![]() ![]() Since the Antiquarian has such bad damage you give up very little by using Protect Me instead of nervous stab or another skill. Simply put, you are giving up an attack on a high damage frontliner in order to make a hardy character tougher. First, the reason those other skills are underwhelming is largely due to the opportunity cost of using them. On the surface it is worse than the protection granting skills that the Crusader and Leper have, since it comes with the drawback of taking more attacks, however this doesn't hold up to closer analysis. Protect Me: This is far and away the Antiquarian's best skill, it is in fact so good that using it is the best thing that they could do most of the time. Let's go through the skills, starting with the ones that I believe most need to see changes. Personally I think that the weapon was a mistake for reason's I'll ellaborate on later. Indeed, the antiquarian is basically degenerate by which I mean that the classes abilities are so poorly balanced against one another that 90+% of the time there is only one right action for the antiquarian to take.įirstly, the Antiquarian is designed to be something of a noncombatant, this is achieved two major ways: 1) the Antiquarian has the worst weapon in the game 2) the Antiquarian has underpowered skills. What I'm here to talk about is the internal balance of the antiquarian class, you've brought one to the dungeon for your own reasons and now you are using it in combat. Personally I think the Antiquarian does the role of money generation very well, but inherently devalues themselves in harder dungeons. ![]() The balance between taking an Antiquarian vs someone else is entirely dependant on how easily you expect to clear the dungeon and how much you need money. Prefacing this: I'm not going to argue the external balance of the class, since its primary role in the group is to generate extra money but underperform in combat. ![]()
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