It still baffles me how they could have overseen something as big as that. It's like they made Paladin and didn't even attempt to do the content with it.



It still baffles me how they could have overseen something as big as that. It's like they made Paladin and didn't even attempt to do the content with it.


I don't understand why people do crazy equations or invent obscure terms like "Indirect healing bonus" to just explain "damage reduce"...
Next time, we'll see "Sword Oath provides an indirect-non-missed-non-skills-enmity-bonus"...Hmm, no, it just gives you an additionnal weaker auto-attack![]()
Last edited by Reynhart; 12-16-2013 at 05:19 AM.
Less damage taken = less healing needed.
For a WAR to have the equivalent percentile of healing recovered per heal, a 25% healing bonus is required.
Hence, mitigation provides an indirect form of a healing bonus.
There is math that proves it.
I like how you've gone from trying to make an actual argument, to just throwing out quips because its too hard to try and hold a form of discussion.
If you don't like the fact people disagree with you, and can actually prove their points, then perhaps you should simply keep your opinions to yourself.


The only thing math proves is that -20% damage taken is better than +20% healing received.
Mitigation provides...mitigation.
People are just making up terms to explain something else.
And besides, why did the discussion go on "Which one is better" ? Did I mention "WAR" in my original post ?
Last edited by Reynhart; 12-16-2013 at 07:46 AM.


effective hp and effective healing explicitly define what someone is talking about when using "math" to compare less damage taken to either more hp or more healing received.The only thing math proves is that -20% damage taken is better than +20% healing received.
Mitigation provides...mitigation.
People are just making up terms to explain something else.
And besides, why did the discussion go on "Which one is better" ? Did I mention "WAR" in my original post ?
effective hp = how much damage you can take when damage reduction is removed from the equation
effective heals = how much damage is healed when damage reduction and bonus healing are both removed from the equation
When you convert damage reduction, bonus hp and/or bonus healing into either effective hp or effective heals (depending on what you're talking about), then it's much easier to make meaningful comparisons between the two abilities that detail exactly why one is better than the other.
They're not terms made up to sound fancy for no good reason. They are precise terms to explain exactly what's going on.
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