Q&A with Trion Regarding Rift at WonderCon 2011


At WonderCon 2011, I caught up with 3 of Trion’s employees, Exec Producer Scott Hartsman and Community Managers Elrar and Zann, about their recently-launched MMORPG Rift.

Transcript

For full disclosure, these were questions I came up with on the spot, and this was an ad-hoc conversation – the Trion guys didn’t know what I was going to ask.

Me: You came on board about 2 years ago, so how did you help shape or change the direction of the game?

Scott Hartsman (Exec Producer): For me it was really about taking a look at what had already been done, what was already in place, and figuring out how to get from where they were to where we could launch a game that was AAA. And it was amazing to me how much was actually there. I mean it was by far one of the most functional teams with functional technology, and we were in the process of getting the game from Dev mode to Beta mode and later Launch mode. So it was more about guiding, and it really wasn’t about coming in to be Thor with a hammer.

Me: So you had a great staff to work with, a talented staff?

Scott: Yes, an amazing staff.

Me: So how did you guys make the decision as far as the timing of the launch, because I’ve been really impressed with the game after only 5 weeks. I’ve experienced no server downtime (Editor’s note: there have been maintenance windows but they have typically shorter than a half-hour, not the several hours unplanned downtime I have experienced with new titles), no client crashes, no unplanned downtime. So how did you guys, how did you build a case to wait long enough until the game was polished enough to launch?

Scott: It was really simple. We had support all the way up to the Executive Board. All the games that have all flopped in the last number of years have largely flopped because they either didn’t have enough to do or they fell down. And so to us those were the 2 key things, that until we were confident that we were stable, until we were confident that we had enough to do, no one was going to let us launch, so we didn’t have anyone kicking us out the door before it was ready.

Me: So you guys were all aligned about the timing of the launch?

Scott: Everybody was.

Me: That’s good because I feel like that’s been part of what has really killed several titles, the perception of the players.

Scott: I agree.

Me: Congratulations and thank you so much for your time.

Scott: Absolutely, very nice meeting you.

————————————————————————

Elrar (Community Manager): We are the voice of the Development team when they are too busy working. We’re there to field the questions from you guys and then go to the Development team, let them know about it, and we get information back.

Me: You guys made a conscious decision to host your own forums and there is a lot of debate about [doing] that, there are some really good articles I’ve read such as Taming the Forum Tiger, it talked about the risk of having your own forum versus letting other people  host it. So, how do you guys feel about the interaction with the community, because I feel objectively that the community over-reacted a little bit to some of the changes being put in place in 1.1. People are unhappy with changes, even to those things that are objectively “overpowered” that have been tweaked. What do you do with that?

Elrar: So the first thing you always need to keep in mind is that change is hard, so, when you change something there is inevitably going to be someone who doesn’t like it. So you take that, and then you go: “OK, now is he reacting to the change or to a negative effect of that change?” Once you find that out, then you go: “Is that negative effect a valid concern, is that something we might want to look into?” And then from there we pass that on, and then Development team will take that and use all the metrics they get from the game and the qualitative information they get from the players and combine that to come up with the best decision possible. So, not all negative feedback is bad, and we try and understand why do players feel this way and then address that. Either it’s a perception issue or an actual issue. How can we explain it or improve it so that you come to accept the changes more easily?

Me: If there are inaccurate perceptions about the state of the game or state of balance, how do you guys shape or influence that, because people are going to believe whatever they are going to believe, and I think sometimes people tend to react emotionally on the forums?

Elrar: Sometimes we just need to let it simmer, let people just go out there and play the changes. And then eventually they might come back in a weekend and go “OK, I’m into this” or “I’ve found a build that plays the way I want, e.g. really big crits or something like that.” People adapt to changes, they’ll figure out how [they] can enjoy the game. It’s a very small percentage of people who actually just go “this was too much and I don’t want to play this anymore.” And you know what, sometimes it’s perfectly understandable. Sometimes it’s just not the game for you. There’s so many more people who eventually go “I understand why they made the changes, I don’t like them because it makes my class less fun, but on the whole it makes the game more enjoyable for everyone.”

Rift Schwag FTW!

Thanks Scott, Elrar, and Zann for taking the time to share your thoughts. As the t-shirt says, we’re not in Azeroth anymore :)

Posted in Business Analysis, Interview, RIFT

Rift Warrior PVP Video: Volume 8: Riftblade / Paladin @ 42, Patch 1.1. Update


This HD video is narrated footage of my level 42 Warrior in a Codex warfront (queued solo) in the MMORPG Rift in Patch 1.1.

Patch 1.1 just launched today, so I posted this video to showcase the differences in Riftblade mechanics. My impression from a dozen warfronts in the 40-49 bracket is that Riftblade is still a viable PVP spec. I am not 50 so I can’t speak to endgame yet.

The most noticeable change with the patch is the decreased usage of Rift Surge – the cooldown is three times as long. In my objective opinion, Rift Surge was a bit over-nerfed. I do think Trion is doing the right, albeit painful, thing in trying to balance the game, so we’ll see if there are any changes made to swing the pendulum for Rift Surge back a bit.

To deal with the introduction of the cooldown for Flamespear, I tweaked my macros.

Per Patch 1.1, I have updated my Riftblade PVP Guide.

If you have questions about the changes, I recommend you read through the Guide first as I may have already addressed them. Questions asked on my blog will be given priority by me over questions posted here on YouTube, as the Guide is where I am focusing my efforts.

