by taking Evasion. Dexterity = Much higher Defense rate, but you probably won't get Evasion so it works out to be roughly the same. + Much higher Attack rate meaning you miss less often. Can be overkill though, as in having greater than 100% hit chance which of course will be capped to 100% anyway. + You don't need Lethality so you save on 4 talents which you can use for utility talents like Stealth and Deft Hands. + Better physical resistance. - Much lower DPS, especially against heavily armoured enemies. This is the main drawback. - You may as well use Zevran. So basically, Cunning has better DPS but Dexterity gives you more utility. This guide assumes you take the Cunning route for the maximum DPS. The Dex route looks a lot like Zevran already. Also you can use other companions for lockpicking. For those of you who wonder whether the Cunning build gets a high enough Attack rating to maintain a decent hit rate, don't worry. My Warden has over 90% hit rate throughout the game. You have enough natural Dex and many, many factors boosting your Attack rating. +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ ========= 4. SKILLS ========= As a Rogue you get the privilege of gaining a skill every 2 levels instead of every 3 like everyone else. This means by level 20 you will have 13 skill points, not including tomes. You as a Rogue start with a point in Poison-Making. This is extremely handy because it lets you use poisons and grenades. No further point is needed as Zevran has invested quite heavily in that skill and can make your poisons and bombs for you. Later you can improve this skill for convenience so you don't need to go to Zevran to make poisons. The only skill you really absolutely need to invest in is Combat Training, which is required for some of your core weapon talents. Get the 3rd Combat Training by level 4 and max it by level 10. This skill also gives small but bonuses to your combat stats such as Attack and Stamina Regen. A useful skill to get is Coercion which is only available to the Warden and not to any of your companions. Since only you can use it, and since it helps quite a lot during quests to bring extra rewards or make things easier, I generally always pick it. It also adds flavour. It is worthwhile to put one point into Stealing to open up a line of side quests in Denerim. The quests are only available if the Warden him/herself has has the skill. For actual stealing, Leliana already has more than one skill point there so you can use her. You probably have a few leftover skills. Get whatever you want, I like Set Traps because it goes with the rogue theme. If you want you can get it early for a sidequest in the first town, Lothering. Even the tier 1 Traps can deal a lot of damage, albeit with small AOE. Combat Tactics can seem useful at a glance, but most of the time you'd want to control your Warden instead of automating him/her. Rogue backstabber is the hardest character to automate because you need to keep re-positioning yourself for backstabs, etc. You have enough base tactic slots for basic functions such as using poultices when damaged and attacking nearest enemy in a pinch. Combat Tactics is not a good investment. Remember you also have your companions who can also help with their skills. In particular, Leliana has multiple points in Stealing, Zevran in Poison and Morrigan in Herbalism. Do try to have access to all skills across your whole group. Example skill build: Level 1 Poison 1, Combat 1, Coercion 1 2 Combat 2 4 Combat 3 (must have) 6 Traps 1 (for an early game sidequest) 8 Coercion 2 10 Combat 4 (must have) 12 Coercion 3 14 Coercion 4 16 Stealing 1 (for a later-game sidequest) 18 Poison or Traps 20 Poison or Traps +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ ================== 5. SPECIALIZATIONS ================ I think it's pretty obvious that Assassin will be your key specialization since it adds a lot to DPS and improves backstabs. What should the other specialization be? To tell the truth all of them have much to offer. Duelist is the most obvious choice. It adds +2 Dex and +1 damage first up, as well as boosting attack and defense from Dueling and Keen Defense. Pinpoint Strike is also right up the DPS alley, granting extra critical hits. A less obvious point is that you DO NOT have to pick Assassin at level 7 if you choose Duelist. Assassin only gives you Mark of Death at level 7, which is an expensive Activated ability that only works on 1 target. Frankly there are better uses for your meager stamina early on. The really juicy Assassin passive