![]() ![]() In my eyes, it is important to prioritise the acquisition of constellations in this order as it lends the theorycrafter direction in the devo-pathing process. The way I do it is by grouping constellations according to: 1. What I believe to be the best approach to devotions *CLICK THIS IF YOU'RE A BEGINNER* - How to make devotions support themselves Aeon’s Hourglass = AH Time dilation = TD.Dual wield = DW 1H = 1-handed weapon 2H = 2-handed weapon.Situational tier - Constellations which are only valuable under the right conditions Shit tier - Constellations no one should use. They have the highest cost/investments, & yield no returns in exchange for the strongest procs. Tier 3 constellations Located the periphery of the devotion map. Tier 2 constellations - normally have a cost of ~10 affinities, require an investment of ~6 devotion points, and provide relatively poor returns of ~3 affinities. Tier 1 constellations - Constellations you have immediate access to upon investing in a crossroad. Transitory constellations - Constellations which yield x returns (where 3 < x < 7) of affinities a constellation provides upon completion. of devotion nodes needed to complete a constellation Terminology used in this guideĪffinity: any 1 of the 5 color balls you get for completing a constellationĬost - # of affinities needed to make a constellation accessible. Hopefully this guide will help less experienced players elucidate this matter so that they may dominate cairn with the righteous wrath of the Gods. The discussion on how-to plan devotions is an extremely complex one, especially when considering damage-conversion mechanics and for those getting the expac the introduction of even more pieces to this very dynamic puzzle. guide wouldn’t be half as complete if it weren’t for you lot. ![]()
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