Here is the 1H Riftblade/Paladin used in the video:
http://rift.zam.com/en/stc.html?t=0cLhg.xGs0dsMGtdz.xxouok

As I mentioned in the video, Sweet verified in my bug thread that the 6-sec cooldown for Flamespear is supposed to be 4 seconds:
http://forums.riftgame.com/showthread.php?145550-Bug-Flamespear-cooldown-says-and-is-6-seconds-not-4

Posted in PVP, RIFT, Video, Warrior

Rift Warrior PVP Video: Volume 7: Riftblade / Paladin @ 38, Nice Try Gankers


Here is my 7th Warrior PVP video, continuing as 1H Riftblade / Paladin:

This short HD video is narrated footage of my level 38 Warrior killing two level 40 Warriors (Manderz and Ditziwt) who *attempted* to gank me.

Here is the 1H Riftblade/Paladin used in the video:
http://rift.zam.com/en/stc.html?t=0cLhg.xGs0dsMGtdz.xrozo

When fighting opponents – especially multiples – keep in mind the following tips:

  1. burn CC cooldowns aggressively. I stunned the 1st Warrior with the Paladin ranged ability Light’s Hammer early and then followed up with a Stonespear for the root. You want to disrupt the timing of your opponents as much as possible
  2. try to keep your opponents in front of you for the block/parry as much as possible, break their LoS, and recognize when to close to melee and when to kite
  3. Rift Strike should be high in your rotation, as the 5% buff to Crit is huge. Also test out your various abilities to see which ones deliver the most damage benefit. As discussed in the video, my Paladin AOE ability Sweeping Strike hits hard enough that it is worth using against a single target over Flamespear or Searing Strike
  4. be mindful of the finishers that your opponents have. I popped my full heal against the 2nd Warrior because of the risk of getting Deathblow’d
  5. if you are in a Contested zone, try to keep 2-3 Attack Points up when traveling through the zone. That way if you get jumped you have some AtPts to work with

If you are looking for my macros, check out the skeleton draft version of the Riftblade Warrior Guide.

If you have questions/comments/feedback, post ’em!

Posted in PVP, RIFT, Video, Warrior

Rift Warrior PVP Video: Volume 6: Riftblade / Paladin @ 35


Here is my 6th Warrior PVP video, continuing as 1H Riftblade / Paladin:

This HD video is narrated footage of my level 35 Warrior in the Whitefall Steppes warfront in the MMORPG Rift. I queued for the warfront with Gaardarun, a 31 Paragon/Champion-spec’d Warrior.

I racked up 28 killing blows (a personal best) as we pulled out a victory in the last 30 seconds when Gaardarun made a clutch cap.

My intent for posting these videos is to provide helpful tips and tactics for other players of the same class / spec. That said, I do have a concern when posting a video like this, especially one where I am on a killing spree, is that they will be used as “proof” that a given class/spec is overpowered.

Before you make claims of imbalance, consider the following:

  1. I *do not* typically score 28 kb’s in a warfront. The norm for me is around 8-15 kb’s per match, depending on the quality and comps of players on both sides.
  2. I more than doubled the kb’s of two 36 Warriors *combined*:
    – Buliwyf 2H 36 Warrior: 3rd damage, 11 kb’s, 5 deaths
    – Nuircala 1H 36 Warrior: 5th damage, 1 kb, 7 deaths, 1 flag return
    – Taugrim 1H 35 Warrior: 1st damage, 28 kb’s, 3 deaths, 1 flag return
    If you remove me from the scoreboard table, there was fairly reasonable balance across DPS classes.
  3. Some of my opponents simply weren’t particularly skilled or geared, which made them easy targets to finish.

Here is the 1H Riftblade/Paladin used in the video:
http://rift.zam.com/en/stc.html?t=0cLhg.xrs0dsMrtzz.xrozo

If you are looking for my macros, check out the skeleton draft version of the Riftblade Warrior Guide.

If you have questions/comments/feedback, post ’em!

Posted in PVP, RIFT, Video, Warrior

Guide to Riftblade Warrior PVP Mechanics


1.4.1 update (2011/09/07): I haven’t had time to update this Guide as we re-rolled to another server and faction, so I leveled a new class (Cleric), but here is the 32 Riftblade / 18 Champion / 16 Paladin spec I recommend if you want an all-around good DPS, good mobility, good survivability spec. For the macros for this spec, see Section 8C. If you have strong pocket healing, replace Pally with another tree and go 2H.

This guide discusses the Riftblade-spec’d Warrior class for PVP in the new MMORPG Rift, Patch 1.2. This guide provides comprehensive written material and narrated PVP videos.

Please post your feedback, tips, and questions!

Revision History

The first version of this Guide was posted on March 20, 2011. Here is the change log for recent revisions:

  • 2011 September 7: added update note at top of Guide
  • 2011 June 8: minor updates to Section 8
  • 2011 May 18: minor updates to 8C macros, runes
  • 2011 May 15: Added new RB/Champ/Pally section 8C
  • 2011 May 13: updated for 1.2. Added new RB/VK/Pally section 8B

Table of Contents

  1. Mechanics Overview
  2. Resource Mechanics
  3. Damage Mechanics
  4. Crowd Control Mechanics
  5. Mitigation, Avoidance, CC-Counter Mechanics
  6. Blade and Avatar Mechanics
  7. Riftblade Tree Recommendations
  8. Spec Combinations
  9. Stats / Runes Recommendations
  10. Myths / Misconceptions
  11. Tips and Tactics
  12. Macro Mechanics
  13. Strafing / Movement / Keybindings
  14. Narrated PVP Videos
  15. Recent / Upcoming Patch Changes
  16. About the Author

1. Mechanics Overview

Riftblade is 1 of the 9 talent trees (“Souls”) for the Warrior class (“Calling”). For this Guide, I am assuming that Riftblade is your primary tree for investing your talent points. Telarapedia has a great writeup on the lore of Riftblade.

