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Grim Dawn Revive Hc Character

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Grim Dawn Forgotten Gods – Hardcore Oathkeeper – Part One

March 27, 2019

Last time I posted something like this on Arcadelife was back in 2013 when I was playing Diablo 3, trying to get a hardcore character to the level cap. This time (with a lot less available time) I'm trying out the new Oathkeeper class/mastery in Grim Dawn's new expansion – Forgotten Gods, which was released about five hours ago on Steam.

As I make the leap to streaming, I'd like to combine my love for Grim Dawn with my all time favorite past-time of Dungeons and Dragons. I'm looking to make something in the same vein as shows like Adventure Zone, Critical Role, Dimension 20, or NADDPOD, but in order to do this I want to bring in passionate people from the Grim Dawn community. With those changes in mind, its time to update our guide to the best Grim Dawn builds. If you want to take a look, our previous version of the best build still has some solid tips if you want to try out a Warder character, although some of that info is now outdated.

I've already taken a couple of hardcore characters to level 50, completing the base game (i.e. not including the Ashes expansion) with one of them, so I've got a reasonable idea about what I'm doing. Unlike in Diablo 3, where there's a 10 second countdown whenever you try to leave the game, Grim Dawn can be paused at any time and you can quit immediately – this makes hardcore mode considerably less stressful.

Grim Dawn Revive Hc Characters

Currently, my hardcore Oathkeeper character is level 15, which is exactly where I planned to get it to on day one. I'd already figured out where I was going to assign mastery points which you can see here in a screenshot from the game (not from Grim Tools, which is a truly brilliant site, in case you were wondering):

Getting to level 15 was pretty quick. I used the Crucible (sort of an infinite arena mode if you don't know what it is) from level 7 until I unlocked 5 devotion points, after a couple of runs through the Slith island very close to the start of the first campaign area. For early levelling, and clearing trash mobs, Aegis of Menhir is adequate but nowhere near as effective a starter skill as the Necromancer's skeletons or the Shaman's Devouring swarm. It starts to look good once you get the mastery bar up to level 5 and start putting points in the Avenging Shield skill which lets your Aegis hit more targets. This is what it looks like early on, in action at character level 6:


As I mentioned, I used the Crucible from level 7, once Aegis of Menhir was doing enough damage to be effective at clearing waves of enemies. Crucible is a quick and easy way to get 5 Devotion points before wading into the main campaign. I wanted to get the Fiend constellation as quickly as possible because of the percentage buffs to fire damage – which is the default damage type on Aegis of Menhir. You can modify it to acid damage, which I probably won't bother with, and the whole point of that would be if you were going for a totally different damage focus on a particular build. Fiend also gives you this 25% chance damage effect – I've got it bound to Righteous Fervour which is being used as default attack (left mouse button). Just one point in that skill; I might stick with it but I'll probably swap Flame Torrent out for a better devotion skill at a later stage.

Reprisal unlocks at mastery level 20. This looks very much like something they added in for all the people who quite sensibly want to dump all their attribute points in Physique and not bother putting any in Spirit. As you can see (pic below) each level of Reprisal lowers the energy cost of Aegis of Menhir in addition to adding a large amount of burn damage. It also includes a new buff type that appears in Forgotten Gods – the addition of a percentage of retaliation damage to attack damage. Again, they've realised the basic retaliation builds are a bit boring to play because you generally just stand there and don't attack anything. This type of buff just gives you more options, like you'd maybe want to equip that Perdition set you've got hanging around but never really wanted to play a Retaliation build because it sounds too boring.

That's about it for level 15. It's pointless talking about gear because I'm picking up whatever drops and occasionally swapping around some items where I've got low-level rares and epics in storage. Nothing worth mentioning – it's the same stuff every player will have seen if they're played a few different characters through normal/veteran.

I'll aim to get an update posted when I reach level 20. That could be before or after getting past the warden, depends how tanky the Oathkeeper is feeling at that point. If you're playing this expansion, have a good time with it – it's looking fun so far.

Grim Dawn Revive Hc Character

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I also write novels: https://jwtapper.co.uk/



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