The Mercenary Guide Author: Sunbearie & Team |
Version: 1.10 Page 1 |
|
Adapted from the original as written by Darkness on the
DiabloII.Net Single Player Forums (and - in his own words - 'pretty
much everyone else on earth I've been able to pump for
information'). Updated by Sunbearie and Team (many, many,
many people)
Introduction
For three of the character classes, the Barbarian, Sorceress and
Paladin, the only support they're going to see throughout an SP game
is that of a mercenary (a.k.a. moron) who, for reading purposes,
will be referred to as a merc throughout this document. Mercs are
useful little things and since the release of the expansion they
have gone from being the most unused feature of my D2 games, to a
key part of my gaming strategy.
They can also be slightly annoying. Mercs will run off and attack
monsters that your character cannot currently see on screen, which
can bring a whole load of trouble down on your head as well. Playing
with a merc changes the tempo of the game and is something worth
bearing in mind.
Mercenary
Names
First thing you'll notice is that when you go to hire your merc
there are a number of mercs available with different names. Their
various stats and levels will be covered later in the FAQ, but at
this moment you may well be blindsided by a merc with a cool name
such as Azrael or amused to find mercs called Elly, Gaile and Flux.
A complete list of merc names - according to Spirea of The Lurker
Lounge - can
be found here.
The merc names are randomly assigned each time you visit the merc
leader on each trip to town. If you want a particular name for your
merc, say you want an Act 2 offensive merc on Nightmare diff called
Azrael, just keep revisiting town until the merc with the name you
are after appears.
Merc
Stats and Leveling Mercs
When you are being shown mercs to hire, the game lists the merc's
name and type, along with cost, defense & life.
The defense shown is the base defense WITHOUT the dexterity
bonus. Once you have purchased the merc, you will immediately see
that the listed defense is higher than that which was shown. Thanks
to Badf00d for this info.
In the section dealing with each Merc group I have listed the
bonuses to the stats they obtain as they level up. I'd like to thank
Jude for this idea.
You can get all the stats (life, strength, dexterity,
resistances, etc.) per level in the 1.10 Mercenary Stats Excel file
which can be downloaded here,
hosted by RTB, courtesy of ArchDemonHunter.
At each difficulty level (hence referred to as diff.), the mercs
you can hire will be of a higher experience level than those of the
previous diff., however their stats will be lower when compared to a
merc from the previous diff. who has reached the same level of
experience. In short, leveling up your normal diff. merc is better
than hiring a new one at a higher difficulty level.
Note: The actual difference in the physical stats of a normal
diff. merc and nightmare diff. merc isn't tremendous and there are
only a few levels of difference in their skills. To give an example,
at level 80, a normal rogue merc has 1290 life and 199 dexterity
(dexterity). A nightmare rogue merc would have 1256 and 194 dexterity.
In short, it won't make a tremendous difference to your PvM
(player vs. monster) game if you hire a merc in hell diff. Only Act
II nightmare diff mercs are really affected by this. If you wish to
have those particular auras then you are going to have to settle for
slightly lower stats.
The mercs' levels per group and difficulty setting are as
follows:
| |
Normal |
Nightmare
|
Hell
|
| Rogue Scout |
3-7 |
37-40 |
67-71 |
| Desert Warrior |
9-13 |
44-47 |
75-79 |
| Eastern Sorcerer |
15-19 |
49-53 |
79-83 |
| Barbarian |
28-32 |
59-62 |
80-84 |
The levels seem to follow a trend as you progress through the
acts and the difficulty settings. Also note that if you go to an act
before you are at the maximum level of the mercs in that act (level
13 in act 2 normal, level 19 in act 3 normal, etc.), the only
mercenary that you will be able to hire are those that are equal to
your level.
Mercs get the most experience when you are fighting monsters of a
similar level to that of the merc. If you've just hired a new merc
and want to level them to the same level as your character, compare
their level to that of monsters in different parts of the game and
fight in that area. You can find the data here
. With players 8 active, the merc will level up pretty quickly.
Mercs also get more experience for monsters they kill themselves,
rather than the XP they get when your character kills monsters.
Assist your merc by lowering monster HP for and backing off, or
using spells/skills that effect whole groups of monsters to weaken
them and allow your merc to finish them off. Try to pick monsters
that are unlikely to hit your merc hard and often, e.g.. Frenzytaurs
in the Ancients way. These monsters are very likely to take your
merc apart quite quickly. Places like the Arcane Sanctuary, where
your merc can take on monsters without being swamped are ideal.
However the area in question might not have the best experience
for your character and may also have pretty lame item drops. Taking
your merc to Act V of normal or nightmare diff (depending where you
character is in the game) works almost just as well. Alternatively,
running places with many boss packs near a WP such as the temples in
Act III or Shenk/Eldritch in Act V may speed up the leveling
process.
Note that in 1.10, act V is now populated with several nasty
monsters including Oblivion Knights in the Worldstone Keep or
several archer-type monsters in the bloody highlands so it is a lot
harder to keep your mercenary alive. Basically a trade-off between
experience and survivability.
In v.1.09 and 1.10, Mercs do not lose experience when they are
killed in Nightmare and Hell diff. Under 1.08 they did.
Mercs cannot be a higher level than your character and when a
merc reaches the same level as the player character they cease to
gain any experience until the player character levels up again. So
when your character reaches level 99, your merc will remain at level
98 forever as they cannot gain anymore experience.