Strengths of Riftblade talent tree:

  • Deals non-Physical damage for many abilities, so the Armor of your target isn’t a factor. This helps all targets regardless of Armor class to feel equally squishy – only their Resistances come into play (in particular Fire and Air damage Resistance)
  • Delivers good ranged DPS capability, thanks primarily to the 3 Spear abilities, Fiery Burst, and Rift Surge
  • Provides solid damage mitigation from Avatar of Water (10% reduction, talented)
  • Has excellent mobility and counters to some CC – Riftwalk provides a gap closer and removes mobility-impairing effects and some CC effects (stun, mez, incapacitates)
  • Possesses multiple CC abilities (chain ranged snare, melee AOE snare, ranged root, ranged silence) – it is important to note that this particular strength is less important in 1.2 given the CC immunities

Weaknesses of the Riftblade talent tree:

  • Lacks debuff for healing received or healing output
  • Lacks purge (offensive dispel) capability
  • Doesn’t provide oh-crap emergency buttons for meaningfully boosting survivability
  • For damage abilities that do not have a weapon contribution component, does not scale effectively with weapon or gear

Many Riftblades play their Warrior primarily as a RDPS (Ranged DPS). While there are situations (e.g. mass PVP, outnumbered heavily, etc) that encourage fighting from ranged, if you only engage from range you will

  • Miss out on key Riftblade abilities (e.g. Rift Strike, Frost Strike, Thunder Strike, etc) that are only usable from melee range and whatever melee-oriented abilities/procs/buffs/debuffs you get from your 2nd and 3rd talent trees
  • Be unable to circle-strafe your target to take advantage of LoS

More on that in the Myths / Misconceptions section.

2. Resource Mechanics

We have two resources to manage:

  1. Power
  2. Attack Points (AtPts)

All Warriors use a “Power” mechanic, which is functionally equivalent to a WoW Rogue’s/Feral’s energy bar or WAR’s Action Points. Power starts at full @ 100, depletes as you use abilities, and regenerates at a (mostly) constant rate.

You can instantly regenerate 10 Power via crits with the Planar Blade ability.

All Warriors also share an AtPts mechanic. Some abilities generate 1 AtPt per use, up to 3 AtPts max. You can spend AtPts on various special abilities which consume all AtPts and scale based on the number of AtPts consumed.

Typically you want to build up to 3 AtPts, consume then with a special, then build back up to 3 AtPts again. In some cases, if you know you are close to finishing an opponent or need an effect proc’d (e.g. Earth Burst for the AOE snare) it’s fine to cast a special with 1-2 AtPts.

3. Damage Mechanics

As noted in the Mechanics Overview, a plus for Riftblade is the elemental-based damage for the Riftblade abilities.

Elemental Burst Abilities

All Riftblade AtPts-consuming Burst abilities can be used from range – after being cast they trigger on the next ability use. Here are the key AtPts-consuming Burst abilities

  • Fiery Burst: our bread-and-butter DoT, applyable from range
  • Earth Burst: AOE snare and interrupt for 3 targets. Sometimes worth using at 1 AtPts for the CC effects. Note that the AOE is centered around your target, so the implication is you can snare multiple targets from range
  • Storm Burst: AOE damage for up to 7 targets. The AOE is centered around your target

I find that I use Fiery Burst much more than the other two Burst abilities, primarily because it does good damage and is effective for burning single targets down. Also, when talented Freeze Armor applies a debuff that increases Fire damage taken by 20%, so Fiery Burst ticks for 20% more when the target has Freeze Armor on them.

The Enhanced Burst talent increases Elemental damage by up to 30% for 6 seconds after using a Burst ability, which is very helpful when applying pressure on a target.

Procs

Riftblade delivers a significant portion of its sustained damage from the Elemental Touch proc, which adds a flat amount of damage per ability use. For Fiery Burst, Elemental Touch applies on the 1st tick.

Single-Target Damage

Rift Surge is currently one of the spec-defining burst-damage abilities. It applies a debuff on the target that procs for damage whenever the target uses an ability. The duration of the debuff is fairly long, 15 seconds, so what you can do versus Healers and Mages is apply a 3-AtPts Rift Surge, silence the target with Windspear (or vice versa), continue to DPS to create a heal deficit, then when the target tries to cast spells after the silence wears off they self-inflict damage. Rift Surge has been nerfed in 1.1 – notably the cooldown has been increased to 30 seconds, it’s Cleansable, and it doesn’t scale as well – but it’s still worth a single talent point investment.

In many situations, you will want to apply Rift Surge first, then apply Fiery Burst while Rift Surge is on cooldown. Rift Surge has a “faster” tick rate if you cast it on classes that use instant-cast abilities.

Here’s the priority for Riftblade AtPts generating abilities:

  1. Rift Strike: hits hard, buffs Crit % by 5%, and scales with weapon damage
  2. Frost Strike: hits fairly hard, scales with weapon damage, and applies a debuff that increases the next Thunder Strike or Searing Strike to hit the target
  3. Flamespear or Searing Strike: Flamespear tends to outdamage Searing Strike during the leveling process, except right after a Frost Strike. With the introduction of a 4-sec cooldown to Flamespear in 1.1, you will likely want to put Searing Strike as part of your rotation or in macros ahead of Flamespear. Searing Strike benefits from the Frost Strike debuff as well, so those melee abilities synergize with each other

AOE Capabilities

As discussed above, both Storm Burst and Earth Burst provide AOE capability. Riftblade also has a spammable 3-hitter in Thunder Strike, but it has a high Power cost (25).