abilities are not available until levels 12-16. Thus if you wait until level 14 for Assassin and then use 2 Tomes there, you don't miss much. In the meantime you can increase your Attack using the much more stamina-manageable Sustained Dueling ability. Bard is a specialization highly dependant on Cunning, which you will have plenty of. You can improve stamina/mana regeneration with Song of Valor or use Distraction to save your weak mage from an enemy who chose to focus on her. The most useful ability is the Song of Courage which improves damage for the whole party. The final ability, Captivating Song, leaves you unable to move which goes against your whole philosophy and probably not worth getting. Bard may be better than Duelist for DPS if you have two or three good DPS fighters in your party. Don't use Bard if you have many mages in your party. Note also that although Leliana is already a Bard, two Songs of Courage stack except on the second Bard to start using the ability. Bard abilities are available at an earlier level than Duelist or Assassin abilities and is therefore a better early game choice. Rangers simply summon their pet and it will run around and attack for you. It will deal some damage and hopefully draw aggro. In particular once you have Master Ranger you can use Overwhelm to disable enemy mages. Ranger is especially useful if you have a Blood Mage in your party so that they can drain health from the summon instead of another party member. Summoning takes forever to cast, so you ideally want to start battles with the summon already sustained. Thus it isn't as useful as Dueling in early game stamina management. +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ ========== 6. TALENTS ========== These are the most important choices, it is what makes the build. Some choices are obvious, others can be dubious. By the end (level 20) you'd have taken most of the Rogue combat and Dual Weapon talents as well as your specialization talents. However, there is also a matter of priority, which should you take first? Which do you leave out? # Essential Talents: * Momentum Huge attack speed increase! This alone increases your DPS by about 40%. I regard this as the number one priority in this build. There is also a large movement speed bonus advertised, but I haven't noticed it much. * Lethality One of your main sources of damage, the reason why you max Cunning. Also leads to the defensive talent Evasion which you may as well get as it's only 1 more step from here. * Coup de Grace Allows you to deal automatic backstabs on a stunned or paralyzed enemy. Opens up a lot of combos, notably with Dirty Fighting, Riposte, poisons and Paralyze runes. * Assassin passives (Exploit Weakness -> Lacerate -> Feast of the Fallen) Exploit Weakness greatly enhances your backstabs, Lacerate does too to a lesser degree. Feast of the Fallen is too awesome as it gives you Stamina boosts to fuel your damage-dealing Activated abilities. These are only available level 12-16 though, so the early game priority isn't high. # Dubious Talents: * Dual Weapon Master This matters a lot only if you're wielding two main-hand weapons. Going by the Cunning DPS route, you will use two Daggers instead. It also grants -2.5% fatigue, but if you think about it that will only save you 1 stamina for each 40 you would spend which isn't a lot. Only get this Talent to unlock the Dual Weapon Master Achievement. * Feign Death Seems like it could be useful in a pinch, but if you're in trouble yet conscious you can usually just run away and kite instead. If you're in trouble and stunned/paralyzed well then this won't help either. The extra long cooldown makes it even less useful. * Whirlwind and Punisher Awesome, awesome abilities. However, they use up a lot of stamina and have long cooldowns. Great to have but unfortunately you only have space for them late in the game. To maximize the build, Tomes of Physical Technique are used. