Archery in DA:O: An Overview
There seems to exist a curious concensus in DA:O gaming community as to archery being underpowered. However, that's true only to a certain extent: archery talents, indeed, are somewhat underpowered. Archery itself is not. Bugged? No doubt. Underpowered? No way.
Actually, there are three key principles to keeping your archers efficient: (a) use talents only when it's absolutely necessary; (b) have Shale in your party: Rock Mastery aura is one of the best buffs in the whole game, and it's archery-oriented, too; (c) don't even think of using Haste or Swift Salve - refer to Ranged Attack Speed Bugs.
One may wonder, why refrain from using talents? As a rule of thumb, archery talents are all built around pretty solid game designer ideas, but suffer from serious meta-balance issues: in other words, their cost:efficiency ratio in comparison to other talents/spells is just very, very bad. Cost, in this case, represents both stamina cost per se and conjuration time. For example, let's take a closer look at Arrow of Slaying: in theory, it looks great. However, 3 seconds conjuration time, plus high stamina cost, plus post-use penalties make it much less appealing: with a proper setup, you could have 2 critical hits scored by the time it takes you to unleash one Arrow of Slaying - at zero stamina cost, without any consecutive penalties. Not to mention that even damage-wise, 2 crits are better than one Arrow of Slaying, unless one is fighting critter/normal-rank enemies, that is -- yet one really doesn't need to resort to Arrow of Slaying to defeat critters).
Arrow of Slaying: Usage Guidelines
Many players like big damage numbers -- herein lies the main appeal of Arrow of Slaying. However, as if 3s conjuration time was not problematic enough on its own, talent mechanics are unusually convoluted and definitely counter-intuitive. Basically, the one and only factor that can guarantee you will deal heavy damage with Arrow of Slaying is a multiplier bonus based on level difference between the attacker and the target. Take a look at this table:
Level Difference | BonusMultiplier |
---|---|
0 | 2 |
1 | 3 |
2 | 0 |
3 | 1 |
4 | 6 |
5 | 7 |
6 | 4 |
7 | 5 |
8 | 10 |
As you may notice, bonus multiplier progression is very weird, to say the least (in fact, there is a method to this madness: technically, binary xor just either adds or substracts 2 from the level difference). Essentially, you have to know the exact level of your target to be able to use Arrow of Slaying effectively. In a nutshell: targets one level below the archer are worth it, as are targets 4+ levels below you; targets of the same level, as well as targets 2-3 levels below the archer are not. Please note targets 2 levels below the archer practically nullify the damage bonus, that is getting multiplied by 0. So, if your ambition is to become a great sharpshooter, one skill and one talent are mandatory: Master Survival and Combat Stealth/Master Stealth. The former allows to judge whether the target is worth your Arrow of Slaying. The latter solves, to a certain degree, the 3s conjuration time problem: when you fire from Stealth (be sure to turn The Tainted Blade off), conjuration time obviously does not matter much.
The most important thing to remember, though, is that Arrow of Slaying is only effective vs. Critter and Normal rank enemies. Vs. Lieutenants and above, 2 critical hits you can score as fast as 3.2s are a much better option as far as damage output is considered.
Permanent Auto-Crit Setup
Revenons à nos moutons. The main problem seems to be, indeed, finding that proper setup. First of all, rogue is vastly superior to fighter due to Lethality talent and Bard specialization. Basically, the only mandatory archery talents are Aim and Master Archer. As far as active talents go, Shattering Shot and Scattershot are the best of the bunch, although even that huge -20 armor penalty applied by the former with Master Archer is hardly worth it in non-boss fights, while the latter is more of a threat management talent than anything else (see Tanking: An Alternative Approach for details). Stat distribution: enough dexterity to equip your weapon of choice with Fade, gear and specialization bonuses, the rest into cunning. Dexterity-based archers are easier to start with (no attack rating issues; however, cunning build archer rogues have a decent option of choosing Duelist for a first specialization, thus effectively solving the problem), but overall much worse mid- to late-game due to armor penetration problems. The best specialization by far for your archer is Bard due to Song of Courage. Essentially, Aim + Song of Courage + Rock Mastery combination is what makes your cunning-based archer worth the investment. You should aim for a permanent auto-crit. While Pinpoint Strike buff works nicely with ranged attacks, it lasts only 15 seconds and has a whopping 3 minutes cooldown time. Permanent auto-crit is attainable even for an entire archer party (PC archer, Leliana, Zevran, Shale). Please refer to this video to see some practical implications of this approach: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qHKTJLCkvjI
Some +X% ranged critical chance gear to consider is:
It goes without saying, if you have only one archer in your party, Far Song is your best option as far as weapon choice is concerned. Somewhat surprisingly, +X% critical damage gear is nice to have, but ultimately non-essential. It is actually better to have + dexterity, + cunning, or, ideally, + all stats gear piece equipped than +X% critical damage one. Of course, the trade-off should be within common sense limits: it would be extremely unwise to unequip Red Jenny Seekers for the sake of Dalish Gloves, for instance; yet Felon's Coat will boost your archer's damage much better than Warden Commander Armor.
