Difference between revisions of "Gem"
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Gems are small objects that grant bonuses when socketed into items. There are four types of gems in Diablo III; [[Amethysts]], [[Emeralds]], [[Rubies]] and [[Topazes]], which are found in 15 levels of quality. (The 15th, Marquise, was added in [[Patch 1.0.7]].) Only the first eight levels can be found from monsters or chests, with Flawless Squares the highest quality (and the only type that drops in Inferno). Higher levels of gems can only be crafted (for a price) by the [[Jeweler]], and the costs grow and accumulate impressively. | Gems are small objects that grant bonuses when socketed into items. There are four types of gems in Diablo III; [[Amethysts]], [[Emeralds]], [[Rubies]] and [[Topazes]], which are found in 15 levels of quality. (The 15th, Marquise, was added in [[Patch 1.0.7]].) Only the first eight levels can be found from monsters or chests, with Flawless Squares the highest quality (and the only type that drops in Inferno). Higher levels of gems can only be crafted (for a price) by the [[Jeweler]], and the costs grow and accumulate impressively. | ||
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Creating a level 14 gem is quite a chore. The total costs, assuming a starting point in Inferno where Flawless Squares drop, is 729 Flawless Squares, 15,400,000 gold and 1631 [[Tomes of Secret]], for each Radiant Star gem. | Creating a level 14 gem is quite a chore. The total costs, assuming a starting point in Inferno where Flawless Squares drop, is 729 Flawless Squares, 15,400,000 gold and 1631 [[Tomes of Secret]], for each Radiant Star gem. | ||
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As of patch v1.07, there is no way to create or add sockets to items. During development the Jeweler was set to add sockets to items, but this ability was shelved pre-release, leaving players able only to hope for socket finds. It's often hoped that socketing might come back as a quest reward or for a price, in a patch or more likely in [[D3X]]. | As of patch v1.07, there is no way to create or add sockets to items. During development the Jeweler was set to add sockets to items, but this ability was shelved pre-release, leaving players able only to hope for socket finds. It's often hoped that socketing might come back as a quest reward or for a price, in a patch or more likely in [[D3X]]. | ||
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+ | [[Diamond]]s are confirmed as being introduced in [[Reaper of Souls]]. | ||
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Gems are a very useful item to [[twink]] to new characters, as gems have no level requirements. Items with sockets are first found around level 15 (some [[legendary]] items have sockets as low as level 10), in late Act One or early Act Two, and it's quite easy to add a gem with a bonus much larger than that of the item itself. Low level weapons with a high level [[Ruby]] in them become wildly overpowered, but that's the whole fun of it for many players. | Gems are a very useful item to [[twink]] to new characters, as gems have no level requirements. Items with sockets are first found around level 15 (some [[legendary]] items have sockets as low as level 10), in late Act One or early Act Two, and it's quite easy to add a gem with a bonus much larger than that of the item itself. Low level weapons with a high level [[Ruby]] in them become wildly overpowered, but that's the whole fun of it for many players. | ||
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==Diablo III Gems== | ==Diablo III Gems== | ||
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Gems in Diablo 3 have evolved during the game's development. Though the concept of 14 levels of quality has remained constant, the types of gems, their names and graphics, and the materials and costs to upgrade them have evolved repeatedly. | Gems in Diablo 3 have evolved during the game's development. Though the concept of 14 levels of quality has remained constant, the types of gems, their names and graphics, and the materials and costs to upgrade them have evolved repeatedly. | ||
− | * See the | + | * See the [[Gems archive]] info for full details on their development. |
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===Weapons=== | ===Weapons=== | ||