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE: Buy the 1st Tome off Bodahn at Camp as soon as you leave Lothering! ------------------------------------------------------------------------- The first Tome is available from Bodahn Feddic the first time you enter your party Camp. This WILL RESPAWN but only if you buy it then and there, so make sure you buy it right away so you can get two from Bodahn. If not, you only get three Tomes total. The other tomes are in Orzammar and on Bodahn again, except only in the very late game. As a Dwarf Noble you should have no trouble at all getting the first Tome at level 8. You can even afford the Arcane version for mage companions. Other Origins may struggle. ------------------------------------------------------------------------- NOTE: Accept the reward from the Arl of Redcliffe to get +1 talent point! ------------------------------------------------------------------------- I wrote this down because I actually missed out by saying I don't need a reward. Bad. You get a total of 5 extra Talent points this way. I only included 3 in the below guide in case you miss some. If you don't miss any, use the spares to take Whirlwind or Punisher early or use them on your Companions. # Denotes a skill acquired using a Tome or other bonus. On level 1 you will automatically get 2 Talent points instead of 1. Around level 5 when you become a Warden, you automatically get another Talent point. While I played the Duelist build for my character, I now feel that the Bard build is actually a bit stronger. Level 0) Dirty Fighting (no choice) 1) Dual Weapon Sweep + Dual Weapon Training 2) Flurry 3) Below the Belt 4) Momentum 5) Combat Movement + Dual Weapon Finesse (Need Dex=24) 6) Deadly Strike 7) Dueling 8) Coup de Grace + #Lethality 9) Dual Striking 10) Riposte 11) Dual Weapon Expert 12) Evasion (Need Dex=35) 13) Upset Balance 14) Mark of Death + #Exploit Weakness + #Lacerate 15) Keen Defense 16) Feast of the Fallen 17) Pinpoint Strike 18) Whirlwind 19) Cripple 20) Punisher --> Dual Weapon Master if you're still playing. --> If you still have leftover points, start getting Stealth or Archery Level 1-8 are dedicated to getting Momentum, Lethality and Coup de Grace ASAP. The pre-reqs are useful in their own right: Combat Movement improves flanking angle and Dual Weapon Sweep is a nifty little AOE damage ability. Flurry and the Dual Weapon passives are also wonderful. I made an interesting choice at level 7 by going Duelist first. I feel that I need all the stamina I have for Dirty Fighting, Flurry and soon Riposte that there is little left for Mark of Death whereas Dueling is Sustained. Also the +1 Damage from Duelist is as good as the +2.5% Critical early on. You won't miss out on much and can still get the Assassin abilities in a timely manner since you have to wait till level 12 for the next ability anyway. Next I go with Riposte since it is awesome in combination with Coup de Grace. Note that Dual Striking is useless to us because you can't backstab or critical hit with it. At level 11 and 12 I chose passive abilities to conserve stamina since now I have a new Activated ability. Dual Weapon Expertise adds to DPS a little, while Evasion is a defensive manoeuvre. Level 13 to 17 is all about acquiring the abilities of your specializations. For best results, this is the time you need to get those Tomes and accelerate the Assassin abilities. The awesome Punisher and Whirlwind are unfortunately relegated to late levels. They are great but cost so much Stamina to activate and so does the much less powerful prerequisite Cripple. Besides, the specialization abilities are too good to delay. This is probably the best out of the 3 non-Assassin specializations. Duelist will have better defense, but Bard will have stronger, more reliable damage capability and will also boost other fighters in the party. Level 0) Dirty Fighting (no choice) 1) Dual Weapon Sweep + Dual Weapon Training 2) Flurry 3) Below the Belt 4) Momentum 5) Combat Movement + Dual Weapon Finesse (Need Dex=24) 6) Deadly Strike 7) Song of Valor 8) Coup de Grace + #Lethality 9) Distraction 10) Song of Courage 11) Dual Striking 12) Riposte 13) Evasion (Need Dex=35) 14) Mark of Death + #Exploit Weakness + #Lacerate 15) Dual Weapon Expert 16) Feast of the Fallen 17) Whirlwind 18) Cripple 19) Punisher 20) Dual Weapon Master --> If you still have leftover points, start getting Stealth or Archery Level 1-8 are still dedicated to getting Momentum, Lethality and Coup de Grace ASAP since these are the core talents. Since you can get Song of Courage at level 10, we take Bard specialization first over Assassin. Song of Courage is awesome good and should be taken as early as possible. This will delay the less important Evasion and Dual Weapon Expert talents. You don't need to take the last Bard ability Captivating Song since this immobilizes you and is therefore not worth it. This allows you to get the late talents sooner. Everything else is the same as the Duelist build. As mentioned before, summoning takes ages to cast and therefore you'd start battle with the summon already sustained. This means Ranger isn't as useful in the early game for stamina