What's the utility? MO' POWAH, BABY!
What's the utility? MO' POWAH, BABY!
But what of questing or just having fun? You can't use Onslaught unless you always remind yourself not to use the full bar, which also sucks because then you're slowing down your FCs and ICs.
Didn't think it was that easy to calculate, I mean, you didn't account for the cd reduction of Infuriate from FC.Can't tell if you're trolling about upheaval or not. Fell Cleave is 590 potency for a cost of 50 gauge, which is 11.8 potency per gauge point (590/50). Upheaval is 450 potency for a cost of 20 gauge, which is 22.5 potency per gauge point (450/20). In other words, upheaval gives you more damage per gauge.
Use upheaval on cooldown. Onslaught is situational. I recommend https://thebalanceffxiv.com/ and it's associated discord for any further questions.
Still worth using upheaval on cooldown you only use onslaught out of inner realse to gain a gcd or you are going to overcap
Yes, but their estimate is actually high in comparison to what it really is. This is because Fell Cleave is also on the GCD while Upheaval is not. So while the analysis that Upheaval is 450/20 = 22.5 potency per gauge, the same analysis for the average potency of Fell Cleave (590/50 = 11.8 potency/gauge) is not because you are replacing a GCD action. The calculation for the average combo potency is a bit harder to analyze on warrior than on dark knight since you have multiple combos giving different gauge amounts and also have an additional potency in terms of Inner Chaos reduction which is also dependent on the Average GCD potency. Basically you are correct, it is much more complicated than it was made out to be. Regardless, upheaval is definitely the most cost effective way to transform warrior gauge into damage.
Post Script Analysis
I calculated the average Fell Cleave potency: This does not mean every fell cleave is worth the same, but if you were to average all your Fell cleaves together this is how much potency it gained you over your average GCD. If you want more details as you what a specific Fell Cleave is worth you will need to consult your specific fight.
I did a quick calculation taking into account gauge lost, average GCD potency, timer reductions on Inner Chaos as well as Inner Chaos's interaction with its own timer. I did make a small approximation so this is an upper estimate on the average potency but I expect that it is fairly close to accurate.
For Fell Cleave: 1g is worth 7.15 potency on average. Meaning Fell Cleave is worth about 357.5 potency above your average GCD. Comparing this to Upheaval and Upheaval is approximately 3.15 times more effective at turning gauge into potency over Fell Cleave. Since they use different amounts of gauge Upheaval only gains you about 100 potency over Fell Cleave.
We can also use this to approximate how much of a potency loss onslaught is: onslaught loses 43 potency per use compared to saving the gauge to Fell Cleave. However, if you were to overcap your gauge with the next GCD, there by losing 10 guage you can onslaught instead.
That 10 gauge is worth 71.5 potency, onslaught loses 43 potency. That means using onslaught to gain back that 10 gauge is worth about 28.5 potency. In other words: Onslaught is a dps gain when used well. It isn't often a gain, but in the right situations it can be. This only happens rarely within your rotation. But also keep in mind that if your spring is down and/or onslaught would get you back faster and gain you GCDs it is a gain as your combo potency is also quite high.
Last edited by Chrono_Rising; 07-22-2019 at 06:23 AM.
Thank you!!!Yes, but their estimate is actually high in comparison to what it really is. This is because Fell Cleave is also on the GCD while Upheaval is not. So while the analysis that Upheaval is 450/20 = 22.5 potency per gauge, the same analysis for the average potency of Fell Cleave (590/50 = 11.8 potency/gauge) is not because you are replacing a GCD action. The calculation for the average combo potency is a bit harder to analyze on warrior than on dark knight since you have multiple combos giving different gauge amounts and also have an additional potency in terms of Inner Chaos reduction which is also dependent on the Average GCD potency. Basically you are correct, it is much more complicated than it was made out to be. Regardless, upheaval is definitely the most cost effective way to transform warrior gauge into damage.
Post Script Analysis
I calculated the average Fell Cleave potency: This does not mean every fell cleave is worth the same, but if you were to average all your Fell cleaves together this is how much potency it gained you over your average GCD. If you want more details as you what a specific Fell Cleave is worth you will need to consult your specific fight.
I did a quick calculation taking into account gauge lost, average GCD potency, timer reductions on Inner Chaos as well as Inner Chaos's interaction with its own timer. I did make a small approximation so this is an upper estimate on the average potency but I expect that it is fairly close to accurate.
For Fell Cleave: 1g is worth 7.15 potency on average. Meaning Fell Cleave is worth about 357.5 potency above your average GCD. Comparing this to Upheaval and Upheaval is approximately 3.15 times more effective at turning gauge into potency over Fell Cleave. Since they use different amounts of gauge Upheaval only gains you about 100 potency over Fell Cleave.
We can also use this to approximate how much of a potency loss onslaught is: onslaught loses 43 potency per use compared to saving the gauge to Fell Cleave. However, if you were to overcap your gauge with the next GCD, there by losing 10 guage you can onslaught instead.
That 10 gauge is worth 71.5 potency, onslaught loses 43 potency. That means using onslaught to gain back that 10 gauge is worth about 28.5 potency. In other words: Onslaught is a dps gain when used well. It isn't often a gain, but in the right situations it can be. This only happens rarely within your rotation. But also keep in mind that if your spring is down and/or onslaught would get you back faster and gain you GCDs it is a gain as your combo potency is also quite high.
and there is a reason why every other tank uses their "gap-closer" as dps gain and "maybe" saves 1 charge after burst if the encounter requires it.This is fantastic. The word "utility" has truly, and utterly lost all meaning. It means everything from mitigation, self-healing, raid buffs, interrupts, mobility tools, to now dps. We can now safely toss it in the bin alongside words such as "clunky."
I'm so tired of seeing Onslaught complaints at this point. Switch Onslaught to being identical to every other tank gap closer (reduce 20 yalm range to 15 yalms, increase 10 second recast to 30 seconds, allow for 2 charges, and remove potency from WAR elsewhere so that no net boost to total dps results from the change). While you do that, give the present Onslaught to DRK, because if you're halfway smart about resource management, it's a superior gap closer in every way. We're the only tanks with any real resource management anyways, so we might as well keep that uniform across the board.
sure give us the identical gap closer and lower potencies elsewhere..
on topic: others already mentioned the most important, i'll just advice to always keep at least 20 gauge for onslaught in case you want to gap close, like chrono already said, onslaught is a dps gain if you can gain uptime on the target (gcd's), other then that only use it in inner release and while it can be used as a gauge dump, with the loss of the stance benefits of keeping your gauge high, there is little reason/value of going over 70 gauge atm. at least in my opinion.
Upheaval is a DPS gain at all times. Not sure how you are figuring it isnt. Its a powerful attack that should be used as often as humanly possible. Period.
Onslaught is only a tiny, tiny dps loss. That is easily made up for by not delaying a GCD. TLDR: if walking back to a monster makes you delay a GCD, you should have used onslaught to get back faster. Its really that straightforward. It's a perfectly designed gap closer. If you dont need to gap close, you dont use it. If you find yourself with a gap to close, close it and you will be better off for it.
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