A socket in a weapon is considered almost essential, at the [[end game]]. Rubies were always popular at low or mid levels, and they became much more useful in [[Patch 1.0.7]] when their values in weapons were considerably upgraded. That said, Emeralds are the weapon socket of choice for most high levels characters, especially those with a healthy [[Critical hit Chance]] value. [[Amethyst]]s are a not unheard of for [[Hardcore]] players, for their [[life on hit]]. | A socket in a weapon is considered almost essential, at the [[end game]]. Rubies were always popular at low or mid levels, and they became much more useful in [[Patch 1.0.7]] when their values in weapons were considerably upgraded. That said, Emeralds are the weapon socket of choice for most high levels characters, especially those with a healthy [[Critical hit Chance]] value. [[Amethyst]]s are a not unheard of for [[Hardcore]] players, for their [[life on hit]]. | ||
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+ | * [[Diamond]]s will come with [[Reaper of Souls]] and will boost elite damage in weapons. | ||
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* [[Topaz]] are also sought for the Magic Find bonus, while [[gold farmers]] may enjoy Emeralds for that bonus. | * [[Topaz]] are also sought for the Magic Find bonus, while [[gold farmers]] may enjoy Emeralds for that bonus. | ||
** The Topaz vs. Ruby debate is an interesting one, since high level players mostly seek paragon levels for the 3% bonus to Magic Find and Gold Find per level. Yet an affordable Star topaz grants 25% Magic Find, which is equivalent to the MF gain of more than 8 Paragon levels. | ** The Topaz vs. Ruby debate is an interesting one, since high level players mostly seek paragon levels for the 3% bonus to Magic Find and Gold Find per level. Yet an affordable Star topaz grants 25% Magic Find, which is equivalent to the MF gain of more than 8 Paragon levels. | ||
+ | * [[Diamond]]s will come with [[Reaper of Souls]] and will reduce cooldown. | ||
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===Other=== | ===Other=== | ||
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* [[Rubies]] for [[strength]] for [[Barbarian]]s. | * [[Rubies]] for [[strength]] for [[Barbarian]]s. | ||
* [[Topaz]] for [[intelligence]] for [[Wizard]]s and [[Witch Doctor]]s. | * [[Topaz]] for [[intelligence]] for [[Wizard]]s and [[Witch Doctor]]s. | ||
+ | * [[Diamond]]s will come with [[Reaper of Souls]] and will apply a [[resist]] all bonus to armor. | ||
Hardcore characters are much more likely to use Amethysts to boost their vitality. | Hardcore characters are much more likely to use Amethysts to boost their vitality. | ||
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Gems can be upgraded by the [[Jeweler]], for a price. First of all, the Jeweler needs to be trained to his maximum level in order to craft the highest level gems. Even then, he can only upgrade gems to the 11th quality level, and just be taught the 4 highest tiers in each gem type by [[Designs]] that drop from monsters or objects. Jeweler Designs and Blacksmith [[Plans]] dropped very rarely until [[Patch 1.0.7]] buffed their drop rates 4x. | Gems can be upgraded by the [[Jeweler]], for a price. First of all, the Jeweler needs to be trained to his maximum level in order to craft the highest level gems. Even then, he can only upgrade gems to the 11th quality level, and just be taught the 4 highest tiers in each gem type by [[Designs]] that drop from monsters or objects. Jeweler Designs and Blacksmith [[Plans]] dropped very rarely until [[Patch 1.0.7]] buffed their drop rates 4x. | ||
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All plans and designs can also be purchased from the [[Auction House]], where their prices have steadily dropped over time. (Whe new recipes are introduced in patches, such as the level 63 items and Marquise gems in Patch v1.0.7, their values were very high for a day or two, before falling rapidly.) | All plans and designs can also be purchased from the [[Auction House]], where their prices have steadily dropped over time. (Whe new recipes are introduced in patches, such as the level 63 items and Marquise gems in Patch v1.0.7, their values were very high for a day or two, before falling rapidly.) | ||
