Difference between revisions of "Combat guide"

From Idlescape Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 77: Line 77:
  
 
'''City Gear Goals''':
 
'''City Gear Goals''':
{|
+
 
 +
===Equipment goal for step one===
 +
Get the at least the following combat equipment as soon as you can afford it. Approximate cost is 30 to 40k. Sometimes the same gear is cheaper in Iron, as low-level gear is often resold at a fraction of the cost price of making it. You will be level 10 in all Combat skills before being able to afford all of this so pieces can be substituted for iron.
 +
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"
 
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/rune_scimitar_icon.png" alt="One_Hand"  width="42">
 
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/rune_scimitar_icon.png" alt="One_Hand"  width="42">
 
!
 
!
 
|-
 
|-
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/Mithril_scimitar_icon.png" alt="Bronze Scimitar" width="42">
+
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/mithril_scimitar_icon.png" alt="Bronze Scimitar" width="42">
 
|Mithril Scimitar
 
|Mithril Scimitar
 
|-
 
|-
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/Mithril_platebody.png" alt="Bronze Platebody" width="42">
+
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/mithril_platebody.png" alt="Bronze Platebody" width="42">
 
|Mithril platebody
 
|Mithril platebody
 
|-
 
|-
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/Mithril_platelegs.png" alt="Bronze platelegs" width="42">
+
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/mithril_platelegs.png" alt="Bronze platelegs" width="42">
 
|Mithril Platelegs
 
|Mithril Platelegs
 
|-
 
|-
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/Mithril_fullhelm_icon.png" alt="Bronze Shield" width="42">
+
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/mithril_fullhelm_icon.png" alt="Bronze Shield" width="42">
 
|Mithril Full helm
 
|Mithril Full helm
 
|-
 
|-
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/Mithril_boots_icon.png" alt="Bronze Boots" width="42">
+
|<img src="https://idlescape.com/images/combat/equipment/mithril_boots_icon.png" alt="Bronze Boots" width="42">
 
|Mithril Boots
 
|Mithril Boots
 
|}
 
|}

Revision as of 16:11, 6 December 2020

This combat guide is written by Mageofpie to help new players who are unsure on how to get started with combat and to provide a smooth path throughout early game combat. This guide is intended for brand new accounts and while you may be able to accelerate your progress through it, it is completely viable for a brand-new account and does NOT require any other skills to be trained and can comfortably have you AFK training at City within 24 hours of account creation.

This version is slightly edited to better fit the wiki format. Original can be found at https://docs.google.com/document/d/1cIUozuMG2ZtAdnzbnr6HpeTrBRQaZmYd_HxM07puMBs/edit.


Part one - Farm & Caves

AFK start

If you want to AFK combat, I recommend starting with mining or foraging and selling the items gathered until you can afford the recommended gear and an inventory worth of some basic healing food. It will drastically reduce the effort required on your part. Alternatively, for an in-between strategy, you can let your player fight at the farm until he runs out of HP, at which point your character will be returned to an “Idle” status. While you wait for your HP to regenerate, you can spend this time mining or foraging.

non-AFK start

Unfortunately, if you are a new player, even the low-level zones deal damage to you. For new accounts, you have an AFK and a not so AFK way of training combat. The non-AFK start requires you to be active for the first hour of gameplay or so, which will drastically speed up combat progress.

This will involve running away from Cows during combat. Most of the damage you will take doing the first region will be from Cows, so my suggestion is to avoid them entirely for the first few levels of combat. There is a run button in the top right corner of the Combat interface, and I recommend you press it whenever you encounter a cow, which can be quite regularly. You may also want to run from Goblins if you encounter too many. As soon as you run click back on Farm for a new encounter.

The most ideal monster to encounter is a chicken, which regularly drops a raw chicken when you kill it. These can be sold on the market, however you can immediately vendor it for 75gp by clicking on it in your inventory and selling it. There is usually cheap “Seared Fish” on the market that you want to buy with this money.  “Seared Fish+3” or “Seared Fish+4” is ideal. Every extra level on the Seared Fish will add 1 to how much HP it heals you for.  Buying these will require that you verify your email address as it is required to use the marketplace.


By selling your chickens for 75gp, you should be able to afford food that will allow you to stay in combat. When you buy food from the marketplace, it will go directly into your inventory. You MUST click on the item in your inventory and choose the “Add to Combat Inventory” option for your character to use it to heal themselves in combat.

