Abrael2006-02-22 13:45:32
Do you lose more experience when you vitae or when you conglutinate? Just curious.
Narsrim2006-02-22 14:11:51
Misread.
ferlas2006-02-22 16:55:22
I think the question is how much do you lose from a conglut death, and how much do you lose from a vitae death, just for the sake of numbers?
Unknown2006-02-22 16:56:52
I believe you lose a little more from a vitae death, but I don't have any exact numbers.
Narsrim2006-02-22 16:57:47
Oh, you lose about the same except if its enemy territory then vitae is less.
ferlas2006-02-22 17:51:56
Enemy territory that I can conglut on counts as seren/glom ethereal and the cosmic planes?
Narsrim2006-02-22 17:53:20
Yes. Other examples would be villages (in play or sworn to an organization).
For example, if X is enemied to Stewartsville which is sworn to Magnagora and I kill X (Magnagora citizen) in Stewartsville, he loses more experience than a normal village auto-conglut.
For example, if X is enemied to Stewartsville which is sworn to Magnagora and I kill X (Magnagora citizen) in Stewartsville, he loses more experience than a normal village auto-conglut.
Unknown2006-02-22 22:02:38
unless you have a mob of people on you, then a vitae death will just lead to a normal death instantly afterward, whereas a conglut death will spawn you safely back on your nexi on prime.
Practical application is always a good thing to look at.
Edit:For those who might not know, Vitae places you back into the same room you just died in instantly, with full health, no afflictions and no defences or power.
Also if a warrior is in the middle of a combo or haymaker on you, it'll just continue(the death doesn't cut it off as you just apear back in the room instantly), meaning you'll most likely just die again.
That's why you'll often see the: "Person A has died to Person B", followed by "Person A has died to Person B" on deathsense.
Practical application is always a good thing to look at.
Edit:For those who might not know, Vitae places you back into the same room you just died in instantly, with full health, no afflictions and no defences or power.
Also if a warrior is in the middle of a combo or haymaker on you, it'll just continue(the death doesn't cut it off as you just apear back in the room instantly), meaning you'll most likely just die again.
That's why you'll often see the: "Person A has died to Person B", followed by "Person A has died to Person B" on deathsense.
Narsrim2006-02-22 23:02:21
I vitae/spore. Unless someone is well prepared, I can normally get away.
Acrune2006-02-22 23:42:08
QUOTE(Avaer @ Feb 22 2006, 11:56 AM) 261351
I believe you lose a little more from a vitae death, but I don't have any exact numbers.
I'm fairly confident that this is correct.
ferlas2006-02-23 10:38:00
QUOTE(Narsrim @ Feb 22 2006, 11:02 PM) 261450
I vitae/spore. Unless someone is well prepared, I can normally get away.
You also have the advantage of avenger on prime.