Critical Damage Modifier Calculation
The formula for critical damage modifier calculation is as follows:
CriticalDamageModifier = COMBAT_CRITICAL_DAMAGE_MODIFIER + PROPERTY_ATTRIBUTE_CRITICAL_RANGE / 100.0
Combat Critical Damage Modifier is 1.5. Critical Range may theoretically vary from 0% to 200%, allowing for a 3.5 critical damage multiplier. In practice, the list +X% critical/backstab damage gear suitable for an archer is quite limited:
Bregan's Bow may refer to:
- Bregan's Bow (Origins), a shortbow in Dragon Age: Origins
- Bregan's Bow (Awakening), a shortbow in Dragon Age: Origins - Awakening
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DAA pre-order bonus item
In DA:O, an archer can achieve a grand total of +50% critical/backstab damage (Critical Damage Modifier of 2.0), if one is willing to sacrifice aim speed by equipping Warden Commander Armor, or +35% critical/backstab damage (Critical Damage Modifier of 1.85) otherwise. However, it is advisable to equip only Far Song and Cailan's Gauntlets for a total of +25% critical/backstab damage (Critical Damage Modifier of 1.75), since removing Key to the City or Dusk Ring for The Wicked Oath's sake is counter-productive. After exporting the character to DAA, it will be immediately possible to switch Far Song for Bregan's Bow, if one is so inclined, thus raising the bonus to +30% critical/backstab damage (Critical Damage Modifier of 1.8).
Overall, the +X% critical/backstab damage bonuses are relatively minor: the primary attribute values are just not high enough yet. The situation will gradually change in DAA, though another 30 points invested into the attributes still won't be enough to make +X% critical/backstab damage items preferable to +X attributes ones.
Permanent Auto-Crit Setup: Pt. II
Pre-buffing plays an important role for cunning-based Bard archer rogue. Both Song of Courage and The Tainted Blade bonuses are calculated based on your cunning at the moment they were activated. Equip + cunning gear, buff, unequip. It should be noted The Tainted Blade has a very annoying tendency to turn off during any dialogue/cutscene, so stay alert. Some pre-buff gear to consider is:
A bonus of +14 cunning is very significant (refer to Song of Courage and The Tainted Blade damage formulae). In fact, you should probably have Guildmaster's Belt (at least, pre-Andruil's Blessing) and Dusk Ring equipped in-combat, too.
Unfortunately, enchanted arrows are as close to being useless in DA:O as it gets: early-game, they are scarce enough, while having a truly epic resistable +3 nature damage bonus from Arrow of Filth mid-game+, when your archer, if properly built, should be dealing consistent 100+ damage per crit, is not too impressive. Andraste's Arrows and Elf-Flight Arrow are the only enchanted arrow types to be taken seriously, but their very limited quantity and situational usefullness do not make them too attractive, either.
Undesirable Gear Properties, Talents and Talent Combinations
- The Tainted Blade, being a great damage-booster, is incompatible with Stealth and, to a lesser extent, with Dual-Weapon Expert. It will break stealth due to self-inflicted damage per tick (technically, level 25 rogue with Master Stealth will have a 50% chance to pass the stealth-breaking check, but since the checks will occur each tick, it's ultimately unreliable), and bleeding lacerations from Dual Weapon Expert will apply to the rogue due to the bug. Of course, that's not to say you should avoid using The Tainted Blade on a permanent basis in other situations -- no way, the talent is really good.