The required experience for each level is given by the equation:
experience_function(level) = (Exp/Lvl) * (level+1) * level ^ 2
The base experience/level by mercenary type and recruitment
difficulty:
| |
Normal |
Nightmare
|
Hell
|
| Rogue Scout, Fire |
100 |
110 |
120 |
| Rogue Scout, Ice |
105 |
115 |
125 |
| Desert Warrior |
110 |
120 |
130 |
| Eastern Sorcerer, Fire |
110 |
120 |
130 |
| Eastern Sorcerer, Lightning |
110 |
120 |
130 |
| Eastern Sorcerer, Cold |
120 |
130 |
140 |
| Barbarian |
120 |
130 |
140 |
In essence, Barbarians are the hardest to level as they have the
highest EXP required to level, also, the mercs you pick up from
later difficulties have larger level requirements. So, not only do
the normal difficulty mercs have higher skills than their
counterparts at high levels, but they have lower experience
requirements to level too. Again thanks to Badf00d for this
information.
Mercenary
Equipment
With the additional elites uniques and rune words from 1.10, a
list and comparison of great items to use on your merc would
probably be longer than this guide itself. If you're not a keen
MF-er of have not been playing the game long, then you're not likely
to have a huge list of unique, rare and set equipment, and with the
rarity of higher runes, rune words. You don't really need the godly
items, to be honest, and a merc can be perfectly viable with items
that you can buy from shops, take from monster corpses or from
crafting/gambling. Whenever possible, I would try to list an example
of an equipment that is often used for the modifications described (e.g..
Shaftstop for physical damage resistance). It is merely an example
and obviously in many situations, might not be the best item for
your merc.
The most important mod to have on your merc equipment is Life
Steal. While other mods (extra resists, faster attack, enhanced
damage, damage reduction) are important, life steal and (to a lesser
extent) life replenish will stop your merc requiring a rejuvenation
every 5 minutes. As they cannot heal themselves using potions (and
their life regen often isn't fast enough to survive heavy combat),
the life steal will help a melee merc keep tanking for far longer.
As a merc grows in experience and does more damage, the life steal
will keep a merc near max health during most fights. The Barbarian
is a minor exception to this rule in that as long as he isn't
poisoned he will fully regenerate his life in 12.7 seconds compared
to the others mercs who take 47 seconds to fully heal. A
"cheap" source of equipment would be blood crafted
helms/armours which come with in-built life leech although it
wouldn't be very hard to find better equipment.
Life Leech is completely useless for Act III mercs though, as
they hardly ever use their swords to hit anything. As a result life
leech is not a practical mod to have on their equipment. Give them a
caster type weapon (e.g.. Culwen's Point, unique War Sword) instead
or a 6-socketed sword having jewels with useful mods (+life/res), or
if you're the richer type, Rainbow Facet jewels. Items with -% to
elemental resistance would be excellent.
The "brother" mod of Life Leech is "Increased
Attack Speed". Outside of life steal on weapons, try to give
your mercs the fastest attack weapons you can that won't sacrifice
their damage too much. As there are few equipment slots on a merc to
store IAS items (and no inventory for charms), you need to focus on
the speed of the weapon. A slow attacking merc is really, really
slow and very vulnerable to monster attacks. They will not get the
most benefit from their life steal as the monsters will get more
hits in on them, than they will on the monsters. If you have spare
IAS jewels, Shael runes and a socketing quest, it can be just as
worthwhile increasing the speed of your mercs weapon via socketing
as it would your own. You can check the amount of IAS required off
the mercenary section on Dii.net here
Crushing blow and open wounds have changed dramatically in 1.10,
especially crushing blow, which is now one of the ultimate boss
killers. Whenever possible, try to have such mods on your melee merc
as well.
Mana leech is completely useless to mercs, even the magic using
ones. Don't bother with mana leech when choosing equipment for your
merc because they do not have a mana pool.
Because mercs naturally get quite high resistances, resist gear
is not as useful to a very high level merc and it can be worthwhile
equipping them with damage reducing gear instead. Shaftstop (and the
Leviathan Kraken Shell) obviously comes to mind here.
Naturally any spare uniques you have lying around that could be
used by your merc are probably best placed on your merc. If you've
got it, use it!!! There is no point in equipping a merc with magical
gear from Larzuk when you have spare Shaftstops and Vampire Gazes on
a mule somewhere. Stick them on your merc and you'll instantly
notice an improvement in their longevity.
The same applies to rune words/rares and any cruel weapons that
might be appropriate. If the Cruel Colossus Blade you just made
doesn't have the 40% IAS and 300% ED that you were hoping for,
socket it with an Amn rune and give it your barb merc (or your low
300% Breath of the Dying Colossus Blade :rolleyes: ).
Slow target items for mercs are excellent, nearly as good as
damage reduction items. A slowed creature can hit the merc less
frequently and is therefore easier for the merc to fight. This mod
can be very useful against the Frenzytaurs of Act 5 as well as all
the act bosses. Mercs can also make use of faster run/walk items
which can provide your merc with much greater mobility, allowing
them to get into and out of trouble faster.
Mercs also make a good home for any Ethereal unique items that
you have, since ethereal items do not lose durability when equipped
on a merc.
Merc also get the benefits of the partial bonuses of Set Items as
well. Sadly, most set items consist of too many parts un-equippable
by the merc for them to get the full set bonuses.
In short, treat equipping a merc like you would your character.
Try and give them the best gear you can spare. More equipment
details may be found in the sections pertaining to the specific
merc.
Also, chance to cast (CTC) items, especially curses or static
field, are extremely useful to put on your mercenary. Items that
come to mind are Crescent Moon, Delirium, and the Reaper's Toll. The
Viperfork is also useful if you're in an undead-infested area and
want to get rid of all the corpses before they get reanimated.
Stacking
Auras
Items that come with auras were introduced in 1.10 and in some
cases, render the Act II merc redundant.. Here is a list of possible
auras that can be found on items used on mercs.
Holy Freeze: found on 'Doom' rune word for pole arms (Act
II mercs only)
Holy Fire: found on 'Hand of Justice' rune word for all
weapons.
Thorns: found on 'Bramble' rune word for armours.
