Ordo Maleficus Guide

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At higher levels, witches also get [[Tempestas]] and [[Mons flammas eructans]], which appear to fulfill the role of 'area attack' spells for the witch. Tempestas summons an 'infernal tempest' which is quite cool but unfortunately unpredictable -- sometimes it will unleash the powers of Hell upon everything in the room, and other times it will just sit there. Likewise, mons flammas eructans opens up a rift to Hell and is pretty good at killing everything in a room fairly quickly, but has a wicked cool-down timer, and doesn't appear to attribute its damage to the witch, so you may get no XP by using it. Both spells take a ton of SP to use, and some difficult-to-find blood types. At higher levels, witches also get [[Tempestas]] and [[Mons flammas eructans]], which appear to fulfill the role of 'area attack' spells for the witch. Tempestas summons an 'infernal tempest' which is quite cool but unfortunately unpredictable -- sometimes it will unleash the powers of Hell upon everything in the room, and other times it will just sit there. Likewise, mons flammas eructans opens up a rift to Hell and is pretty good at killing everything in a room fairly quickly, but has a wicked cool-down timer, and doesn't appear to attribute its damage to the witch, so you may get no XP by using it. Both spells take a ton of SP to use, and some difficult-to-find blood types.
-Of course, many witches will want to strike out on their own and go at things solo, which can be somewhat problematic -- witches don't get a whole lot of combat specialty access. In this respect, it can be very useful for a witch to gain a bit of depth through joining an association or two (more details of which are below). A fey-race witch may also have the opportunity to gain an empathic bond and open up some combat specialty access that way. Witches are also able to be fairly stealthy, and both their ability to turn invisible through [[Sub oculos]] and their ability to see in the dark with [[Visus]] (while also using a lantern of darkfire or ioun of twilight) can add quite a lot of survivability.+==Weapons==
 + 
 +Of course, many witches will want to strike out on their own and go at things solo, which can be somewhat problematic -- witches don't get a whole lot of combat specialty access (although they have quite a bit more recently than they have historically). In this respect, it can be very useful for a witch to gain a bit of depth through joining an association or two (more details of which are below). A fey-race witch may also have the opportunity to gain an empathic bond and open up some combat specialty access that way. Witches are also able to be fairly stealthy, and both their ability to turn invisible through [[Sub oculos]] and their ability to see in the dark with [[Visus]] (while also using a lantern of darkfire or ioun of twilight) can add quite a lot of survivability.
 + 
 +Generally speaking, an witch without any associations will have three 'good' weapons choices, and a couple 'decent' ones based on her specialty access.
 + 
 +===Dagger===
 + 
 +Dagger is a fairly obvious choice for a witch, as [[Fabricari]] gives the witch a decent guild item that is no-drop, increases favor, and does an unusual damage type (exsanguination). This can be paired with a shield (since witches get 4 specialty access to shield and have little else to spend strength specs on), or another dagger. One of the perks of choosing dagger is that there are a number of artifact daggers out there, such as Bloodfire, Soulshard, and Cristlun. Even with non-artifact daggers, there are a number of good choices.
 + 
 +===Staff===
 + 
 +Staves are slower than daggers, and tend to be two-handed. A good choice for a witch could be a staff of the elements, since hex reduces a target's resistance to fire. There are also a number of artifact staves that offer decent possibilities for a witch.
 + 
 +===Flail===
 + 
 +Whips. A couple of possible good choices from this section would be a shimmerwhip, a pain lash, or a tentacle rod. Unfortunately, there aren't all that many flail weapons, and whips also have part of their attack rating based on torture skill, but a whip-using (or even pure flail-using) witch also dovetails well with [[Synousia Algesis]], which gives access to a number of good trainers, as well as a number of useful 'gap filler' specialties.
 + 
 +===Bludgeon===
 + 
 +Witches also get 5 specialty access in bludgeon, but there just aren't a whole lot of really good bludgeons out there. Both Shatter and Lightbringer can be nice, but they're artifacts, and not too easily accessible.
 + 
 +===Swords===
 + 
 +Witches get 4 specialty access to swords, which is the lowest of the 'decent' weapons for a witch (other weapon types max out at second-degree specialty). While a sword-wielding witch might sound like a bit of a stretch, there are an absolute ton of swords out there, both artifact and normal. One of the best weapons for a sword-wielding witch (Tarquine's black mithril broadsword) gives +50 to unholy taint, and is itself an unholy item, so it adds to a witch's favor (and thus her ability to cast spells) doubly.