management. Still a worthwhile build though. Since you need to get Master Ranger in a timely fashion I feel the best way is to include a fourth Tome/bonus skill useage. Level 0) Dirty Fighting (no choice) 1) Dual Weapon Sweep + Dual Weapon Training 2) Flurry 3) Below the Belt 4) Momentum 5) Combat Movement + Dual Weapon Finesse (Need Dex=24) 6) Deadly Strike 7) Summon Wolf 8) Coup de Grace + #Lethality 9) Summon Bear 10) Summon Spider 11) Dual Striking 12) Riposte + #Master Ranger 13) Evasion (Need Dex=35) 14) Mark of Death + #Exploit Weakness + #Lacerate 15) Dual Weapon Expert 16) Feast of the Fallen 17) Whirlwind 18) Cripple 19) Punisher 20) Dual Weapon Master --> If you still have leftover points, start getting Stealth or Archery Level 1-8 are still dedicated to getting Momentum, Lethality and Coup de Grace ASAP since these are the core talents. Since you can get max out all Ranger abilities by level 12, we'll do so first. This will grant you a massive pet to wreak havoc. Note that Overwhelm is not available for you to use unless you set it on the pet's Tactics page. This is only available for about 2 seconds each time you summon the pet, which can get very annoying. After maxing out Ranger, we can proceed with the rest of the build. ------------------- A Note on Evasion ------------------- Evasion and other dodge abilities have a short blocking animation when triggered. This is where your character visually makes a blocking move with his or her weapons/shield/whatever. This takes away about a half a second where you cannot attack and thus it protects you at the cost of your DPS. If you feel that this is a lousy deal, skip Evasion and don't equip any item that gives you a dodging bonus. +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+ ============ 7. EQUIPMENT ============ In the early-mid stages of the game, you won't have much choice and will just have to wear the best available gear that's available to you. Later on, however, you'll have plenty to choose from, some of which are exotic or rare and requires some hunting. Many of these items are very expensive, hence why Dwarf Noble Origin is the best since it gets more money. Look at section 10 for money-making tips. --------- Weapons The Rose's Thorn (Orzammar, ~146g) --------- Thorn of the Dead Gods (Deep Roads sidequest) As mentioned before, the highest DPS requires you use two daggers. Daggers are fast and have great armour penetration. The above two are some of the best and give great enhancements. The Rose's Thorn especially is the best dagger in the game. If you have the DLC, "The Edge" is another great dagger which you can use right from the start. It would be superior to Thorn of the Dead Gods. Note that the above mentioned is the Silverite version of Thorn of the Dead Gods, with two rune slots. Lesser versions are available too. The Rose's Thorn is very expensive, until then you can use a lesser version of Thorn of the Dead Gods which you can steal during early Orzammar quests for Bhelen. ------- Runes 5x Paralyze runes (buy 2 from Wonders of Thedas, Denerim) ------- or 5x Dweomer runes The above weapons come with 3 & 2 rune slots. I like to put Paralyze runes in them, as the paralysis will set up backstab attacks with Coup de Grace for a world of pain. All the runes regardless of rank have the same chance of paralyzing, thus any are valuable. The higher runes give longer durations, which is great of course, but even the 4 second paralysis from the Novice rune will give you many free backstabs. The Grandmaster paralyzes for 8 seconds. Considering that not even the Archdemon can fully resist the paralysis effect, I find that this is the way to go and is better than adding damage runes to your weapons. Paralyze runes are rather rare. If you don't have 5, I like to put in defensive runes of the Dweomer and Hale variety. They help resist spells and annoying effects like knockdown. Alternatively you can take the defensive route and load your weapons up with Dweomer runes. It is possible to achieve over 90% Spell Resistance with max Dweomer runes and other gear, I don't know if 100% is possible with this build. I still think a better choice is to focus on getting rid of enemy mages first in every fight so that you don't have to worry about spells at all. --------- Poisons Deathroot Extract, Concentrated Deathroot Extract, --------- Crow Poison, Concentrated Crow Poison No Assassin would be complete without the use of poisons. The best poisons not only deal damage but also stuns the enemy, perfect in combination with Coup de Grace! The humble