By using this strategy, you will only need to gain 1-2 levels in each combat skill before you should build up a supply of food to keep you going through combat. At this point you can start killing cows as they are also the most profitable monster to kill in the zone and you will not have any trouble defeating them. Cows have an uncommon drop of “Milk” that sells quite well on the market. However, be sure to check prices on all your monster drops as prices in Idlescape can be quite volatile.

As you take less and less damage, you should start building up a small gold reserve, which I recommend using to start buying your first pieces of gear, prioritising a Bronze weapon. A scimitar is ideal as it allows you to equip a shield while still attacking fairly fast which is generally considered better for training. Things will start to slow down at this point as with a full inventory of food and stats that are improving fairly quickly, you will find you take little damage at farm with just 1 or 2 pieces of Bronze armour.

When you have gained a few levels and start to take minimal damage in Farm, you can start to slow sell your items on the marketplace as money is no longer of critical importance. When selling to players you will generally get a better deal, however you will have to wait for someone to buy them.

By the end of your first hour, you should be around level 8-9 in your combat stats, and with 1-2 pieces of bronze armour you should find that you take very little damage at all at Farm now. With an inventory of food, you could leave the game for a while and return at your leisure and your character will continue fighting for up to 12 hours or until you run out of food and/or HP.

With this setup you should now also be able to comfortably do combat in the Caves. There are both advantages and disadvantages of doing combat in the caves. With Chicken and Beef prices around 200-300 apiece, farm is consistent money, at around 75k an hour. However, Imps in the caves have a rare drop of a Mind Rune, and caves has a significantly higher encounter rate of Goblins, which drop the ladle variants. Ladles are highly sought after since they help with cooking so they are always quite valuable, however, without hitting either of these drops you will only be making a consistent 35k an hour. While ladles and mind runes are rare, Caves can be worth the investment. Remember to compare prices between areas as the core items from each have frequent price swings. For the sake of consistency with this guide the accounts I have used for testing remained at Farm.

Equipment goal for step one

Get the at least the following combat equipment as soon as you can afford it. Approximate cost is 30 to 40k. Sometimes the same gear is cheaper in Iron, as low-level gear is often resold at a fraction of the cost price of making it. You will be level 10 in all Combat skills before being able to afford all of this so pieces can be substituted for iron.

One_Hand
Bronze Scimitar Bronze Scimitar
Bronze Platebody Bronze platebody
Bronze platelegs Bronze Platelegs
Bronze Shield Bronze Shield
Bronze Boots Bronze Boots

Summary of combat zones

Farm Summary:

Notable Drops:

Raw chicken, Raw Beef, Egg, Milk, Goblin Brain, Ladles (Extremely rare)

Approximate Income: 75k an hour (Potentially more with a very rare ladle drop)


Caves Summary:

Notable Drops:

Burnt Fish, Goblin Brain, Ashes, Tin Ore, Copper Ore, Various Runes, Ladles

Approximate Income: 35k an hour (Potentially significantly more with Mind Runes/Ladles)


Now that you know everything you need for Farm & Caves, it’s time to AFK. We need to get our stats up and make some money for equipment before we can move on to the City. Our goals are listed below.

Part Two – City

City Stats Goals: 30 Attack, Strength & Defence

City Gear Goals:

Equipment goal for step one

Get the at least the following combat equipment as soon as you can afford it. Approximate cost is 30 to 40k. Sometimes the same gear is cheaper in Iron, as low-level gear is often resold at a fraction of the cost price of making it. You will be level 10 in all Combat skills before being able to afford all of this so pieces can be substituted for iron.

One_Hand
Bronze Scimitar Mithril Scimitar
Bronze Platebody Mithril platebody
Bronze platelegs Mithril Platelegs
Bronze Shield Mithril Full helm
Bronze Boots Mithril Boots

Obsidian Shield with Healing 5 Enchant

Approx cost: 800k-2M

First, in most of the slots we are skipping obsidian armour as in most cases Mithril is actually cheaper and as we no longer take damage in Farm/Caves we can afford to wait until 30 Combat stats to upgrade. However, we will be taking an obsidian shield as the one benefit to obsidian gear is that it has 5 slots available for enchants.  In the in-game chat I see many, many people who are unsure why they struggle with City, and the reason is often very simple, they lack a healing enchant. The healing enchant dramatically boosts our health regeneration rate and we want to have 5 healing scrolls on our obsidian shield ASAP, and this will cost MUCH more than the rest of the equipment combined.