Revision as of 02:40, 29 August 2010

Work in progress -- please feel free to expand

Contents

So You Want to be a Witch?

And why not? Witches are cool. They get to consort with evil powers. They get to wear black all year long (and black is very slimming). They use the blood of innocents in dark rituals that cause mayhem and destruction. Sure, they've sold their souls for power and influence, but it's not like they were using those souls anyhow.

Creating a Character

The first thing you want to think about is what sort of race you would like to be. Witches need a lot of intelligence and charisma to specialize in the skills that give them their powers. Willpower is also fairly important. Of course, the other stats should not necessarily be completely neglected in favor of these three -- sure, you can play a fat, slow, blind invalid witch if you really want to, but you'll probably have a hard time of it. If you need to have a dump stat, consider strength, since witches don't get access to many strength specialties.

Fey Races

Generally speaking, fey races make for pretty decent witches -- they get the fey abilities, which includes the possibility of gaining an empathic bond at some point, and familiars can be fairly useful. Fey races also tend to have high intelligence and charisma, both of which are vital. Powrie gains high marks from at least one PC witch, and who wouldn't want to be a blood-sucking faerie?

Demonic Races

Demonic races are also quite nice for witches, since not only do they work off the theme of being unholy harbingers of doom and destruction, but they get demonic abilities which can come in handy and one of which runs off sanguimancy. Demons also get specialty access to unholy taint, which can be useful for the witch. The one problematic thing about playing a demon is that there is only one demonic race (Oni) open at level 1 if you don't have a legendary hero on your atman somewhere, and you have to vivisect to it. Zenun becomes available at character level 50, and is probably one of the best races for a witch, but you may not be that patient.

Psychic Races

The psychic races can also give a bit of extra firepower through their easy access to wild talents, but at the same time, getting wild talents can be a bit of a crap shoot, and you may go through a couple of characters before getting a set of wild talents you can live with.

Others

Just about anything with enough charisma and intelligence can make a decent witch. Even races that don't excel in those stats can still be reasonable choices, so a Yeti witch may be a fun character, even if it might be a little more work than others.

Considerations Other Than Race

Things like culture and sex are generally less-important. If you don't want a long walk to join the guild, consider a culture with its homeland in Cimbra, since the guild house usually wanders around there. One thing that you will want to be sure of is that your character is evil, but if you couldn't figure out that a witch that uses the blood of innocents in dark arcane rituals is supposed to be evil (eeeeeevul!!), then maybe Ordo Maleficus is not the guild for you. Look, here's a set of keys. Aren't they shiny?

Joining up!

Once you've got a character created, you'll be wanting to join the guild. This generally consists of two things: 1) finding the guild house; and 2) offering it some remains.

The difficulty of finding the guild house varies -- it's a chicken-legged hut that wanders around the general vicinity of Cimbra, so you may want to ask a witch if they could kindly tell you where it is -- members of the Ordo Maleficus are capable, once they reach a certain level of skill, of teleporting directly to the hut. If there's no witch around, then you might just need to wander until you find the hut -- it's pretty conspicuous, but the world is a big place these days.

Once you've found the hut, go kill something. Offer its cold, lifeless remains to the hut. Feel the power of a Dark God flowing into and through you. If you're really hardcore (or just that incapable of killing anything), you can offer your own remains to the hut. It's all good, as long as you're evil.

So Now What?

You've joined. You're a newly-minted witch. Huzzah! You've now got a long list of powers, absolutely none of which you can use yet. You've also been given a pouch and a tablet. The pouch is for collecting blood, and the tablet shows members of the Almerian Inquisition who have killed witches. Your first order of business should be in spending your specialty points in your guild skills. Then you need to train.

Spending Specialty Points

You'll need lots of invocation. You'll also need lots of sanguimancy and nigromancy. Unholy taint is also a very good thing to have, as it increases your favor. Unfortunately, witches don't get a whole hell of a lot in the way of combat specialties, which means you may want to reserve enough specialty points to join an association that will give you more (this will be discussed below).