tier one Deathroot Extract grants 10% chance to stun for three seconds. The improved tier two version grants 15% chance to stun for 4 seconds. The extra 1 or 2 nature damage are inconsequential: those decent length stuns set you up for Coup de Grace backstabs! The tier one poison is the most cost effective choice of course, you'll find plenty of Deathroot plants around. The tier two poison is more expensive but quite a bit more effective too if you are able to afford ingredients. The Crow Poison and its Concentrated version are even more effective, with 3 second longer stuns and triple the damage of the respective Deathroot counterpart. However they are far more expensive, requiring more ingredients. The fact that they are tier 2 and 3 doesn't matter much as Zevran already comes with tier 3 Poison-Making. If you have too much money, the Concentrated Crow Poison is the best poison you can use. Recipes for the four poisons are free, at Faryn (Frostback Mountains), Alimar (Orzammar Dust Town) and Cesar (Denerim, after finishing Trial of Crows quest) respectively. Main ingredients can be bought from Varathorn (Dalish Camp). ------- Bombs Any bombs: Acid, Freeze, Shock, Fire, Soulrot ------- Assassins lack AOE damage dealing and bombs are an excellent way to fill this gap. The AOE is not big at all, but enough to hit 2 to 4 enemies if they are clustered. Any bomb will do as they all have the same AOE and damage and use the same amount of ingredients. Use the one least likely to be resisted by your target (eg. don't use Acid Flasks on Golems or Undead). Only Acid Flask can be acquired in infinite quantity. All bombs need tier 2 Poison-Making to craft. Contact your pal Zevran. Ingredients can be found, well everywhere in small quantities. Infinite Lifestone can be purchased from Ruck (Deep Roads). ------ Bows Far Song (Redcliffe smith replacing Owen, ~120g) ------ Falon'Din's Reach (Brecilian Ruins, young Dragon's hoard) Spear-Thrower (Deep Roads at the Dead Trenches) Dalish Longbow (Random loot/shop, around Dalish areas) Scout's Bow (Varathorn at Dalish Camp) What, bows?? That's right, you're a melee fighter but having a bow equipped in your secondary weapon slot will give you far more flexibility. Sometimes you don't have time to rush a distant enemy while a bow will get the job done quickly. You want a fast bow, after all if you cannot get rid of that faraway target in a timely fashion you may as well sprint there. As such the important quality for your bows to have is Rapid Aim. All crossbows are slower so they're not as good for you, plus you need high Str to use the best ones. The first three bows above are ordered from best to worst, the worst still being awesome. You're not a dedicated archer, so if you have one in your team give the best bow to him/her. The last two bows are non-unique random loot but will work perfectly fine as a secondary weapon. Note that if you switch to your bow your dual-weapon talents will be turned off, this includes Momentum which you can't turn back on for 30 seconds. So think twice before switching to bow. -------- Armour -------- Helmet: Longrunner's Cap (Orzammar/Paragon quest) Helm of Honnleath (Stone Prisoner DLC, kill Kitty) Gloves: Red Jenny Seekers (Denerim, Trial of Crows quest) Pushback Strikers (Orzammar/Paragon quests) Armour: The Felon's Coat (Denerim mid-game, ~90g) Shadow of the Empire (Orzammar shops, ~12g) Boots : Bard's Dancing Shoes (Camp, ~10g) Antivan Leather Boots (Urn quest, must give to Zevran first) Lion's Paw (DLC) There aren't many good light helmets. Longrunner's Cap gives decent armor and will enhance your stamina regen. The Helm of Honnleath is not a light helmet, but it has great Armor rating and adds +2 to all attributes while only requiring 20 Str to wear. It is by far the best choice if you have the DLC. The best aggressive gloves are the two above pairs. Red Jenny will increase critical/backstab damage while Pushback will increase critical chance. Red Jenny is superior in DPS lategame. The Felon's Coat is by far the best Light Armour. Get it as soon as it's available, which is when you finish three of the five main (The Blight) quests. Until then you can use Shadow of the Empire, itself a great light armour. The Bard's Dancing Shoes reduces hostility, which is very important but unfortunately also bugged and doesn't work -_- Nevertheless it also has great armor rating for light boots and +6 defense. If you'd rather have a little more Spell Resistance rather than Defense, take the Antivan Leather Boots. If you have the Lion's Paw DLC, that |
