Bloodthirst

ADVERTISEMENT
From Diablo Wiki
Revision as of 23:10, 25 August 2011 by MrFrye (talk | contribs) (added icon)
Jump to: navigation, search
BloodThirst.jpg

Bloodthirst is a passive skill available exclusively to the Barbarian. It causes the Barbarian to gain life based on the amount of damage he deals, in a traditional leech-skill.




Lore

Not known yet.


Design

10% of damage dealt is gained as life.

Bloodthirst is a simple skill, if you were to look at it through the WarCraft II (or DotA) perspective, you would understand this skill as a 10% lifesteal. In Diablo II most skills didn't give life per hit, but there were health leeching prefixes on weapons, which could make any class gain health on hits. This skill is aimed to make the Barbarian less worried about health during battles, and should probably be taken as soon as possible if the player wishing to make tanking a breeze. It can be assumed that other skills which deal damage will also bring in health.

Level Requirement


Synergies

  • Bash: The 200% damage of this skill will bring in a lot of health.
  • Cleave: The health gained from attacking multiple monsters at once will be huge.
  • Revenge: Activating Revenge within the time frame of Bloodthirst will bring in huge amounts of health, but you are limited to the small window of opportunity.


Development

Passive skills have had a long and storied history. When Diablo III debuted at the WWI 2008, skill trees included passive skills, much like in Diablo II. In 2010, it was announced that passive skills had been renamed traits and separated out from active skills. At the July 2011 Press Event, Blizzard announced that passive skills were once again in the game, replacing the traits system. Bloodthirst is unique in that it was an original passive skill and is once again a passive skill, but was never a trait. It is the same skill, but the stats may have been tweaked slightly.

As of July 2011, it had a listed level as 1, which is clearly incorrect since passives aren't available until level 10.


References