Get Some Training

A small digression -- fairly recently, Babbi Yagga herself started showing up in her hut as a trainer. Prior to this, the guild's best trainer was Antonina, who wanders around and sometimes turns invisible (both of which are annoying traits for a trainer). At times, the inability to locate Antonina drove witches to the likes of Mok, or Norij, or Helborg, many of whom also wandered or were otherwise difficult to access. Predictably enough, many witches who didn't have enough skill to use a single power died horrible deaths, and many a chuckle was probably had on the developers' chat channel over this. You can still find a list of useful trainers here, but Babbi is probably the only one you really need to use anymore. Now you damn kids get off my lawn.

Blood (For Dummies)

Now, where was I? Oh yes. Train things up, so you can use your powers. You will also need blood, which is a fairly common commodity. For some reason, you can't use your own blood (well, unless you get a limb amputated, in which case you can drain the limb and possibly use your own blood. Not that this is necessarily recommended, but waste not, want not.) So go find (or make) something that's dead, and 'drain remains into pouch'. You've now got some blood of your very own (not necessarily your own blood, of course, unless you went the "cut some limb off and drain it" route), and can start doing magic.

Each of the guild's powers requires a certain rarity of blood. You can evaluate the rarity of a certain type of blood with the evaluate command. If you don't have the rarity of blood (or better) that a power requires, then you can't use the power. Once you get to the point where you can use it, Corrugo capitum allows you to shrink heads so as to provide you with a better way to store blood than just keeping it in your pouch.

For the most part, the more common the blood, the longer it lasts, and your spells will prefer to use the most common type of blood that they can. So, if your blood supply consists of an angel head (very exotic) and some rat's blood in your pouch (very common), and you cast Enervare, the spell will use the rat's blood in your pouch. On the other hand, if you were to cast the more powerful Vastare, the spell would use the angel blood, since you don't have any other unusual or better blood. This is a waste of good blood, and angels are tough to kill. You should try to have a good variety of blood rarities on hand so as to avoid using up all your rare blood when you don't need to.

Blood Management

Unfortunately, there is currently no command to show you what blood types you currently have in your pouch, and no command to tell you whether or not one of your shrunken heads has been used up. So, pay attention -- when blood dries up in your pouch or a head loses its potency, all you get is a one-line notification. If you miss it, tough titties.

You may also want to consider keeping a container on-hand in which to stash your shrunken heads, so that you can make sure that you're using blood in your blood pouch preferentially. With a little practice, you'll be juggling shrunken heads like a pro in no time.

Favor

Favor is important for a witch to have. More favor means your spells are easier to cast, that your powers are more powerful, and that Samael loves you even more. You want to be loved, don't you?

Gaining favor is fairly easy to do once you understand how -- first, raise your unholy taint. More unholy taint means that Samael's got his dark influence all over you, and that you're becoming a better witch. You should also take care to surround yourself with unholy objects, as this will raise your favor (to a certain extent) -- your shrunken heads are unholy. Finally, make yourself an athame with fabricari -- it's a fairly decent weapon which does an unusual type of damage that's difficult to resist, and wielding it will increase your favor. Standing on unholy ground will also give your favor a boost.

Keep yourself away from holy objects, as having anything holy on your person will rapidly tank your favor. Unfortunately, some of the best blood foci -- the Horn of Calais, the Chalice of Cathrys, and the Heart of Tyristael, are all holy objects, and at least one (the horn) is required for one of our spells (Tempestas -- at least until someone figures out where all the unicorns are hiding). So if you use one of these foci, consider keeping it in a container when you don't need it, as that will provide enough separation to keep you from losing favor. Finally, you will not be able to use your powers while standing on holy ground. Which sucks, but you'll quickly figure out where you should be keen to avoid.

Finally, as a last resort, Invocare praesidium will give you tons of favor at the cost of some very exotic blood.

Strategies for Adventuring

The first thing you should do is summon your infernal shroud, since this will both protect you and suck the souls from mortally-wounded opponents (which is pretty damn metal). It will also occasionally grant you life protection, but you shouldn't rely on this at all.