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All gem upgrades cost gold, and most require some materials as well. Lower level recipes are quite cheap in terms of gold and materials, and only require 2 gems to upgrade to the next level. Higher level gems require a lot of gold and materials, and it takes 3 gems to make 1 of the next rank. At the 2 > 1 upgrade ratio introduced in v1.03 (prior to that all upgrades were 3 > 1, plus much higher gold prices), it would require 256 chipped gems and 570 gold to create 1 Flawless Square (which is the highest gem that drops), though no one actually collects that many chipped gems since higher quality gems can easily be found. | All gem upgrades cost gold, and most require some materials as well. Lower level recipes are quite cheap in terms of gold and materials, and only require 2 gems to upgrade to the next level. Higher level gems require a lot of gold and materials, and it takes 3 gems to make 1 of the next rank. At the 2 > 1 upgrade ratio introduced in v1.03 (prior to that all upgrades were 3 > 1, plus much higher gold prices), it would require 256 chipped gems and 570 gold to create 1 Flawless Square (which is the highest gem that drops), though no one actually collects that many chipped gems since higher quality gems can easily be found. | ||
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When considering upgrade prices, bear in mind the cumulative costs, which are listed in the last column of the table below. For example, the price to make the 14th level gem, a Radiant Star, is 400k gold + 20 [[Tomes of Secret]] + 3 Flawless Stars. That doesn't sound so bad, until you realize that each of those Flawless Stars had to be made from requires 3 Perfect Stars, and 9 Flawless Stars, and 27 Stars, and so on, down to the [[Flawless Squares]] that form the base of the gem economy. | When considering upgrade prices, bear in mind the cumulative costs, which are listed in the last column of the table below. For example, the price to make the 14th level gem, a Radiant Star, is 400k gold + 20 [[Tomes of Secret]] + 3 Flawless Stars. That doesn't sound so bad, until you realize that each of those Flawless Stars had to be made from requires 3 Perfect Stars, and 9 Flawless Stars, and 27 Stars, and so on, down to the [[Flawless Squares]] that form the base of the gem economy. | ||
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It requires a total of 729 Flawless Squares, 1631 Tomes of Secret, and 15,400,000 gold to make a single Radiant Star, not counting the gold required to upgrade the Jeweler in the first place, or to obtain the three highest level plans for each gem. Even assuming you had all the Flawless Squares, Tomes of Secret, and over 15 million gold in your stash, creating a Radiant Star would still take you 243 clicks on the Jeweler's upgrade bar. At 3 seconds per click, that's 729 seconds, or close to 12 minutes doing nothing but clicking the "Upgrade" bar in the Jeweler's interface. | It requires a total of 729 Flawless Squares, 1631 Tomes of Secret, and 15,400,000 gold to make a single Radiant Star, not counting the gold required to upgrade the Jeweler in the first place, or to obtain the three highest level plans for each gem. Even assuming you had all the Flawless Squares, Tomes of Secret, and over 15 million gold in your stash, creating a Radiant Star would still take you 243 clicks on the Jeweler's upgrade bar. At 3 seconds per click, that's 729 seconds, or close to 12 minutes doing nothing but clicking the "Upgrade" bar in the Jeweler's interface. | ||
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For instance, the developers have discussed entirely reworking the reflects damage / [[thorns]] system, which would involve greatly buffing or reworking the bonuses granted by Topaz gems in weapons. | For instance, the developers have discussed entirely reworking the reflects damage / [[thorns]] system, which would involve greatly buffing or reworking the bonuses granted by Topaz gems in weapons. | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
+ | <font size="-3"> | ||
+ | <references/> | ||
− | + | {{Template:Items navbox|normal}} | |
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[[Category:Items]] | [[Category:Items]] | ||
[[category:Gems]] | [[category:Gems]] | ||
[[category:Socketing]] | [[category:Socketing]] |
Revision as of 15:04, 2 September 2013
Gems are small objects that grant bonuses when socketed into items. There are four types of gems in Diablo III; Amethysts, Emeralds, Rubies and Topazes, which are found in 15 levels of quality. (The 15th, Marquise, was added in Patch 1.0.7.) Only the first eight levels can be found from monsters or chests, with Flawless Squares the highest quality (and the only type that drops in Inferno). Higher levels of gems can only be crafted (for a price) by the Jeweler, and the costs grow and accumulate impressively.