The 31-point Riftblade talent Rift Storm is a PBAOE (Point Blank AOE) that damages on up to 10 targets every second for 10 seconds. The ability has a 3-min cooldown and is useful for preventing opposing players who lack a bubble from capping a node or picking up a flag.

4. Crowd Control Mechanics

Riftblade has a lot of excellent CC tools to work with, including:

  • Freeze Armor: ranged snare
  • Stonespear: ranged 3-sec root
  • Windspear: ranged 5-sec silence
  • Earth Burst: AOE snare and interrupt
  • Riftwalk: 2-sec root

Both Spear abilities have a base 30-sec cooldown that can be reduced to 15 seconds with talents. Spears have a travel time, so they will not CC the target until they land.

Fork can be used to increase the number of targets affected by your Spears. The main issue with using Fork is simply the Power cost, as Riftblade is a Power-intensive spec.

I find that I use Earth Burst mainly for the snare effect at 1 AtPts and not for the silence, especially as you can’t see the cast bar for opponents other than your target.

Note for 1.2: with the introduction of the two categories (movement and control) for CC immunity, if you need to limit the movement of your target you should try to apply Freeze Armor first before Riftwalk’ing or Stonespear’ing.

5. Mitigation, Avoidance, CC-Counter Mechanics

With talents, Avatar of Water provides a flat 10% damage mitigation, and I use it 99% of the time in PVP over Avatar of Wind, which mainly provides a 10% speed benefit.

In terms of avoidance (i.e. not getting hit), there are only 2 Riftblade abilities:

  • Stoneshield: causes next opponent attack to miss, 30-sec cooldown. Useful for capping flags
  • Elemental Deflection: increases Parry up to 6%

The most important CC counter and gap closer that Riftblade has is Riftwalk. This awesome ability has multiple functions:

  • Closes gaps to opponents
  • Breaks the following CC effects: roots, stuns, snares, mez’s, and incapacitates. If you get CC’d and the only button which is still lit up for use is Riftwalk, hit it :). Note that you will only be able to Riftwalk to targets that you have LoS on
  • Breaks LoS temporarily (similar to WoW Rogue Shadowstep) by moving us to our target’s back

6. Blade and Avatar Mechanics

TLDR: use Storm Blade until you get Planar Blade, and use Avatar of Wind until you get Avatar of Water. From that point on, stick with Planar Blade and Avatar of Water.

All Riftblades get Storm Blade, which is a very underwhelming blade buff that adds weapon damage as a DoT on Crit.

With 26 points in Riftblade tree, you can obtain the talent ability Planar Blade, which provides 10 Power on Crit and refreshes the cooldown of Riftwalk (and VK Rift Summon). As we are often Power-starved, Planar Blade provides much-needed Power when we are bursting.

With 44 points in Riftblade tree, you get the base ability Blade of Elemental Affinity, which generates 35% of Crit damage as healing. The extent to which it is valuable has to do with how much Crit you have. My main concern with taking this ability is the addition 6-point tree investment needed over the 38 points required to get Rift Strike – those 38 are well-spent but the next 6 seem very lackluster. I’d probably take Improved Fork and Elemental Flux, which would provide a 15% chance for normal non-Crit attacks to proc the 35% heal, but remember that 35% of a non-Crit won’t be a large number. Based on my experience in warfronts, Blade of Elemental Affinity is not worth taking.

With 10 points in Riftblade tree, you get Avatar of Wind, which provides a 10% speed increase and 3% Dodge increase.

With 20 points in Riftblade tree, you get Avatar of Water, which provides 5% damage mitigation (10% talented). This is an excellent all-around mitigation ability in PVP.

With 51 points in Riftblade tree, you get Avatar of the Rift, which provides a 65% increase to the Burst abilities, swaps the overall mitigation of Avatar of Water for Physical-only mitigation, provides a static damage reflect when hit by melee, and provides limited AP scaling. To get Avatar of the Rift, you have to max every talent in the tree, forcing you to take a 2-point PVE thread reduction talent (Elemental Caress) and the underwhelming 5-pointer Static Shock.

7. Riftblade Tree Recommendations

For PVP, if Riftblade is your main tree your minimum points investment is 32, to get the ranged silence Windspear. Here is what a sample 32-point Riftblade looks like:

http://rift.zam.com/en/stc.html?t=0cL__.ehs0bsMMtz

Notice that the 32-point tree:

  • Does not include Surging Energy, because if you do not have Rift Strike, your Crit rate against Clerics/Mages/Warriors with the PVP tree talent Resilient will likely be low single digit % so the proc rate for Surging Energy would be negligible. For the same reason, it’s the a good idea to put some points in Elemental Flux to proc Planar Blade
  • Skips the talent ability Elemental Burst, as it may not be wise to trigger an AOE snare due to the CC immunity mechanic introduced in 1.2

Depending on your other trees, it may be worthwhile to spend 6 more points to get the 38-point ability Rift Strike. For 1.2, is the base 38-point investment I recommend:

http://rift.zam.com/en/stc.html?t=0cL__.gGs0bsMGtd

What’s excellent about the 38-point spec is that there are no craptastic talents that you are forced to take to get there – every talent provides value. There are several optional talents in this spec:

  • Burning Blood: do not take this if you have spec’d 5/5 into Resilient in Vindicator
  • Elemental Burst: provides some nice burst AOE damage and an AOE snare, although in 1.2 this will also trigger CC DR
  • Improved Fork: I personally do not take this talent, because Fork has a high Power cost. But some folks swear by it
  • Improved Riftwalk: while Crits with Planar Blade will refresh the cooldown of Riftwalk, I’ve found having the cooldown reduction to be useful, in case you end combat with Riftwalk on cooldown
  • Rift Storm: I used to spec for this but I find its usage limited by the overly-long 3-min cooldown. Useful for preventing flag pickups by the opposing team

Whatever you do, do not take Elemental Caress (PVE threat reduction) or Static Shock for a PVP spec, they’re a waste of talent points.