- Evasion is a talent to avoid, especially with +X% displacement/dodge modifiers on gear. Why? Because evasion animation: (a) takes some significant time to execute; (b) plays during attack and wait phases, effectively cancelling actions assigned to a character. So, with a high enough displacement value, plus unavoidable +10% from Dark Passage, you can become effectively locked down by any melee opponent. Yes, you won't get hit, but you won't hit, either, and that is much worse -- the lost damage trade-off is very bad.
A Note on Massive Armor Use
Only massive chest armor affects ranged attack speed. An archer can equip massive helmet, boots, and gloves without suffering aiming speed penalty, as long as he meets strength requirements for those gear pieces. Since archers are not about talent-spamming, fatigue factor should not be much of a concern. Overall, there are two massive armor pieces useful for any archer build:
It's hard to argue with an enormous +5 dexterity bonus from Corruption. This is the best archer helmet in the game, outclassing even Helm of Honnleath: simply put, +5 to damage modifying attribute is better than a total of +4 to damage modifying attributes, not to mention instantly maximized spirit resistance. The problem with Corruption is you obtain it very late into the game. On the other hand, the imported Warden archer will be able to put it to good use in DAA until he finds a worthy alternative. Cailan's Gauntlets are the only improvement on Red Jenny Seekers in DA:O: the same +15% critical damage bonus, more armor. Since it is a Return to Ostagar item, it is also DAA-transferable. For more thoughts on DAA-exportable archer gear, see: Exporting the Warden Archer to DAA: Gear & Party Problems
A reasonable question might arise at this point: while dexterity build can just invest in strength to meet the requirements, how is cunning-based archer supposed to equip those items? In fact, it is possible to equip those armor pieces with minimal investment into strength, if the archer has Dual-Weapon Mastery (he should have enough unspent talent points by end-game). Temporary strength-enhancing gear setup includes:
Harvest Festival Ring or any other ring granting +2 to strength
This setup, plus strength bonus from Fade essences, will net a total of +24 strength. There would be a need to equip some minor strength-enhancing gear, like Barbarian Mace or Shadow of the Empire first in order to equip some of the major strength-enhancing items. Luckily, one will have to go through this tiresome process only once.
Ranged Weapon Aim Speed and Aim Speed Modifiying Factors Reference Sheet
Base weapon aim speed values in DA:O are: 0.2s for shortbows, 0.3s for longbows, 0.8s for crossbows. Aim speed modifiers (in other words, rate of fire bonuses and penalties) have a minimum hard cap of +6.0s and a maximum hard cap of -3.0s. However, aim speed can only be effectively reduced to 0 (apparently, animation length cannot be negative). There are several factors affecting aim speed, some of them, unfortunately, severely bugged -- see Ranged Attack Speed Bugs for details. The following reference sheet covers aim speed modifying abilities, gear, and consumables:
- Rock Mastery: -2.0s or -4.0s (after area transition).
- Rapid Aim on Repeater Gloves: -3.0s.
- Rapid Shot: up to -3.0s (with Master Archer).
- Rapid Aim on Antique Warden Crossbow: -0.5s.
- Rapid Aim on Armsman's Tensioner, Camenae's Barbute, Falon'Din's Reach, Far Song, Marjolaine's Recurve, Spear-Thrower: -0.3s.
- Rapid Aim on Dalish Longbow, Scout's Bow: -0.1s.
- Haste: +0.8s.
- Swift Salve: +0.9s.
- Aim: +1.5s.
Massive Chest Armor Penalty and Base Attack Timing
The massive chest armor penalty is applied directly to Base Attack Timing (BaseDuration), in other words, to the default ranged attack animation length with Aim Speed 0. The BAT for massive (heavy/massive without Master Archer) chest armor is 2.0s, for any other chest armor it is 0.8s, after which, the game engine adds a flat +0.8s animation length. Thus, the maximum fire rate attainable with any chest armor but heavy/massive is 1.6s, while the maximum fire rate with heavy/massive chest armor is 2.8s. Please note Aim Speed modifiers do not affect these values -- Aim Speed calculations are applied on top of BAT.
