Yeah it works just like that...
"Bethesda, did you even playtest this game?"
It bugs me that they felt the need to create such a strong enchantment, they would have been better served taking another look at alchemy magnitudes (shit illusion poison effects) or maybe popping in on that fucking Silent Moons Enchant that they never tested...
Yeah it works just like that...
"Bethesda, did you even playtest this game?"
It bugs me that they felt the need to create such a strong enchantment, they would have been better served taking another look at alchemy magnitudes (shit illusion poison effects) or maybe popping in on that fucking Silent Moons Enchant that they never tested...
Chaos Damage is extremely Overpowered. you could possibly take zero points in destruction and just the enchanting perks and make it viable ( not tested ) I've had 2 sorcerers my last one was at the release of Dragonborn DLC. one i got the Chaos enchant it became way too OP and lost alot of fun factor. I personally avoid it.
Chaos Damage is extremely Overpowered. you could possibly take zero points in destruction and just the enchanting perks and make it viable ( not tested ) I've had 2 sorcerers my last one was at the release of Dragonborn DLC. one i got the Chaos enchant it became way too OP and lost alot of fun factor. I personally avoid it.
So did you perk smithing enough to get to steel plate armor? I noticed you mentioned it being in the wrong side of the simithing tree, but I didn't see anywhere you put points into smithing.
So did you perk smithing enough to get to steel plate armor? I noticed you mentioned it being in the wrong side of the simithing tree, but I didn't see anywhere you put points into smithing.
"For this build I decided to stick my finger up at the oddities of the smithing skill tree..."
Translation? I ignored smithing completely and just ran with plain plate, still capped armor rating...
"For this build I decided to stick my finger up at the oddities of the smithing skill tree..."
Translation? I ignored smithing completely and just ran with plain plate, still capped armor rating...
By choosing not to smith and to use silver swords for that matter (un-smithable, is that even a word?) it keeps you true to the sorcerer archetype...
Perking smithing just for the ability to craft new sets would definitely be a waste, Bandit Chiefs often wear the whole set and steel plate items are pretty common in loot/shops. You don't actually find yourself making many new sets anyway. I think I crafted 3 sets for the whole playthrough with this character...
Thanks Seth
By choosing not to smith and to use silver swords for that matter (un-smithable, is that even a word?) it keeps you true to the sorcerer archetype...
Perking smithing just for the ability to craft new sets would definitely be a waste, Bandit Chiefs often wear the whole set and steel plate items are pretty common in loot/shops. You don't actually find yourself making many new sets anyway. I think I crafted 3 sets for the whole playthrough with this character...
Thanks Seth