Sanctuary: found on Azurewrath, unique phase blade. (act
III/VI mercs only)
Plus
to Skills Items & Mercenaries
What + to skills items do mercs benefit from? is a commonly asked
question. Furthermore what is the effect of the bonus skills when
the item is equipped?
For all mercs, only the mod "+X to all skills" will
work by raising their existing skill level by the equivalent of X
entire levels of the equivalent player characters skill. While merc
skills do improve with each level, it isn't in the same way as that
of player characters, so + to skills can really benefit mercs. E.g..
the Iron Wolves magical skills are capped at lvl 18 so + to skills
here can lead to a significant improvement.
Previously in 1.09, mercs benefited from +skills of the
individual trees (e.g.. An Act III cold merc would benefit from +3
Amazon Spear & Javelin skills). Sadly, this feature has been
removed in 1.10.
In 1.09, Rogues benefit the most with a huge array of skills
available and these have been comprehensively
listed on Diabloii. Unfortunately, this feature is also disabled
in 1.10
In short, for 1.10, the general rule is only "+ to all
skills" would have an effect on the merc skills. The sole
exception would be the barb merc. Wearing a helm with +skills to
Bash/Stun would work as the barb uses such skills in combat.
Mercenaries
and Magic Find Equipment
When a merc is wearing MF gear, the value of that MF is added to
the value of the MF your character is equipped with, but only when
the merc makes a kill.
Example:
Merc as 100% MF
Character has 300% MF.
Whenever the merc kills something his MF is treated as being
400%. This does not apply in reverse however and a Mercs MF does not
add to characters. So if you're out MFing with your merc, make sure
he/she gets the last hit in on whatever Boss or Unique you're
attempting to MF from. Practically speaking though, with the high HP
of 1.10 Hell Act bosses on players 8, you should consider whether
the time taken for the merc to kill the boss could be used on
another MF run!
Apparently % increase gold drop now works then same way as %
magic find. It only applies when the merc kills something.
Note: in 1.09, any +% gold find equip that a merc is carrying
apparently does add to any increased % gold drop that the player
character is carrying. If you're into gambling in a big way, load
down you merc with extra gold items.
Merc
Healing
Use rejuvenation potions wherever possible to heal your merc. As
per your character, regular potions take time to effect a merc and
if you're healing them in the heat of battle, odds are a regular
potion will not stop them from being killed. Use the Horadric cube
to create rejuvenation potions via the following recipes:
3 Health Potions + 3 Mana Potions + 1 chipped gem ==> 1
Partial Rejuvenation Potion
3 Partial Rejuvenation Potions ==> 1 Full Rejuvenation Potion
3 Health Potions + 3 Mana Potions + 1 Gem (normal)==> 1 Full
Rejuvenation Potion
Also, when healing your merc, hold down "shift" and
right click on a potion in your belt rather than dragging the potion
over to your merc. The first method is quicker and removes all the
fumbling that can occur when you're trying to get an antidote potion
to them in a hurry. Alternatively hold down shift and hitting 1, 2,
3 ,4 (for your belt slot) to heal your merc. This is even quicker
and requires no mouse movement!
Incidentally, the duration of thawing and antidote potions now stack. Hence
feeding your merc several of such potions before any killing session
basically gives you a merc highly resistant to poison and cold. This
is especially useful in the undead-heavy areas like Act II where the
merc just can't seem to stop themselves from walking through poison
clouds.
Merc
Resurrection
If your merc dies you can visit the leaders of the merc groups in
each act and pay a sum of money for your merc to be resurrected. In
act 4, Tyrael performs this roll. The cost of resurrection increases
as your merc levels off, but peaks at the princely sum of 50,000
gold when your merc reaches around level 80. You can revive your
merc at any time, even if you start a new game in a different
difficulty setting.
To date there is only one instance where a merc cannot be revived
and it only occurs in version 1.07/1.08 of Diablo 2/LOD. The Corpse
Spitters in Act 4 will devour your mercs corpse rendering them
unressurectable. If you are playing version 1.07/1.08 and your merc
dies in act 4 either a) get back to town ASAP a resurrect them or b)
kill all the corpse spitters in the vicinity. If you don't you will
lose your merc and all the gear that is on them.
Mercs
Versus Bosses
In 1.10 now, if you're facing an act boss for the first time,
then odds are your Merc is going to get killed in fairly short order
thanks to the x2 damage done by the bosses, including normal boss
monsters (such as Griswold). In addition, the 1.10 patch reduced the
amount of damage mercs could do to bosses. Mercs now do - 50% damage
against bosses in normal, 35% in nightmare (40% in 1.09), and 25% in
hell difficulties.
While its down to the individual whether they want to use up an
entire belt of rejuvenation potions keeping their merc going, I
would suggest its not worth the bother especially if your character
can manage to fight on alone. After all, if you've used them all up
on your merc, what're you going to drink? Then there's the resurrection
costs. Do you really want to throw thousands of GP away to keep your
merc up through a fight?
However, if you are one of those magic finders, then there are
several combinations to be used against the act bosses. For example,
hitting hell difficulty Baal with a Kelpie Snare (slow) will make
sure that he doesn't make any powerful attacks. And if you are
capable of dispatching the other four act bosses quickly enough
(sorceresses with static field and a strong elemental attack), then
that spear will be all you need in order to keep a mercenary alive.
Furthermore, the decrepify curse from the Reaper's Toll will make
act bosses attack at half the speed with half the damage, hence
quadrupling your mercenary's survival rate. Add in a Shaftstop and a
vampire gaze (or crown of ages if you have one), and your mercenary
will probably be able to last up to a whole minute. If you're a
melee-based character, stepping closer seems to attract the boss's
attention and focus his/her attack on your character instead,
leaving the mercenary in one piece.
It's not as cut and dried as that, the ranged attack Mercs (Acts
I & III) can survive a boss fight if you position yourself
careful and keep the act bosses attention. This leaves the Merc free
to throw ranged attacks at the boss until they are dead.