There is some debate about going to a 44-point investment in Riftblade to get Blade of Elemental Affinity, which provides self-healing for 35% of the damage when you Crit. The main tradeoffs for getting Blade of Elemental Affinity:

  • You give up Planar Blade, which restores 10 Power on Crit and also refreshes the cooldown on Riftwalk
  • The 6 additional points over the 38-point spec limit your options in going deeper in secondary and tertiary trees

Here’s is the 44-point investment spec I would recommend:

http://rift.zam.com/en/stc.html?t=0cL__.EGszdsMGtdz

There is a lot of debate regarding whether Avatar of the Rift, the 51-point talent, is worth spending 51 points to get for PVP. To get to it, you have to waste 2 talent points in the threat reduction talent Elemental Caress and on the underwhelming 5-point talent Static Shock. In addition, you lose the Spell mitigation from Avatar of Water. Avatar of the Rift does certainly provide excellent burst for Burst abilities (see what I did there?).

Tips

  1. Do not put any points in Elemental Flux until you have Planar Blade or Blade of Elemental Affinity. Elemental Flux is a horrid talent at lower levels, because the damage from Storm Blade is very low, and buffing the proc rate for a low-damage ability doesn’t make sense

8. Spec Combinations

I will build out this section of the Guide over time, as I am able to try different specs.

As of Patch 1.2 and later, please see Section 8C for my current spec.

A. 1H Riftblade / Paladin

As noted in the Mechanics Overview section, Riftblade damage does not really scale much with weapon or gear. Given that, there isn’t much DPS lost when running a 1H, but there is a lot of upside when using a shield as a Pally.

In a nutshell, the Pally tree offsets some of the deficiencies with the Riftblade tree, in particular by boosting survivability and by providing an emergency oh-crap button in Touch of Life. The Riftblade/Pally combo possesses excellent CC capabilities, good damage, and good survivability.

Please note that this is also a very solid spec for PVE questing and rifting (but not instance runs). This is a very solid spec to run from levels 10-49 in warfronts. At level 50, I recommend the Riftblade / Champ / Pally spec documented below in Section 8C.

Consider what you get for your first 17 points in Pally:

  • +10% passive Block (not dispellable)
  • +5% Hit and +5% Block buff
  • +10% passive damage increase (not dispellable)
  • Ranged 3-sec stun (1-min CD)
  • 9% passive spell damage mitigation (not dispellable)
  • 25% passive chance on block to generate an AtPt (not dispellable)
  • A CC breaker, Paladin’s Devotion
  • Aggressive Block, which boosts Block by 10% for 15-sec, so you can chain the buff to keep it up
  • Block reactive ability Retaliation, which is a low-Power cost melee ability that is off the GCD and therefore provides burst
  • Castable HP buff on any friendly player
  • Passive HP self-buff
  • Melee interrupt Face Slam (6-sec CD) which is off the GCD
  • Full self-heal Touch of Life (10-min CD)
  • Ranged ability Shield Throw
  • Melee AOE ability Sweeping Strike which packs very good single-target damage

That is an excellent return on investment, and unlike some trees, many of the Pally abilities (e.g. Retaliation, Face Slam) complement not compete with the Riftblade base abilities for your GCD.

Up through level 40, here is the build I recommend: 38 Riftblade / 15 Pally / 0 VK:

http://rift.zam.com/en/stc.html?t=0cLhg.eGo0dsMGtdz.xrozo

You can move 3 points from Elemental Flux to Boiling Blood, depending on whether you want Power regen or the on-Melee-Crit reflect. VK is an excellent 0-pt 3rd tree, because it offers a 5% spell mitigation self-buff.

At level 41, once you are able to get the Paladin talent Paladin’s Devotion, you can re-invest the points in Steely Resolve in Small Arms Specialization.

There are many 1H different specs that are viable at 50, including the following specs. Please note that there are some minor differences in how the 38 points are allocated – either I recommend 3/5 Elemental Flux or 3/3 Boiling Blood:

  1. 38 Riftblade / 17 Pally / 11 VK: the VK tree provides an 11-pt talent called Spell Sunder, which removes 3 buffs from an opponent. This purge ability has a range of 35m and its cooldown is 15 seconds. In extended fighting against groups, Spell Sunder and Devouring Blow provide tools for debuffing and draining mana-based classes
  2. 38 Riftblade / 21 Pally / 7 Vind: the Vindicator tree provides reduction in chance to be Crit by players by 15%, 2% raid Crit increase when you block a player, a CC breaker, and the Guard ability to redirect damage from friendlies to you. The 21-pt Pally talent ability Reverent Protection is an excellent tool for capping flags and nodes under fire
  3. 38 Riftblade / 20 Pally / 8 Para: the Paragon tree offers Strike Like Iron for the controlled burst, an inexpensive but effective “follow up” attack in Rising Waterfall, 3% Crit self buff, 40 Str self buff, a block/parry reactive, and Predictable Movements to reflect melee attacks
Spammable Single-Target Attack Macro (builds AtPts)
#show Flamespear
suppressmacrofailures
cast Retaliation
cast Disarming Counterblow (remove this line for < 20 points in Pally cast Rift Strike)
cast Aggressive Block
cast Sweeping Strike
cast Frost Strike
cast Searing Strike
cast Discharge (remove this line for < 4 points in VK)
cast Flamespear
cast Shield Throw

I have Sweeping Strike (a Pally melee AOE ability) and Frost Strike ahead of Flamespear, as both abilities deal higher damage. Flamespear is listed after the melee abilities, for situations where I am either at range or none of the previous reactive or cooldown abilities are usable. Note that at range this macro would cast Flamespear, then Shield Throw, then Flamespear. I put Shield Throw at the end as a filler for when Flamespear is on cooldown.