Creating a level 14 gem is quite a chore. The total costs, assuming a starting point in Inferno where Flawless Squares drop, is 729 Flawless Squares, 15,400,000 gold and 1631 Tomes of Secret, for each Radiant Star gem.
As of patch v1.07, there is no way to create or add sockets to items. During development the Jeweler was set to add sockets to items, but this ability was shelved pre-release, leaving players able only to hope for socket finds. It's often hoped that socketing might come back as a quest reward or for a price, in a patch or more likely in D3X.
Diamonds are confirmed as being introduced in Reaper of Souls.
Gems are a very useful item to twink to new characters, as gems have no level requirements. Items with sockets are first found around level 15 (some legendary items have sockets as low as level 10), in late Act One or early Act Two, and it's quite easy to add a gem with a bonus much larger than that of the item itself. Low level weapons with a high level Ruby in them become wildly overpowered, but that's the whole fun of it for many players.
- See the Diablo 2 Gems page for details on that game's seven types of gems (skulls, diamonds, and sapphires do not appear in Diablo 3).
Contents
Diablo III Gems
Gems in Diablo 3 have evolved during the game's development. Though the concept of 14 levels of quality has remained constant, the types of gems, their names and graphics, and the materials and costs to upgrade them have evolved repeatedly.
- See the Gems archive info for full details on their development.
Weapons
A socket in a weapon is considered almost essential, at the end game. Rubies were always popular at low or mid levels, and they became much more useful in Patch 1.0.7 when their values in weapons were considerably upgraded. That said, Emeralds are the weapon socket of choice for most high levels characters, especially those with a healthy Critical hit Chance value. Amethysts are a not unheard of for Hardcore players, for their life on hit.
- Diamonds will come with Reaper of Souls and will boost elite damage in weapons.
Helms
Sockets in helms are even more desired than in weapons, to the point that virtually no end game helm is considered viable without a socket.
- Rubies are the most popular for the +%experience per kill. This bonus was irrelevant in the end game until the debut of the Paragon system, at which point it became the most sought after.
- Amethysts are popular, especially for Hardcore characters, since the +%life bonus is a huge source of hit points, leveraging already high vitality bonuses.
- Topaz are also sought for the Magic Find bonus, while gold farmers may enjoy Emeralds for that bonus.
- The Topaz vs. Ruby debate is an interesting one, since high level players mostly seek paragon levels for the 3% bonus to Magic Find and Gold Find per level. Yet an affordable Star topaz grants 25% Magic Find, which is equivalent to the MF gain of more than 8 Paragon levels.
- Diamonds will come with Reaper of Souls and will reduce cooldown.
Other
All other items are given the "other" designation. Sockets are found in rare and magical pants, chest armor, off-hand items (such as quivers, mojos, orbs, shields, etc) amulets, and rings, but not in shoulders, bracers, belts, or boots. (A few legendary and set items add sockets to other pieces of armor, such as the socket in Ice Climbers boots or Tasker and Theo gloves.)
Softcore players almost always go for +damage via a boost to their mainstat.
- Emeralds for dexterity for Demon Hunters and Monks.
- Rubies for strength for Barbarians.
- Topaz for intelligence for Wizards and Witch Doctors.
- Diamonds will come with Reaper of Souls and will apply a resist all bonus to armor.
Hardcore characters are much more likely to use Amethysts to boost their vitality.
Upgrading Gems
Gems can be upgraded by the Jeweler, for a price. First of all, the Jeweler needs to be trained to his maximum level in order to craft the highest level gems. Even then, he can only upgrade gems to the 11th quality level, and just be taught the 4 highest tiers in each gem type by Designs that drop from monsters or objects. Jeweler Designs and Blacksmith Plans dropped very rarely until Patch 1.0.7 buffed their drop rates 4x.
All plans and designs can also be purchased from the Auction House, where their prices have steadily dropped over time. (Whe new recipes are introduced in patches, such as the level 63 items and Marquise gems in Patch v1.0.7, their values were very high for a day or two, before falling rapidly.)