Appendix: Archery in Dragon Age: Origins - Awakening
General Principles
A viable DAA archer is vastly different from a viable DA:O archer. The main contributing factor to this is Accuracy modal ability. In short, DA:O Cun-based archers will have to undergo a respecialization. A classic Str/Dex archery build is much more viable in DAA due to insane benefits from Accuracy. However, it is worthy to remember damage from abilities and gear (DamageBonus attribute) is capped at 100. That said, Dex-based critical chance and critical range (+X% critical/backstab damage) bonuses from Accuracy far outweigh any possible benefits one can gain from investing in Cun or Str.
Best item properties for an archer in DAA are: + damage-affecting attributes, +X% critical/backstab damage, armor penetration. Attribute-based damage is calculated separately from DamageBonus; +X% critical/backstab damage can actually reach its maximum 3.5 factor with Accuracy and new gear; since this is a Dex-based, not Cun-based build, armor penetration bonuses will provide a significant damage boost against heavily-armored enemies (please note, however, that armor penetration rating above 25-30 is ultimately impractical).
Specializations and Talents
Optimal specializations for an archer party are as follows: Bard -- pre-buffed with + Cun Song of Courage x 3 will allow you to reach auto-crit without Aim; Assassin -- specialization passive bonus, stackable unresistable Mark of Death that provides an effective +60% damage bonus (to base damage only, but this is enough to make a 400 dmg critical hit a 500 damage critical hit); Legionnaire Scout -- specialization passive bonus, Mark of the Legion grants a huge +10 bonus to a damage-affecting attribute, Strength of Stone is the best anti-boss ability in the game.
The new rogue sustainable, Weak Points -- essentially, a minor brother to Mark of Death in terms of effect, is definitely worth picking and keeping active at all times. New archery talents, excluding Accuracy, are somewhat underwhelming. Arrow Time is extremely situational. Burst Shot is friendly fire-capable, cannot boast an excessively impressive range (especially compared to an old war horse like Scattershot) and crits with factor of 3.0 on the main target, then with standard factor of 1.5 on the rest in 3m radius -- in short, better effect is attainable without 2s conjuration time in DAA. Rain of Arrows can be marginally useful again large groups of immobilized enemies (or unusually masochistic ranged attackers), but that is a very unlikely scenario.
Some of the old archery talents become more useful than ever: critical Scattershot with 3.5 factor is a sight to behold, while cumulative Suppressing Fire finally gets to shine in an archer party. However, one of the old staple talents becomes largely obsolete and even counter-productive after a certain point in DAA. Aim could be a very good synergy to Accuracy. However, without Shale's Rock Mastery, the only practical way to deal with the +1.5s aim speed penalty it imposes is to equip Repeater Gloves. This is a viable option early-game, when you cannot reach auto-crit with Accuracy and Song of Courage alone, but definitely sub-optimal mid-game+, as you gradually gain access to some great archery gloves.
DAA Archery Gear
The list is almost complete. The items missing from the list are parts of Nimble and Blackblade sets the author was not able to acquire during his playthrough (in fact, there is a serious controversy as to whether they are lootable in vanilla DAA, without third-party workarounds and fixes, much like Dwarven Defender and several other items were in DA:O). The gear listed below is not specifically archer-oriented, but definitely worth equipping, either as a pre-buff option or as a permanent combat one, if you are into optimizing your archer's performance. Obvious choices, like +X all attributes items, and gear pieces granting minor bonuses by DAA standards (less than +3 attrubute X) are not listed.