The next thing you'll notice is that witches don't have a whole lot of direct-damage spells, and the spells that they do have don't have a huge amount of punch and cost a lot of SP (and blood). Enervare and Vastare are good to have in a pinch, but shouldn't really be relied upon all that much. Unfortunately, one of the most effective strategies for a witch (and somewhat unusually for a spellcasting guild) is to debuff and fight hand-to-hand.

A witch's main strength lies in the ability to debuff her opponents, and the first and foremost tool in the witch's arsenal for this is Molestia. Pox does a small amount of damage over time and reduces a target's hit points, and Hex lowers their dexterity and some of their resistances (go try casting hex on Eridar in Corna -- watching a phaethon get burned to death by his own armor is pure entertainment.) Tetanus slows the target and stuns them for awhile. Crudelis further messes targets up, and Oculus malum does some direct damage and frequently stuns.

While it may seem somewhat counter-intuitive witches also make pretty decent healers, with Sanitas allowing them to heal most injuries fairly proficiently. Unfortunately, sanitas harms undead, so generally shouldn't be used on any ringwielders or reapers with whom you happen to be grouping.

All of this makes a witch a pretty good groupmate, since their curses can soften up most targets pretty significantly (and hex allows flame-users to do a lot more damage, so try grouping with a flame RW or an OIA for even more happy good times). In a group, a witch can generally get by just tossing hexes around and doing a bit of healing.

At higher levels, witches also get Tempestas and Mons flammas eructans, which appear to fulfill the role of 'area attack' spells for the witch. Tempestas summons an 'infernal tempest' which is quite cool but unfortunately unpredictable -- sometimes it will unleash the powers of Hell upon everything in the room, and other times it will just sit there. Likewise, mons flammas eructans opens up a rift to Hell and is pretty good at killing everything in a room fairly quickly, but has a wicked cool-down timer, and doesn't appear to attribute its damage to the witch, so you may get no XP by using it. Both spells take a ton of SP to use, and some difficult-to-find blood types.

Weapons

Of course, many witches will want to strike out on their own and go at things solo, which can be somewhat problematic -- witches don't get a whole lot of combat specialty access (although they have quite a bit more recently than they have historically). In this respect, it can be very useful for a witch to gain a bit of depth through joining an association or two (more details of which are below). A fey-race witch may also have the opportunity to gain an empathic bond and open up some combat specialty access that way. Witches are also able to be fairly stealthy, and both their ability to turn invisible through Sub oculos and their ability to see in the dark with Visus (while also using a lantern of darkfire or ioun of twilight) can add quite a lot of survivability.

Generally speaking, an witch without any associations will have three 'good' weapons choices, and a couple 'decent' ones based on her specialty access.

Dagger

Dagger is a fairly obvious choice for a witch, as Fabricari gives the witch a decent guild item that is no-drop, increases favor, and does an unusual damage type (exsanguination). This can be paired with a shield (since witches get 4 specialty access to shield and have little else to spend strength specs on), or another dagger. One of the perks of choosing dagger is that there are a number of artifact daggers out there, such as Bloodfire, Soulshard, and Cristlun. Even with non-artifact daggers, there are a number of good choices.

Staff

Staves are slower than daggers, and tend to be two-handed. A good choice for a witch could be a staff of the elements, since hex reduces a target's resistance to fire. There are also a number of artifact staves that offer decent possibilities for a witch.

Flail

Whips. A couple of possible good choices from this section would be a shimmerwhip, a pain lash, or a tentacle rod. Unfortunately, there aren't all that many flail weapons, and whips also have part of their attack rating based on torture skill, but a whip-using (or even pure flail-using) witch also dovetails well with Synousia Algesis, which gives access to a number of good trainers, as well as a number of useful 'gap filler' specialties.

Bludgeon

Witches also get 5 specialty access in bludgeon, but there just aren't a whole lot of really good bludgeons out there. Both Shatter and Lightbringer can be nice, but they're artifacts, and not too easily accessible.

Swords

Witches get 4 specialty access to swords, which is the lowest of the 'decent' weapons for a witch (other weapon types max out at second-degree specialty). While a sword-wielding witch might sound like a bit of a stretch, there are an absolute ton of swords out there, both artifact and normal. One of the best weapons for a sword-wielding witch (Tarquine's black mithril broadsword) gives +50 to unholy taint, and is itself an unholy item, so it adds to a witch's favor (and thus her ability to cast spells) doubly.

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