Mercs can be useful against an act boss though as they can buy
precious seconds worth of distraction before they die, allowing you
to get the first few hits in on the boss and develop a bit of
momentum. Against the Ancients they can help distract one or two of
them and allow you to lead the third away to a corner for a private
pummeling. When you enter Tal Rasha's chamber in Act II, Duriel will
invariably charge at your merc rather than you, thus you avoid the
hideous amount of damage that the initial charge attack can do to
you (note that in 1.10, Duriel no longer has his nasty charge
attack). If you're lucky, the merc might even still be alive and
forcing a quick Full Rejuvenation potion down his/her throat will
give you an added source of damage in the fight.
Here's a list of boss monsters in 1.10:
Blood Raven Griswold
Andy Radament
Summoner Duriel
Mephisto Izual
Diablo Nihlathak
Defilers Baal
Baal clone Diablo Clone
Boss Fight
Tips
A basic rule of thumb I've noticed in boss fights is that the
boss monster will go for the nearest character. If you want to keep
your merc alive this is worth bearing in mind, though this can be
quite an easy decision if you are playing a melee character and have
hired an Act 1 or Act3 merc. An interesting point is that when the
Boss focuses an attack on you, if you run away before the attack is
executed, the Boss would often pursue your char, completely ignoring
your mercenary. If that happens, you would need to tank the Boss
while it completes its attack, then run away before it begins the
next one.
Melee Character + Ranged Merc
In this instance, where the player character is melee and the
merc is ranged, simply go toe to toe with your boss monster and this
should keep your merc out of harms way. The only stumbling blocks
for this strategy are Diablo, the ancients and Baal. Diablo is a big
hurty thing and its not always advisable to go to toe to toe with
him, especially on Hell diff, some running around is usually called
for and a stray Pink Lightning Bolt from him, or his fire attacks,
will waste your merc in next to no time.
With the Ancients, there are three of them. One of them will
usually find the time to attack your merc, which is usually a pretty
short conflict, especially on Hell diff. This is especially true if
Korlic, the leaper, decides to leap attack your merc.
The problem with Baal is his tentacles. Whilst they don't hurt
the player character much, they can surround and wear down a merc
very quickly (thanks to the extra damage). As the tentacles attack
when you character and merc are a distance away from Baal, ranged
mercs will often fall victim to them.
Melee Character + Melee Merc
Where both the character and merc are melee based I've noticed
that the boss concentrates on the character that hits hardest. Not
the most often, but the character that does the most damage in a
single attack. If this is the character then the boss will focus its
efforts on you, if its your merc the same rule applies.
Invariably the player character is better suited to surviving a
boss encounter at melee range and if the primary reason for having a
merc is to take advantage of their aura effects it can be worth your
while substituting their current weapon for something that does
slightly less damage then your character does. Thus the boss will
focus on you.
This strategy is pretty sound against all the boss monsters
(especially Duriel if you have a fat purple handy to help them
survive the initial charge) except for Diablo as his big hurty fire
attacks are something that you don't want to experience at close
range (especially on Hell diff), and the Ancients, because there are
three of them. At least at melee range against the ancients, Korlic
is unlikely to use his leap attack which does reduce a potential
source of huge damage from these monsters.
Ranged Character + Melee Merc
Without insufficient support, often the merc simply charges into
the fray and invariably dies. It does depend on the boss monster in
question and a melee merc will have an easier time surviving
Andariel and Duriel at close range than they will against Mephisto
or Diablo. Mephisto's melee attack is just too powerful for mercs to
stand up to very long and Diablo's attacks (especially fire and
lightning) are lethal.
In the case of the Ancients, it is highly likely that your merc
will be mobbed by them in the opening seconds of the fight while
your character is going to range.
Ranged Character + Ranged Merc
The rule of the closet character applies here if the monster is
going to melee attack you. If both characters are equidistant, then
I guess the rule of most damaging applies. However, if you're not
too concerned about your merc surviving the fight, tool 'em up to
them max, send them into the fray and get ready to resurrect them
after the fight is over.
Something to note is that ranged mercs tend to move away from
monsters if they are too close. A tricky but possible way to keep
your range merc (and yourself) alive would be to constantly run
between the boss and your merc constantly shooting away.
Melee Mercs Versus Lightning Enchanted
Monsters (from Drandimere)
Two characteristics of LE monsters are that the more they get
hit, the more sparks they generate. The type of damage you are
inflicting also makes a difference - cold damage generates more
sparks than fire. At times the damage you are dealing out may kick
up so many sparks that your merc can't life leech it back fast
enough (at low and mid levels), especially if you are dealing
elemental damage. Therefore, it may help prolong the life of your
merc if you back off for a moment and just let the merc take care of
the LE while you handle its buddies. Yes, he is still causing sparks
to fly from his weapon, but he is also leeching it back with each
hit and thus doesn't die.
In addition to this, I have also noticed that if your merc is
equipped with an item which freezes the target then Lightning
Enchanted monsters tend not to throw out less lightning bolts. In
act 2 I have noticed this to be especially pronounced on the
Scarabs.
The
Mercenary Groups
Act 1 Merc: The Rogues of the
Sisterhood of the Sightless Eye
Hire from: Kashya upon reaching clvl 8 or receive as a
quest reward after Blood Raven is defeated.
Can equip: Bows (with unlimited arrows), except crossbows
Level up: +1 Strength, +2 Dexterity, +6.5 Defense, +1.5
Resistances, +8 Life
These feisty lovelies become available once you've defeated Blood
Raven and can be very helpful. They are restricted to using bows,
but require no arrows in order to fire them.