The macro shows Flamespear, so that I can tell when my target is at <= 20m range (contributed by: haimeiw).

Melee AOE Macro (builds AtPts)
#show Sweeping Strike
suppressmacrofailures
cast Sweeping Strike
cast Thunder Strike

Note that I do not include Rift Storm or Earth Burst in this macro, as this is the macro I spam for AOE to build AtPts.

Gap Closer
#show Riftwalk
suppressmacrofailures
cast Riftwalk
cast Shield Charge

Note that I have Riftwalk ahead of Shield Charge, because I have found that Riftwalk is more reliable for closing gaps to opponents on a different vertical level (e.g. up on a rock). Sometimes Shield Charge won’t bring you all the way to your target because you will hit an intervening terrain.

CC Breaker
#show Break Free
suppressmacrofailures
cast Paladin's Devotion
cast Break Free

Note that Paladin’s Devotion is intentionally placed above Break Free. Break Free removes any CC, but it’s also on a 2-min cooldown, so if you have a CC effect that Paladin’s Devotion can remove, you’re better off using Paladint’s Devotion to remove it and save Break Free for when you really need it.

B. 1H Riftblade / Void Knight / Paladin

This is a variation of the 1H Riftblade / Paladin spec, with Void Knight replacing the Paladin tree as the secondary tree. VK has become a much more attractive tree in 1.2 with the changes to VK.

Consider what you get for your first 18 points in Void Knight:

  • A stacking buff that can provide up to +50% Strength
  • Spell Sunder, a powerful purge (offensive dispel) that removes 3 buffs from your target and has a 15-second cooldown
  • A stacking buff that can provide up to +50% Armor
  • +5% spell damage mitigation buff
  • An AtPts-consuming ability (Devouring Blow) that deals damage and drains mana
  • Hard-hitting Air-damage ranged ability Discharge
  • Passive HP buff
  • Air-damage ranged ability Spark
  • PBAOE ability Ragestorm that can hit very hard
  • A ranged mana drain Soul Pillage

Please note that all Warrior interrupts have a shared cooldown, so you can not use Face Slam and then Furious Rage. Same goes with taunts such as Shield Throw and Spark.

In 1.2 here are the specs I recommend:

  1. 32 Riftblade / 18 VK / 16 Pally: you get most of the key Pally abilities and talents including the key CC breaker Paladin’s Devotion and the passive (non-dispellable) 9% Spell damage mitigation. The physical damage mitigation provided by this build is stellar with Ravenous Defense; at 10 Pacts you will easily crack 10k armor. Melee abilities scale well with the stacking Str buff. Ragestorm hits like a truck at 10 Pacts. The main issue with this spec is Power starvation; without Rift Strike’s Crit buff, you will find that Planar Blade does not proc as often

I have experimented with going up to 25-28 points (or more) in VK, here are my comments:

  • Catalyze is an excellent 20-point root ability which provides ranged mana drain capability, and its Power cost is one-third of Soul Pillage (granted Catalyze is an AtPts-consuming ability so there is that resource cost)
  • You can increase Void’s Spell mitigation by an additional 15%. However, if Pally is your 3rd tree you may have to give up the passive 9% Spell mitigation talent Hardened Will, so you are netting a gain of +6% Spell mitigation, and keep in mind Void buff is dispellable
  • Replenish is not worth the investment in PVP – even fully talented, at 6k HP each Pact heals for a meager 18 HP
  • I was excited to try Rift Summon, but given the CC immunity sometimes this ability provides no effect
Spammable Single-Target Attack Macro (builds AtPts)
#show Flamespear
suppressmacrofailures
cast Retaliation
cast Aggressive Block
cast Sweeping Strike
cast Frost Strike
cast Searing Strike
cast Discharge
cast Flamespear
cast Spark

Note that Discharge is listed above Flamespear, as Discharge has a longer cooldown and more importantly hits harder. Spark is used instead of Shield Throw because Spark’s elemental damage type synergizes better with Riftblade.

The macro shows Flamespear, so that I can tell when my target is at <= 20m range (contributed by: haimeiw).

Melee AOE Macro (builds AtPts)
#show Ragestorm
suppressmacrofailures
cast Ragestorm
cast Airburst
cast Judgment
cast Sweeping Strike
cast Thunder Strike
Purge / Drain
#show Spell Sunder
suppressmacrofailures
cast Spell Sunder
cast Devouring Blow

C. 1H Riftblade / Champion / Paladin

Thanks to Vexxen on the Rift Warrior forum for proposing the 38 Riftblade / 17 Champion spec.

As of Patch 1.2, 38 Riftblade / 17 Champion / 11 Paladin spec has proven to be the most effective Riftblade-based spec (1H or 2H) for me in warfronts and in 1v1s against specs with self-healing, based on testing with various specs. Why? Lingering Wounds is the #1 asset that a Warriors brings to PVP at level 50.

While I was skeptical of pairing Champ with any spec that uses 1H or deals non-Physical damage, in actual gameplay 17-point Champion is a solid complement to Riftblade, because it addresses one of the key weaknesses: the lack of a healable debuff.