All gem upgrades cost gold, and most require some materials as well. Lower level recipes are quite cheap in terms of gold and materials, and only require 2 gems to upgrade to the next level. Higher level gems require a lot of gold and materials, and it takes 3 gems to make 1 of the next rank. At the 2 > 1 upgrade ratio introduced in v1.03 (prior to that all upgrades were 3 > 1, plus much higher gold prices), it would require 256 chipped gems and 570 gold to create 1 Flawless Square (which is the highest gem that drops), though no one actually collects that many chipped gems since higher quality gems can easily be found.
When considering upgrade prices, bear in mind the cumulative costs, which are listed in the last column of the table below. For example, the price to make the 14th level gem, a Radiant Star, is 400k gold + 20 Tomes of Secret + 3 Flawless Stars. That doesn't sound so bad, until you realize that each of those Flawless Stars had to be made from requires 3 Perfect Stars, and 9 Flawless Stars, and 27 Stars, and so on, down to the Flawless Squares that form the base of the gem economy.
It requires a total of 729 Flawless Squares, 1631 Tomes of Secret, and 15,400,000 gold to make a single Radiant Star, not counting the gold required to upgrade the Jeweler in the first place, or to obtain the three highest level plans for each gem. Even assuming you had all the Flawless Squares, Tomes of Secret, and over 15 million gold in your stash, creating a Radiant Star would still take you 243 clicks on the Jeweler's upgrade bar. At 3 seconds per click, that's 729 seconds, or close to 12 minutes doing nothing but clicking the "Upgrade" bar in the Jeweler's interface.
And the Marquise Gems introduced in Patch 1.0.7 require 3 Radiant Stars each.
Gem Result | Gold Cost | Gems Required | Materials | Cumulative Cost [e] |
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Chipped | N/A | N/A | N/A | Find them. |
1 Flawed | 10 gold | 2 Chipped | None | Find them. |
1 Regular | 25 gold | 2 Flawed | None | Find them. |
1 Flawless | 40 gold | 2 Regular | None | Find them. |
1 Perfect | 55 gold | 2 Flawless | 1 page of Jewelcrafting | Find them. |
1 Radiant | 70 gold | 2 Perfects | 1 Page of Jewelcrafting | Find them. |
1 Square | 85 gold | 2 Radiant | 1 Tome of Jewelcrafting | Find them. |
1 Flawless Square | 100 gold | 2 Squares | 1 Tome of Jewelcrafting | Find them. |
1 Perfect Square | 30,000 gold | 3 Flawless Squares | 3 Tomes of Secret | 30k gold & 3 ToS (3 Flawless Squares) |
1 Radiant Square | 50,000 gold | 3 Perfect Squares | 6 Tomes of Secret | + 30k gold & 3 ToS + 30k gold & 3 ToS + 30k gold & 3 ToS + 50k gold & 6 ToS = 140k gold & 15 ToS (9 Flawless Squares) |
1 Star | 80,000 gold | 3 Radiant Squares | 9 Tomes of Secret | 140k gold & 15 ToS + 140k gold & 15 ToS + 140k gold & 15 ToS + 80k gold & 9 ToS = 500k gold & 54 ToS (27 Flawless Squares) |
1 Flawless Star |
100,000 gold | 3 Stars | 12 Tomes of Secret | 500k gold & 54 ToS + 500k gold & 54 ToS + 500k gold & 54 ToS + 100k gold & 12 ToS = 1600k gold & 174 ToS (81 Flawless Squares) |
1 Perfect Star | 200,000 gold | 3 Flawless Stars | 15 Tomes of Secret | 1600k gold & 174 ToS + 1600k gold & 174 ToS + 1600k gold & 174 ToS + 200k gold & 15 ToS = 5000k gold & 537 ToS (243 Flawless Squares) |
1 Radiant Star | 400,000 gold | 3 perfect stars, | 20 Tomes of Secret | 5000k gold & 537 ToS + 5000k gold & 537 ToS + 5000k gold & 537 ToS + 400k gold & 20 ToS = 15400k gold & 1631 ToS (729 Flawless Squares) |
1 Marquise Gem | 20,000,000 gold | 3 Radiant Star Gems | 10 Demonic Essence | 66.2 million gold + 4893 Tomes of Secret + 2187 Flawless Square Gems + 10 Demonic Essence |
Full List of Gem Properties
All gems and their bonuses, with game data pulled directly via the Database database.