Fire vs. Cold
With ranged attacks, the Rogue makes good back up for a melee
character freezing the incoming monsters, or thinning out the herd
to ease the pressure on a Necro's minions, while at the same time
staying out of trouble herself. Her inner sight ability allows the
merc to start picking off monsters off screen which can be useful,
but can also bring a Unique and his minions down on you when you
least expect it. However with a decent bow (good damage + high
speed) you could probably leave your Rouge to cut those monsters
down by herself. This has the added bonus of thinning out packs of
monsters that you might run into later. Inner Sight also has the
ability to reduce a monster's defense by a fixed amount, hence being
of some use to melee characters.
The key disadvantage of the Rogue is her low strength. She won't
be wearing high def armour anytime real soon and if she is attacked,
is likely to be hit and downed quite quickly as she doesn't have a
great deal of health either.
Another big disadvantage is the AI for the Rogue. The way they
move to target monsters often involves her being a distance away
from the player, where she is a) unprotected and b) likely to
attract more monsters to her position. This happens a lot and if the
rogue does get surrounded she will be cut down in short order if she
can't shoot her way free and your character is engaged in melee
elsewhere. In such an instance a melee character will have to break
off from the monster they are fighting to assist the Rogue. Ranged
characters have an easier time by simply diverting their fire in the
mercs direction for a few seconds, thinning the herd and allowing
the Rogue to give them covering fire in return.
Also Rogues, having targeted a monster, they tend not to move
until they have killed it, which means that if they are about to be
surrounded the usual trick of running the player character about to
get her to move won't work until she's picked off her foe. You have
to run a long way to get her to move.
Finally Rogues have a bias for elemental attacks. Which means in
Hell, she's good against PIs, but there will be large groups of
monsters which she can't kill thus hampering her effectiveness. In
addition to this elemental attacks will effect her ability to life
leech thus making her less self sustaining in some instances. This
also applies to any bow that fires magical or explosive arrows
(which currently only do fire damage in 1.09) and equipping a merc
with such a weapon will also effect her leeching.
When you first get the rogue merc she will be heavily biased
towards using her regular attack over her fire or cold arrow attack.
As she levels she will use the cold or fire attack more often, until
at level 25 she gets the following probabilities of using her
various skills:
75 in 154 chance to use her regular
10 in 154 chance to cast inner sight
69 in 154 chance to use her mercenary type specific fire or cold
arrow attack.
Essentially a 50/50 split between using normal arrows and
invoking her cold / fire arrow attack with a smallish chance to cast
inner sight. Obviously, if you have equipped any + to all or + to Amazon
skills items she will alternate between the special skill and her
normal cold/fire arrow skill. (1.09 and before).
A number of unique bows spawn with mods like "fires
explosive arrows" (e.g.. Kuko) or fires "magic
arrows" (e.g.. Witchwild String). This would count as the
rogue's normal attack (no explosive damage is done) and would not
activate during the fire/cold arrow attack.
Note: for 1.09 and before, if you have given your merc any
+skills items you will prevent the bow from firing the stated arrows
as the merc will never be using the bows regular attack.
In choosing equipment, consider getting mods such as knock back
and chance to cast monster flee (Rattlecage). These would noticeably
improve her survivability.
Side note: the cold arrows seem to have a shorter range than the
fire arrows.
Act II Mercs: Desert Warriors
Hire from: Greiz
Can equip: Spears and Pole arms (and Javelins, but with no
throwing ability)
Level up: +1.5 Strength, +1.5 Dexterity, +9.5 Defense, +1.5
Resistances, +10 Life
These guys are possibly the most used Mercs in the game thanks to
their auras.
The Merc's aura is dependant on the difficulty you get them from.
The Merc auras all have level restrictions with the exception of the
Might Merc aura. The formula for calculating the level of an aura
is:
10/32 of a level per level of the hirling (hlvl). So a level 98
might merc aura would be 10/32*98 = level 30 might aura.
The level caps for the aura's are dependant on the difficulty
from which you hire them and can be seen below:
Normal Difficulty
Combat Prayer (hlvl 9 = alvl 3, max. alvl = 18)
Defensive Defiance (hlvl 9 = alvl 3, max. alvl = 18)
Offensive Blessed Aim (hlvl 9 = alvl 3, max. alvl = 18)
Nightmare Difficulty
Combat Thorns (hlvl 31 = alvl 9, max. alvl = 17)
Defensive Holy Freeze (hlvl 31 = alvl 9, max. alvl = 17)
Offensive Might (hlvl 31 = alvl 8, There is no cap on Might level )
Hell Difficulty
Combat Prayer (hlvl 55 = alvl 18, max. alvl = 16)*
Defensive Defiance (hlvl 55 = alvl 18, max. alvl = 16)*
Offensive Blessed Aim (hlvl 55 = alvl 18, max. alvl = 15)*
The figures for hell diff show that where the same merc hired
from normal diff, they would have an aura level (alvl) of 18 when
they reached hlvl 55 but the max aura a Hell diff merc can have is
16. Hence if you want a higher lvl aura, hire a merc from a lower
difficulty.
Normal
& Hell Mercenary Skills
Offensive - Blessed Aim
Not the most popular aura for many characters, as most of the
melee characters have sufficient skills to raise their AR and the
Sorceress doesn't really need much AR as she hits with her magical
attacks. However for variant builds such as the Melee Sorc, Ranger
(bow/crossbow Paladin) and Meleemancer (melee Necro) where AR is of
critical importance, the blessed aim merc can be very useful. This
merc can also be very helpful to Werebears who also suffer from AR
problems. With the introduction of several new uniques items which
grant AR (eh. Charges of enchant, zeal etc) in 1.10 though, the
actual usefulness of such mercs has been somewhat diminished.
Defensive - Defiance
A high level Merc with this aura, and good equip, is very hard to
hit, even in Hell diff. So a character who has hired such a merc is
equally difficult to hit. The advantages of this are straightforward
to any character, you'll get hit less often, therefore be less
likely to die. This aura has a pronounced effect on the longevity of
a Necro's minions, even when the Merc is of a low level. This aura
is often a "must-have" for characters aiming to have a
huge defence stat i.e. Ironman barbarians or for hardcore players.