Given that this is a 1H spec, the point allocation in Champion looks different compared to typical 2H Physical damage builds, but you get a solid return on investment for your first 17 points:

  • +10% damage for AtPt-consuming abilities (“finishers”)
  • +10% Strength – a modest benefit that increases damage from melee attacks (and as a side benefit block % and block amount)
  • Increased Power regen on Crit
  • PBAOE fear bomb ability Battlefield Intimidation
  • In-combat charge ability
  • -50% healing received debuff (Lingering Wounds)
  • A reactive to counter your target’s Dodge/Parry
  • +15% increase to Crit damage (i.e. Crits deal 165% instead of 150% damage)
Spammable Single-Target Attack Macro (builds AtPts)
#show Flamespear
suppressmacrofailures
cast Inescapable Fury
cast Retaliation
cast Rift Strike
cast Aggressive Block
cast Frost Strike
cast Searing Strike
cast Flamespear
cast Shield Throw

I have Frost Strike ahead of Flamespear as it deals higher damage and buffs the next Searing Strike. Flamespear is listed after the melee abilities, for situations where I am either at range or none of the previous reactive or cooldown abilities are usable. Note that at range this macro would cast Flamespear, then Shield Throw, then Flamespear. I put Shield Throw at the end as a filler for when Flamespear is on cooldown.

The macro shows Flamespear, so that I can tell when my target is at <= 20m range (contributed by: haimeiw).

Gap Closer
#show Riftwalk
suppressmacrofailures
cast [ctrl] Riftwalk
cast Bull Rush
cast Riftwalk

Note that I have Bull Rush ahead of Riftwalk, because Riftwalk is the only CC breaker that this spec has. For situations where Bull Rush may not work (e.g. enemy is on a cliff at Codex and I am on the ground, I press Ctrl when hitting this macro to trigger Riftwalk).

9. Stats / Runes Recommendations

Dexterity = Physical Crit = Endurance > Strength > Attack Power

As stated in the Mechanics Overview, relative to other trees, many Riftblade abilities do not scale much with stats (e.g. Str, Attack Power). That is, even if you stack stats, you will see only a very modest increase to the damage of abilities such as Flamespear, Fiery Burst, and Rift Surge. Therefore you should consider stats aside from the pure damage-scaling stats Strength and Attack Power.

Keep in mind that Riftblade has nice mechanics synergy with Dexterity / Physical Crit, because Planar Blade generates 10 Power per Crit and refreshes the cooldown of Riftwalk.

If you are pairing Riftblade with a tank tree, keep in mind that your Endurance will be buffed by the tank tree’s HP passive.

You may have heard that some Riftblades are using Leather armor instead of Plate for the higher Dexterity, which provides Crit. I do not think that makes sense, given that many specs of the 3 non-Mage classes deal Physical damage. YMMV.

Recommended Runes

  • Helm: Strength +10 (Radiant Potent)
  • Shoulders: Dexterity +7/Crit +5 (Radiant Vengeful), Dexterity +10 (Radiant Deft)
  • Chest: Valor +50 (Blazing Valorous), Valor +25 (Radiant Valorous), Dexterity +10 (Radiant Deft), or Endurance +8 (Radiant Resolute)
  • Gloves: Physical Crit +11 (Radiant Steadfast)
  • Legs: Strength +10 (Radiant Potent)
  • Boots: Endurance +8 (Radiant Resolute)
  • 1H Weapon: Physical Crit +16 (Radiant Destructive) or Dexterity +10 (Blazing Dexterity)
  • 2H Weapon: Physical Crit +30 (Radiant Devastating) or Dexterity +19 (Blazing Dexterity)
  • Shield: Endurance +11 (Brilliant Enduring)
  • Ranged: Physical Crit +16 (Radiant Destructive) or Dexterity +10 (Blazing Dexterity)

Recommended Greater Planar Essences

10. Myths / Misconceptions

Riftblade is an RDPS Spec so you should avoid engaging in melee combat

This oft-used argument is very short-sighted. While Riftblade has very good ranged capability, there are many good reasons for engaging in melee combat:

  • You can LoS your target (e.g. circle strafe or run through them), which prevents your target from being able to use abilities on you / finish casting spells
  • You can use melee abilities that offer: high damage, CC, buffs, debuffs, procs, or some combination of the above
  • It prevents your target from using terrain to LoS you
  • You can interrupt multiple people trying to pick up a flag with our spammable melee AOE
  • You can pressure people in their face, which often makes them panic or unable to focus
  • You deal additional damage from auto-attacks (yes I know this is a minor benefit for Riftblade, but every little bit counts)

I don’t play my Riftblade as a RDPS with melee capability; I play my Riftblade as a MDPS with ranged capability. I have found that as I have leveled up and gained potent melee abilities (e.g. Rift Strike), I am further encouraged to engage in melee combat.

11. Tips and Tactics

  1. Make sure when traveling through Contested zones to have 2-3 AtPts at all times. This will give you options in case you engage in World PVP
  2. Because Spear abilities have a travel time, you can cast a Spear and while it is in-flight you can cast Fiery Blast, and when the Spear lands it will proc the Fiery Burst DoT
  3. You want to use Windspear (WS) against Casters/Healers aggressively, because the cooldown with talents is relatively short
  4. Stonespear (SS) is an excellent tool for rooting kiters, gapping melees, stopping flag carriers, etc. Use it to your positional advantage
  5. Even if you can’t close to melee range on a target, stay busy and use Flamespear to build up AtPts – remember AtPts is your fuel for your key DPS abilities
  6. To break a Rogue out of stealth, you can use the 1 Riftblade AOE that does not require a target: Rift Storm
  7. Not specific to Riftblade: buffs are dispelled in the order that you put them up, so apply your weaker buffs first, save the best ones for last (e.g. Planar Blade)

12. Macro Mechanics

Macros in Rift work very differently from what you may be used to from WoW. Here are the key differences:

