Damage stats : how does minion damage work ?
Hi,
Id like some explaination about minion damage. I didn't find any intel ingame, nor in the wiki, so it's really not clear to me. I'm currently playing a necromancer Templar, lvl 60, and my minions are so powerfull that I only die because of desynch problems, or carelessness lol. It was hard at the beginning, but now, they look so overpowered, I can't believe I'd go that far with any other character build. Which brings the question : why are the minions so powerfull ? I'm not complaining of course, but I can't find any information like "sword does 20-30 physical damage" kind of stat. I'd like to know how much damage they're dealing, what is their accuracy rating etc... I also would like to know how is calculated critical strike for minions. Is it affected by the passive critical strike chance / multiplier ? Can it be improved ? These kind of things. Thanks Last edited by Kamikave#3623 on May 4, 2013, 6:51:59 PM
This thread has been automatically archived. Replies are disabled.
|
![]() |
Minions have their own base stats and can be affected by Minion Instability, Necromantic Aegis, the other minion passives (life, damage, count), and support gems.
The base stats you're asking for are currently not shown because the UI has not been finished for minion info. Nobody knows exactly what their base stats are (including their base crit chance and multiplier, though 5% and 150% is assumed). Your critical strike chance and multiplier passives and gear will not affect minions, but a crit strike or crit multi support gem would. --- As for your question of "why are minions so powerful?", they tend to die a lot in maps. They're weak early on and moderately weak later on, and very strong in the middle. With proper supports you can still clear maps as a summoner if you rely on your spectres for damage. |
![]() |
"I hope you forgot a "yet" at the end ^^ but thanks a lot. I still have't found any maps, I guess it's for later, but I'll keep your advice in mind ;) Last edited by Kamikave#3623 on May 5, 2013, 1:56:47 AM
|
![]() |
Still no info on this, and it would be greatly appreciated/useful
|
![]() |