Just bear in mind that several of the monsters in 1.10 now have
attacks that completely ignore defense.
Combat - Prayer
The life regeneration that this aura provides is probably only of
use to most characters as a way to ignore the effects of poison or
of life draining items (Malice rune word for example). However to
characters with life steal and high resists, this aura is going to
prove to be of little use, and if the merc himself has a life
stealing weapon, then the aura won't be of too much use to him. It
is probably best used for characters with no form of life leech (i.e.
casters). Still, it is probably better to just drink a potion.
This aura is of some limited use to the Necromancer and his
minions as the continual life replenish will help keep them alive
for much longer. In 1.10, the minions actually heal by themselves.
In 1.09, Necro minions can only be healed via wells or a priest in
town.
Act
2 Nightmare Mercenary Skills
Offensive - Might
A very popular aura for almost any character, as additional
damage is always useful. The Merc himself will be doing a godly
amount of damage at higher levels and quite happily tank for himself
and for those who think that "the best defense is a good
offense" this is the way to go.
This aura is probably of least use to a Sorceress as it does not
add any benefit to her magical attacks, but should she run low of
mana and be caught in a corner with only a melee weapon then, this
aura will give her a chance of fighting her way free.
The effect of this aura on a Necro's minions can create a virtual
wall of death to descend upon the ranks of Diablo minions. A few
revived Frenzytaurs or raised skeletal warriors with a might aura on
them can easily sway the tide of battle in the favour of the
Necromancer.
A point to note is that even if you have a might merc whose lvl
is sufficient to provide 100% extra damage this won't automatically
double the damage of your character. The formula below from
Nikodemous from the Paladin forum explains how your might mercs aura
factors into your damage.
Lets say your weapon does 100 points of average damage. (that
being the average of the minimum and maximum shown directly on the
weapon). You have +100% damage from WW
200 strength = +200% damage
and the might merc has lvl 7 might, which gives (40+6*10) 100%
bonus.
Total damage is:
(100 * (100 [base] + 200 [strength] + 100 [ww] + 100
[might]))/100 = 500 average damage
All elemental damage is added to the total, with no % bonuses on
top.
Combat - Thorns
The essential problem with Thorns is that you have to be hit for
it to take effect, though admittedly the effect at high levels can
kill many normal monsters outright. In 1.10, with the high ratio of
monster HP as compared to the damage they do, thorns is more or less
reduced to a novelty aura. It is nice to have around but not
entirely useful.
The Necromancer Overlord is the character build that can make
best use of this aura. With many minions running around the map all
effected by thorns and with the possibility of an Amp Damage curse
as well, this can create havoc for boss monsters that use physical
attacks i.e. Hephasto the Armourer, Duriel and the Ancients. By
wading through the thorns-aura'd minions to get to the player
character, these boss monsters will take an awful lot of damage.
Defensive - Holy Freeze
Another very useful for aura for any player character, more so
for the slowing effect on monsters than any damage done. The only
other choice besides defiance for hardcore player, this aura, at
high levels, will bring many enemies to a near stop. Demon Imps stop
teleporting all of the place, flayers slow right down and
explody-headed Slayers are easily avoided. For characters using
thrown weapons, bows or magic, the slowed monsters make ideal
targets.
The Necromancer Overlord (or a Corpse Explosion Necro) is the
class most disadvantaged by this aura, as the increased number of
bodies that shatter upon death greatly reduces the Necro's potential
revive, summon or corpse explosion fodder.
On Hell diff, cold immune monsters will still be slowed by this
aura.
Important Note on Holy Freeze:
It seems that not all monsters are affected by this aura. Blood
Lords, Moon Lords and Death Lords of act 5 seem resistant to its
slowing effects. The Frenzytaurs are immune to freezing. So do not
rely on your merc to slow these monsters down. Also its good to take
into account the relatively small range of holy freeze e.g.. archers
shooting at you from the edge of the screen is unlikely to be
affected.
Act
2 Merc Aura Activation
Act 2 Merc aura's do not automatically activate when you hire
them, or do they become active when you leave town. The Desert
Warrior requires a little stimulus to use his aura and this means
getting him involved in the action.
Basically, the Act II merc will only activate his aura when he
has to pick an attack. The chance of activating his aura decreases
every level up, to around 2.5% at lvl90+. So if your character kills
everything before the merc gets a look in, the aura won't activate.
It can be a little more complicated than what is stated above and
there do seem to be instances where a hired mercs aura will simply
not turn on, or at least take a very long time to do so. Simply
returning to town and then letting your merc kill more monsters
should normally solve such problems.
Multiplaying
Tip for Act 2 Mercs
Don't all hire the same merc in a MP game if you're all using Act
2 mercs. If you have 6 players with 6 mercs, all with the same aura,
all the game will do is cycle through the aura effects for each
merc. While the radius of effect may be huge (6 might mercs
supporting 6 Zookeeper Necros would be a frightening sight) its not
the best use of the abilities available. If you have 6 mercs all
with different auras you'll have an entire party of hard hitting,
life replenishing, accurate, difficult to hit characters, versus a
load of monsters who are moving slowly and that get hurt whenever
they hit your characters.
Desert Warriors use Pole arms, Javelins (but with no throwing
ability) or Spears (no Amazon-specific spears) and can therefore do
a lot of damage. They attack using the Amazon "Jab" attack
which under 1.09 no longer ignores weapon speed. A Might aura merc
can do a phenomenal amount of damage with such a weapon and can
quite happily cut down any monster that crosses his path. The
non-might mercs still do an impressive amount of damage and with a
decent exceptional or elite pole arm/spear, can easily top 1000pts
of damage. They are also strong enough to wear heavy armour and can
survive in the middle of a melee for some time. In addition they get
a fair few hit points to boot.