In some cases, you can find obsidian shields on the market that already have the Healing 5 enchant for a huge discount rather than buying Healing scrolls and making your own. Because it is by far our biggest expense, I would recommend buying it last. It is likely that we will not have this item by the time we start doing city, however it will be our highest priority to obtain to extend our trips. If you ask in the general chat channel, players are often willing to make scrolls for you at their cost price.

Time to Regen 1HP = 60 / (1 + 0.5 x Healing Enchant)

Level 1 Healing enchant = 40s

Level 2 Healing enchant = 30s

Level 3 Healing enchant = 24s

Level 4 healing enchant = 20s

Level 5 Healing enchant = 17s

It should take approximately 9 hours to reach 30 in your combat stats at Farm, and you should have acquired quite a bit of loot to go with it. An account that camped Farm until 30 combat stats will receive a little over 700 Raw Chicken & Raw Beef, 150 Milk & roughly 300 eggs. Selling these on the market will give you enough money to buy all the necessary Mithril armour, however it will not cover the shield (With Healing). While waiting for them to sell, continue to AFK and gain some more EXP.

It is time to upgrade food a bit at this stage. Seared Fish is still likely your best option, with 14-15 healing fish selling in the range of 300gp each. A full inventory of fish for 8400gp is a tiny cost to be farming City and I would recommend getting a small collection of some food ready in advance. If you are willing to pay a small premium, you can usually find fish that heal 20 health for around 1,000gp.

We should now be entering City with Mithril gear and an Obsidian Shield that has none or some healing. While you are not well enough equipped to AFK the city for long periods of time, City is an incredible source of income in comparison to the previous two areas. Both the Guards and Black Knights that you fight in the area drop significant amounts of gold. Black Knights also have access to a great item drop table. They drop Mithril boots that can be immediately sold for 60,000 and they drop all Obsidian items. Some obsidian items have a chance to transform into very valuable items and are worth a lot of money while some are simply worth immediately selling for GP. Be sure to check the market prices for each obsidian item you receive!

Items to look out for:

Obsidian Helmet: 1.5M+

Obsidian Full Helmet: 2M+

Obsidian Greatsword: 1M+

Gems: Rubies (100-250K), Diamonds (200-300K), Black Opals (4M+, Extremely rare)

(These prices vary however the items are always desirable.)

Depending on your RNG (Number of Black Knight encounters, how spaced apart they are etc) your trip length in this gear will vary. I would expect 75-90 minute trips initially and as you level up and add more healing to your shield this will drastically increase.

You will have to pay some attention to the game at this point, refilling your combat inventory with food every 1-2 hours. If you started with an unaugmented obsidian shield, your goal will be to make enough money to buy the healing scrolls to add to your shield - providing that isn’t cheaper than waiting until you can outright afford a shield that already has Healing 5, if there are some on the market. If you are lucky with the above drops it may only take you a few inventories of food as Black Knights drop Obsidian Items fairly frequently.  

(Note: If there are obsidian shields with healing on the market already and you want to save for them, you can substitute in a Mithril shield until you can afford it to lengthen your trips. While Mithril has slightly better defensive bonuses, it does not have the enchantment slots available which we desperately need.)

This may take a few trips and you might get relatively lucky with item drops, or it may take the better part of a day, but not to fret as we will be in the City for quite a while. Even if you have to buy the scrolls one at a time to add to your shield, that is fine, combining that with stats increasing will start to extend your trips significantly.

With a few Obsidian drops you should be able to afford your shield fairly soon. In test runs I was able to get a shield for 850k off the market with Healing 5 in 7 hours of City, without any of the major Obsidian drops. If you are exceedingly unlucky and also have to craft your own, it could take up to 18 hours. Once you have your Healing shield, it is time to sit back as your trips should be quite long now. If you obtained the shield with stats below 40, trips will last 4 hours or while still using mediocre food.