Quicksilver may refer to:
- Quicksilver (helmet), a light helmet in Dragon Age: Origins - Awakening
- Quicksilver (ability), a rogue talent in Dragon Age: Inquisition
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. |
Non-Replaceable DA:O Gear
While DAA has a fair share of top-notch amulets, gloves, boots, and belts, it is worthy to note helmets, chest armor and rings of comparable quality are either non-existant or acquirable very late into the game. The following importable items will be non-replaceable for the entire game (or, at least, for the 90% of it):
Ring of Dawn
Extreme Pre-Buffing: Heraldry: Legion of the Dead
Glassric the Weaponsmith at the City of Amaranthine sells Heraldry: Legion of the Dead for 60. When applied to any shield, it grants a bonus of +17 all attributes. Since it is highly doubtful the uber-blazon is an intended feature, it is really up to the player to decide whether to use this option or not. There is a significant difference between stacking double Rock Mastery aura effect in DA:O to compensate for archery being buggy, and abusing that huge +17 all attributes when pre-buffing an already extremely powerful character. Please note this exploit also effectively eliminates any need to invest attribute points into strength.
Practical Implications: End-Game Archer Party -- Facts, Figures and Demonstration Video
Below are the fully pre-buffed notable combat statistics for the archer members of the party. Square brackets denote values that go over the cap. Buffs/sustainables active: Song of Courage x 3, Accuracy, Weak Points, Suppressing Fire.
- Sereda, level 35 Assassin/Bard/Legionnaire Scout:
Attack 382.4
Defense 237.0
Armor 23.9
Ranged_Crit_Modifier 100.0 [127.4]
DamageBonus 100.0 [193.2]
Damage_MainHand 176.3
AP_BONUS 9.1
CriticalRange 200.0 [206.0]
- Sigrun, level 34 Assassin/Bard/Legionnaire Scout:
Attack 301.2
Defense 187.0
Armor 24.5
Ranged_Crit_Modifier 100.0 [100.2+3.0]
DamageBonus 100.0 [146.9]
Damage_MainHand 160.7
AP_BONUS 4.5
CriticalRange 150.0
- Nathaniel, level 34 Assassin/Bard/Legionnaire Scout:
Attack 292.7
Defense 172.0
Armor 23.6
Ranged_Crit_Modifier 100.0 [98.2+3.0]
DamageBonus 100.0 [142.6]
Damage_MainHand 160.7
AP_BONUS 5.4
CriticalRange 136.0
Pearl of the Anointed may refer to:
- Pearl of the Anointed (Origins), an amulet in Dragon Age: Origins
- Pearl of the Anointed (Awakening), an amulet in Dragon Age: Origins - Awakening
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. |
Harvest Festival Ring Ring
Cunning Pre-Buff Gear (Song of Courage)
Quicksilver may refer to:
- Quicksilver (helmet), a light helmet in Dragon Age: Origins - Awakening
- Quicksilver (ability), a rogue talent in Dragon Age: Inquisition
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. |
Partha with Heraldry: Legion of the Dead
Wolf Threads
Total: +52 cunning
Dexterity Pre-Buff Gear (Accuracy)
Heartwood Bow limited to one character
Fleet Feet or Stormchaser Boots
Key to the City or any other ring with +2 strength modifier
Total: +27 dexterity (+32 dexterity for the character with Heartwood Bow)
A Note on Armor Penetration
Having a very high AP value may seem superficially beneficient, as AP offers an effective damage increase not affected by DamageBonus cap. However, in practice, the character does not need a very high AP, since the only enemies having high armor value in DAA are, unsurprisingly, Armored Ogres (46.3). Armored Ogres are one big exception to the general rule. Even Elite Boss rank enemies rarely have armor value above 15 (level 32 Mother has 16.3). Moreover, even if your AP rating is low, the armor advantage won't help your enemies much when you score 300-400 damage critical hits consistently. A plain substraction of, say, 10 damage points from such a sum will offer a very minor relief. In other words: it is advised to aim for total AP value of 15-20. Higher value is actually counter-productive, as you will be naturally forced to sacrifice other benefits to achieve it.
Demonstration Video
A word of warning: a potential major spoiler ahead! The final battle with the Mother on Nightmare. The strategy used is a staple anti-boss strategy for this party: ignore the minor threats (tentacles, in this case), Strength of Stone, Mark of Death x 3, auto-attack ad nauseum (Sereda uses Andraste's Arrows -- just in case the critical hits will not suffice for spellcasting interruption purpose). The Mother is not immune to critical damage, so the approach really pays off, as can be easily seen.