Their AI is more focused on staying within aura effecting
distance of the player, but as they level up and the range of their
aura grows the distance they are inclined to wander for a fight
grows. Even high level Act II mercs have less of a lemming tendency
than the other mercs and will retreat quite quickly if your
character decides to leg it.
The obvious disadvantage of the act II mercs is that when they
die, outside of losing your support you also lose the aura effects a
few seconds later. This can turn the tide of battle against your
character very quickly.
The more damaging Pole arms/Spears are usually quite slow. More
than any other merc there needs to be a trade off between speed and
power here in choice of weapon. In addition the weapon needs to have
some elemental damage attached to it otherwise the merc will be
useless against PIs on hell diff. This Merc, unless totally
overwhelmed, can survive quite well in hell diff.
Act III Mercs: The
Iron Wolves
Hire from: Asheara
Can equip: Swords and Shields
Level up: +1.5 Strength, +1.5 Dexterity, +4.5 Defense, +1.5
Resistances, +6 Life
The Iron Wolves are all sorcerers who come in 3 flavours, fire,
ice or lightning with the following spells.
Lightning: Charged Bolt and Lightning
Cold: Glacial Spike or Ice Blast with Frozen Armour
Fire: Inferno and Fireball
Their spells reach the following levels as the mercs experience
lvl increases.
| Eastern
Sorcerer - Fire |
|
| Exp Level |
15 |
37 |
61 |
99 |
| Inferno |
6 |
13 |
20 |
20 |
| Fire Ball |
4 |
11 |
18 |
18 |
| Eastern
Sorcerer - Cold |
|
| Exp Level |
15 |
37 |
61 |
99 |
| Glacial Spike |
1 |
5 |
9 |
9 |
| Frozen Armor |
2 |
9 |
16 |
16 |
| Ice Blast |
6 |
13 |
20 |
20 |
| Easter
Sorcerer - Lighting |
|
| Exp Level |
15 |
37 |
61 |
99 |
| Charged Bolt |
4 |
8 |
12 |
12 |
| Lightning |
3 |
10 |
17 |
28 |
They can equip shields and swords, but, only use the sword in rare
circumstances (such as when they are being mobbed) so it is
worthwhile equipping them with a decent weapon. Ideally a sword with
+1 to all skills or faster cast would be of most benefit to them.
Life leech is less of an issue here, due to the infrequency of melee
attacks that these mercs make.
Base cast rates for Act 3 mercs are (fast cast = FC) (Thanks to
corax for the date)
0% FC - 18FPS
10%FC - 17FPS
15%FC - 16FPS
30%FC - 15FPS
40%FC - 14FPS
60%FC - 13FPS
90%FC - 12FPS
140%FC - 11FPS
Like the Rogue these are ranged combatants and can provide useful
back-up for a melee character. Again the cold mercs attacks will
help against crowds of monsters but freezing them solid or slowing
the monsters down.
Although they can use a shield, they cannot block. Thus a shield
will only help with their defence and also their resists if you give
them a good unique/rare shield. They are strong enough to wear heavy
armour and use large shields, which is useful as their defence
increase per level is pitiful. The cold sorc has an advantage here
in that he also casts frozen armour which confers a defense bonus.
Thus he can actually serve as a limited tank compared to the other
two.
Their magic attack is also very useful against PI's in Hell and
Nightmare, just so long as the PI is not immune to the Sorcs chosen
element or is magic immune as well. This is particularly useful for
those character classes that do not have a strong attack for dealing
with PIs i.e. Werewolf Druids. The added elemental damage from the
Mercs attack can assist whatever damage the WW has on his weapons.
Sorcs suffer from the same AI problem as Rogues though, they back
off to range, target something and keep firing until its dead,
irrespective of whether 20 Flayers have just run onto the screen
next to them and are currently turning the merc into Swiss cheese.
Again once this process has started it is very difficult to get the
merc to move away. The shield will help the merc survive for a bit,
but their low hp means that will be killed sooner rather than later,
unless the player character has the opportunity to thin out the mob
somewhat.
As these mercs only attack very rarely with their melee weapon
the amount of damage these Mercs do isn't very great. This means
they can't fight their way out of a scrape very quickly and on hell
diff it takes an age for them to hurt anything. Add in the existence
of elemental immunities on Hell diff and this mercs use becomes
severely limited. This lack of damage can be compensated for if the
Merc is accompanying a Paladin that uses the conviction aura.
However, because the Act III merc's damage is mostly unaffected
by the equipment they use, there is an ideal niche for them to fill.
Magic Finding. Its easy to equip these mercs with up 300% MF and
because they tend not to go, toe to toe with monsters, you can
shield them with your character while they get the last shot in on a
boss monster. For the dedicated Mfer, this can be worthwhile niche
to exploit.
Another feature in 1.10 is the introduction of unique items with
the mod "-% to enemy resistance" (Griffon's Eye) and
"+% to elemental skill" (Ormus Robes). Equipping such
items would improve the damage done by the Act III merc.
In addition the cold merc is often in danger of trapping you or
himself when surrounded. Because he's targeting a monster a distance
away, he will fire at it regardless of what's in his way. This can
mean that you can find your retreat blocked by frozen, or chilled
monsters, or him surrounded by a crowd of frozen enemies from which
he cannot retreat.
He will use his sword to fight his way out of these situations, but
is unlikely to escape when surrounded by monsters. The cold merc is
also of least use to a Necro Overlord as the frozen corpses which
shatter into nothingness are no use to the Necro for summoning or
reviving.
Getting
your Act III Merc to Move (a tip from Pantin)
When my mercenary starts getting hit too often for its own good,
I start running in a big circle from where I was to where I was with
a radius just a bit smaller than half the screen's height. So I
always end up exactly where I left off, and with some speed the
monsters almost don't move from where they were.