If you need to go to bed or work and would like the account to run longer & have the money to spend, I highly recommend you invest into a handful of high healing Kebabs on the marketplace. Not only do players produce kebabs that have a 36+ HP Heal, but they also have a side effect of reducing incoming damage by 2 for the next 20 or so hits the monster deals to you. In some cases, this makes the food have an effective healing of 80+. This might seem like a big investment, however alternating your inventory with those and a high HP healing fish will extend your trip allowing for up to 12 hours of AFK time. As your levels quickly rise this will become unnecessary as you will heal just as fast as you are damaged negating the need for food almost entirely at this Combat area.

EXAMPLE: https://gyazo.com/711ed69f76b9da7286017ebfc265d56a

Now that we can AFK here and only need to check the accounts occasionally; we will start making quite a bit of money. There is a general gear progression guide below. Firstly, Rune Scimitar’s that have been enchanted to +5 are quite cheap so we will want to pick one of those up ASAP.

At +5 a Rune Scimitar is no longer able to transform into a highly sought-after weapon and as such you can almost always get one at a significant discount and you should be able to afford one by level 50 Attack.

Next, you want to start acquiring your Rune Armour and Enchants. It will take some time, but that is fine as you want to raise your stats quite a bit for the next combat area. We are looking to gear ourselves with Full Rune Armour, including a shield as the obsidian shield has served us well, but a Rune Shield also has 5 slots available for the Healing Enchant. It does not matter which piece of armour you get as the Enchants we want are applicable to all of them.

The enchantments you want are: Recklessness 5, Critical Strike 5, Reinforcement 5 & Protection 5, in that order. If possible, I highly recommend making the extra money outright and buying pieces of rune armour that have already been augmented to +5 as our next upgrades beyond that are a significant distance away and you can often find Rune+5 armour pieces on the marketplace at reasonable prices. Obtaining each piece and enchant may take a day or two each. This is why you want to upgrade your weapon first and then get a Rune armour piece with Recklessness 5 enchanted on to it and then add Critical Strike to your Scimitar. These are all significant boosts to your DPS, which will in turn increase your income by a noticeable amount. As there is not a significant price difference between Rune and Stygian boots, I recommend skipping directly to Stygian boots and when you can afford to do so, enchant them with Treasure Hunter 6.

These gear goals are a stretch and will take some time however buying gear in between will set you back in the end as this is gear you want to be comfortably AFK farming Lava Maze in and start to explore the Valley of Giants. You will likely be able to transition to lava maze before having all of the enchants if you at least have Reinforcement as it is considered the strongest defensive enchantment. By alternating high healing fish and high healing kebabs I was able to stay for 2-2.5 hours at Lava Maze with only 2 pieces of Rune Armour & Reinforcement Enchant.

This guide will not cover Lava Maze and beyond as the Enchantments you are after do not really ever change from here on out other than a few choices you have.

!) You may want a Rune Battleaxe to farm giants as they are weak to crush. You will also want to swap out Critical Strike on your weapon for Overhealing to extend trips.

2) A King’s Crown has 8 slots and some people like to use Reinforcement 8 to help with survivability when killing Giants. Whether you get a Kalanahmatti or a Moss Maul, you are going to want Overhealing on them. If you have enough defence late-game you can use a Black Knight’s Great Helm at a high-augment to increase your DPS over a King’s Crown. You may also benefit from the Patience Enchantment as the slower the weapon the stronger it becomes. Your Enchants in this case will be: Recklessness, Reinforcement & Patience on your armour.


End of City Stat Goals:

Attack/Strength/Defence 70+


End of City/Lava Maze Gear Goals:

Rune Scimitar +5 (Critical Strike 5)

Rune Full helm +5 (Recklessness 5)

Rune Breastplate +5 (Reinforcement 5)

Rune Plate Leggings +5 (Protection 5)

Rune Shield +5 (Healing 5) (2nd last)

Stygian Boots (Treasure Hunter 6) (Get this last)

Approx Cost: 60-70M


Test Account Time Stamps:

Achieve AFK Farm: 1 Hour

Reach 30/30/30 Combat Stats: 9 Hours

Time in city to afford Obsidian Shield w/Healing 5: 16 Hours 10 Mins

Stats when shield acquired: 37/37/37

First AFK session w/shield & 14 healing food: 3.5 hours

Second AFK alternating Kebabs & Fish: 20 Hours+