<item type="list" mode="misc">Gem</item>
Marquise Gems
Marquise Gems were added in Patch 1.0.7 as the new, highest level gem. They are meant to serve as something of a gold sink, with a considerably higher creation cost than earlier levels of gems, despite adding only marginally to the function.
Marquise Emerald
- Weapon: Increased Critical Hit Damage by 110%
- Helm: +33% Extra Gold from Monsters
- Armor: +62 Dexterity
Marquise Topaz
- Weapon: Melee attackers take 2500 per hit
- Helm: 33% Better chance of finding magical items
- Armor: +62 Intelligence
Marquise Amethyst
- Weapon: Each Hit adds +700 Life
- Helm: +19% Life
- Armor: +62 Vitality
Marquise Ruby
- Weapon: +160 Minimum and +160 Maximum Damage
- Helm: Increases Bonus Experience by 33%
- Armor: +62 Strength
Rubies Buffed
Patch 1.0.7 introduced Marquise Gems and also reworked Rubies, greatly increasing their damage when socketed in weapons. This was intended to make them a viable alternative to Emeralds, which were virtually the only gem socketed in weapons (at least in Softcore. In Hardcore Amethysts enjoyed some popularity for their Life on Hit bonus.)
From the official patch notes:[1]
All ruby gems have had their weapon bonuses increased (these changes will apply to both existing rubies, as well as new rubies):
- Chipped Ruby: +3 minimum damage/+3 maximum damage (up from +2/+2)
- Flawed Ruby: +6 minimum damage/+6 maximum damage (up from +4/+4)
- Ruby: +9 minimum damage/+9 maximum damage (up from +8/+8)
- Flawless Ruby: +12 minimum damage/+12 maximum damage (up from +10/+10)
- Perfect Ruby: +15 minimum damage/+15 maximum damage (up from +11/+11)
- Radiant Ruby: +18 minimum damage/+18 maximum damage (up from +12/+12)
- Square Ruby: +21 minimum damage/+21 maximum damage (up from +13/+13)
- Flawless Square Ruby: +25 minimum damage/+25 maximum damage (up from +14/+14)
- Perfect Square Ruby: +30 minimum damage/+30 maximum damage (up from +15/+15)
- Radiant Square Ruby: +40 minimum damage/+40 maximum damage (up from +16/+16)
- Star Ruby: +60 minimum damage/+60 maximum damage (up from +17/+17)
- Flawless Star Ruby: +80 minimum damage/+80 maximum damage (up from +18/+18)
- Perfect Star Ruby: +100 minimum damage/+100 maximum damage (up from +19/+19)
- Radiant Star Ruby: +130 minimum damage/+130 maximum damage (up from +20/+20)
- Marquise Ruby: +160 minimum damage/+160 maximum damage.
These rubies have also had their bonus damage calculations changed, and will now add damage flatly to both the minimum and maximum values on weapons:
- For example, if you have a weapon that does 150-200 damage and you socket a Perfect Square Ruby (which adds +30 minimum damage/+30 maximum damage), your weapon will do 180-230 damage.
Future Gem Changes
Further gem changes and modifications are expected in future patches and expansions.
For instance, the developers have discussed entirely reworking the reflects damage / thorns system, which would involve greatly buffing or reworking the bonuses granted by Topaz gems in weapons.
References
Items of Diablo III [e] Item Basics Normal Items Crafting Legendary Armor I Legendary Armor II Legendary Weapons 1h Legendary Weapons 2h Item Sets |
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