The main GOOD thing is that the mercenary stops firing and
actually moves back to follow you. But when you go back and restart
fighting it stops where it is, usually half a screen behind you,
safely placed.
Act
V Mercs: The Barbarians
Hire from: Qual-Kehk
Can equip: Swords (only one at a time)
Level up: +2 Strength, +1.5 Dexterity, +7.5 Defense, +1.5
Resistances, +12 Life
These guys really are tanks. They are stronger than the other
mercs and therefore capable of wearing heavy armour and wielding big
swords.
Unlike the other mercs, barb mercs can wear class specific items
which can greatly increase their strength. They are also affected by
+skills to bash or stun available on such helms. Wielding big swords
and doing lots of damage coupled with either the barb skill stun, or
bash, they are very keen to get into a fight. Fast attack on the
swords is of great use to these mercs. The barb gets great strength
and life increases as he levels up.
Barbarian
Mercenaries' Skills
The Barbarians have three attacks which they use as and when they
feel like:
Normal Attack: The barb merc
hits twice when doing his normal attack.
Bash: This is the more useful
of the 2 other skills to choose from. Outside of doing more damage
and having increased AR the attack knocks the monster away, thus
buying the barb and the player character extra breathing room. This
is especially useful for when fighting through a doorway.
Stun: The stun is quite
useful because it leaves monsters standing around looking stupid for
2 seconds or so, giving free hits and preventing the monsters from
swarming the merc and the player character.
Conversely monsters with stun attacks are bad news for mercs
because stun effect leaves the merc unable to keep the monsters off
balance and is liable to get swarmed. Against a pack of Urdars in
Hell, even a very tough well equipped merc (irrespective of which
Act the come from) is likely to be killed in short order.
The disadvantage of the barb merc is their enthusiasm for getting
into a fight. Of all the mercs they have the greatest tendency to
run off at speed to kill a nearby monster, irrespective of how many
there may be. This does help to keep monsters away from the player
character (useful if they happen to be a Sorc or Necro) but
invariably gets the barb killed. The barb has good defence (not as
good as the Desert Warrior) but its not good enough to survive
repeat attacks on nightmare or hell difficulties. If you can back
your merc up though, his Bash attack will keep the monsters at bay
and give you room to kill monsters at a more leisurely pace.
Barb mercs don't work well if your playing style is to stand
around and pick through chests, study you gear or think about where
you're going next. Odds are he's already decided where you're going
and has shot off after the nearest monster. Sticking close to your
barb merc does up the tempo of the game somewhat. However, if you
give your barb a fast attacking weapon, with big damage and life
steal you shouldn't have to worry about them too much.
A hidden trait of the barbarian merc is that he comes with an
in-built addition 70% resistance to poison. Thus he is a possible
candidate for running Andariel.
The barb merc should also have some elemental/magical damage on
their weapon if you wish for them to be of use against PIs. An
alternative would be to equip them with swords that has a chance to
cast amp damage which would remove the immunity.
Character
Specific Tips
Ranger Merc Tip from Wassup
The Blessed Aim merc is especially useful to the Shock Ranger
should you fail to find a weapon that shoots fire, explosive, or
magical arrows (these special arrows have the side effect of always
hitting) since you'll be using Holy Shock as your main aura and use
Normal Attack to shoot arrows, you'll suffer from serious Attack
Rating problems rather quickly. also when facing Lightning
Immune/Lightning Enchanted bosses, I found the following tactic
useful - turn on Fanatism/Salvation for Lightning Immune/Enchanted
bosses respectively and shoot arrows at the boss with him and knock back
(thus requiring Knock back equipment) into a wall. with the boss in
constant stun lock, you merc can then do the actual damage to the
boss (given he's not Physical Immune as well, in which case you
should just leg it).
Note: In 1.10, general bow skills such as fire, explosive and
magical arrow are now dependent on attack rating to hit. The sole
exception is Guided Arrow (provided by Widowmaker).
Assassin & Might Merc Tip
from bablyon_f
One thing to be aware of using Might Merc with an Assassin is
that your Shadow Master companion becomes a bit of a liability.
The Shadow Master seems to spam Mind Blast all the time &
converts some monsters, these then pickup the Might aura from your
Merc. This is all very nice until they go hostile again and KEEP the
Might aura for a while (5 secs-ish). This is normally more than
enough time to completely annihilate your Merc who isn't clever
enough to get out of the way & can even be nasty for yourself if
your not watching closely!! The only answer is to keep a close watch
& run as soon as conversion ends - this gets very boring very
quickly though.
A similar effect can occur with a Paladin, Thorn's merc and a
conversion aura. When the conversion wear's off the monsters will
still be affected by thorns for a few seconds afterwards. Be very
careful with melee attacks at this time. - Thanks to Psychotron for
this tip.
Note: this feature no longer happens in 1.10.
Other
Frequently Asked Questions
Which melee merc to use, Act II or Act
V?
Obviously the Act II merc is always favored for their auras.
However, in cases where you don't exactly need the aura anyway,
notably sorceresses and barbarians, a barb merc can be a fine
companion. They also have the slight advantage where they can stun
monsters completely including bosses, and replenish life faster than
their Act II counterparts.
Which act II merc is the best, HF,
Defiance or Might?
I don't have a proper answer for this age-old debate. Basically,
if you have no problems with crowd control, you can use might.
Between Defiance and Holy Freeze, it comes down to playing style
(being hit less or the chance not to be hit at all). Do bear in mind
that normally you would need to equip at least a decent (i.e..
elite) armour to have a viable defense while holy freeze has a
limited range.
Who would actually use an act III merc
and why?
Well, I would for one, my cold merc works fine with my lightning Amazon
and the fire/lightning merc adds some fireworks for my frost zealot.
Ultimately, it is all about the style points.
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