  • There is no WoW castsequence equivalent in Rift
  • In Rift, you can put as many cast statements in a macro as you want, and Rift will cast the 1st ability that is usable (i.e. not on cooldown, conditions met, etc)

That second point has huge implications and allows you to write a “spam” macro like this:

Reactive Ability A
Reactive Ability B
Cooldown Ability C
Cooldown Ability D
Spammable Ability E

Some people have criticized Rift as being “too easy to macro” but in my opinion that is a simplistic and inaccurate point-of-view. Why? Each spec combination has a plethora of abilities to work with, combining special abilities that consume AtPts would limit control, and you generally want to carefully macro your CC and CC-counter abilities. I personally do not macro CC abilities as I believe they should be on separate keybinds for control. So while you can macro multiple abilities into one macro, you will still need to set up many macros to support all the abilities and still retain control of key cooldown and situational abilities.

Please note that if there are abilities in a macro that you do not yet have, you will see an error message when using the macro. Some folks have simply cut-and-pasted my macros without looking at what they actually do, but in my opinion you should try to understand how they work, then tweak according to your needs.

13. Strafing / Movement / Keybindings

Please see the article that provides a video Guide, screenshots, and descriptive text on how my character control is setup. That is a very complex topic unto itself.

14. Narrated PVP Videos

Below are my narrated PVP videos, in reverse chronological order (most recent first). There are points I make in each video which are timeless.

Taugrim’s Rift Warrior PVP: Volume 11: Riftblade / Paladin / Vindicator @ 50, Rank 3

Taugrim’s Rift Warrior PVP: Volume 10: Riftblade / Paladin / Vindicator @ 50, Rank 1

Taugrim’s Rift PVP: Warrior Volume 8: Riftblade / Paladin @ 42, Patch 1.1. Update

Taugrim’s Rift PVP: Warrior Volume 7: Riftblade / Paladin @ 38, Nice Try Gankers

Taugrim’s Rift PVP: Warrior Volume 6: Riftblade / Paladin @ 35

Taugrim’s Rift PVP: Warrior Volume 5: World PVP @ 29

Taugrim’s Rift PVP: Warrior Volume 4: Riftblade / Paladin @ 27

Taugrim’s Rift PVP: Warrior Volume 3: Riftblade / Paladin @ 24

Taugrim’s Rift PVP: Warrior Volume 2: Riftblade / Paladin @ 21

Taugrim’s Rift PVP: Warrior Volume 1: Riftblade / Paladin @ 15

15. Recent / Upcoming Patch Changes

Trion continues to adjust classes / trees for game balance reasons. Below is a summary of changes (documented and undocumented) for recent patches and their impacts.

Current Live Version: 1.2

My comments for changes are in italics.

Patch 1.1/1.11 Changes (1.11 Notes 4/1Official 1.1 Notes 3/29, Update 3/25 , Alpha Notes 3/23 ):

  • Earth Burst: Now properly interrupts elites and other high level mobs. Bug fix for PVE, no impact to PVP.
  • Avatar of Wind: Fixed a bug causing the tooltip of this ability to report improper values. No impact to PVP.
  • Rift Surge: Can now be removed with abilities that remove Curses. Now has a 30 second cooldown instead of 10 seconds and is adjusted by Attack Power at a slightly lower rate. This is a significant nerf for PVP. I can understand nerfing Rift Surge by either making it a 30-sec cooldown *or* making it Cleanse-able, but making it both have a 30-sec cooldown and Cleanse-able will make Rift Surge largely irrelevant if there is a skilled enemy Healer. Update #1: OK, that being said, I have found that my DPS in PVP has not dropped off as much as I was expecting. After thinking about it, I think the loss in DPS from the pre-1.1 Rift Surge is partially offset by the fact that I am using Fiery Burst instead, and as a Burst ability this procs the Enhanced Burst 30% Elemental damage increase for 6 seconds on our target.
  • Flamespear: Now has a cooldown of 6 seconds and has its damage slightly increased to reflect the longer cooldown. There was an update: Flamespear, Path of the Wind and Path of the Raptor are having their cooldown times reduced from the 6 seconds that they are on Test right now to 4 seconds. We’re satisfied for now that these changes still give Warriors ranged attack options across a few different specs. While this is a nerf, I think the introduction of a 4-sec cooldown to Flamespear seems like a reasonable change. What it means for Riftblades when fighting from range is that we’ll have to work in other ranged abilities (e.g. Spears, etc) while waiting for FS to come off cooldown. Update #1: the Trion employee Sweet acknowledged my thread that Flamespear went live with 6-sec cooldown. Update #2: per 1.11, the cooldown has been fixed to be 4 seconds, and I confirmed it’s working
  • Burning Blood: Now deals damage based on 10-30% of the character’s Strength. Moderate nerf. Having it based on the amount of damage inflicted probably created scaling issues.
  • Improved Freeze Armor: Now only affects Riftblade attacks. Bug fix, it sounds like Improved Freeze Armor was buffing non-Riftblade Fire attacks?

16. About the Author

I’ve written Guides across multiple MMORPGs, including:

  • The stickied Protection Paladin Cataclysm PVP Guide on the WoW Pally forum. During my time in Cataclysm, I was the only Prot Pally rated 2k+ in the 2v2 and 3v3 Arena brackets in my battlegroup
  • Warhammer Swordmaster and Bright Wizard Guides and videos
  • LOTRO Captain and Orc Reaver Guides and videos

I enjoying dialoguing with and helping other players – my hope is that this Guide provides value to you and enables you to improve your gameplay :)

Posted in Guide, PVP, RIFT, Video, Warrior
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