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Leap

IconLeap.png
Leaping over a gap to unsuspecting zombies.

Leap (named Leap Attack prior to March 2012) is a Defensive Barbarian skill unlocked at level 8, making the Barbarian leap, causing damage and knockback upon landing. When using this skill the Barbarian leaps at a high rate of speed from his current location to the targeted spot, dealing considerable damage upon impact.

Hover for latest stats

The rune effects provide a variety of modifications and bonuses, both to offense and defense.

This skill is one of the Barbarian's movement abilities.


Contents

Post-Release Changes

Patch v1.0.4 improved Leap by making it a better movement skill. The Barbarian can now use it even while immobilized by CC effects.

v1.0.4 changes:[1]

  • Leap
    • Can now be used while immobilized by crowd control effects (such as Jailer)
      • Note: Leap will not break CC effects, but that it can still be used while under the effect

This means that a Barbarian who is jailed or otherwise stuck can use Leap while in that state. Leap will not dispel the effect (the way Furious Charge or Wrath of the Berserker do), but a Barbarian who is jailed can at least move (taking the jail cell with him) out of the way of AoE dangers such as Plagued, Desecrator, Arcane Enchanted, etc.

Skill Rune Effects

The following is a very quick summary. Hover over the links for the stats of the latest live versions.


Icon Name (Hover over for latest stats) Level Unlocked
Runed.png Iron Impact 14
Runec.png Launch 21
Runeb.png Toppling Impact 32
Runea.png Call of Arreat 44
Runee.png Death from Above 60


Skill Design

Barb SMASH!

Once the player activates the skill, the Barbarian will leap from his current location, to the location of the mouse cursor, damaging and knocking enemies back upon landing. This skill is best used to reach ranged monsters, who are behind enemy lines and to escape tight situations, if such occur.

Leap has not changed much from D2, and has been demonstrated repeatedly in the gameplay movies. The main difference with the D3 version of this skill is that minor damage is dealt to everything nearby when the Barbarian lands, rather than major damage to one particular monster.


Video

A video of Leap in use can be seen below, courtesy of the DiabloInc You Tube channel.


Synergies

The following Barbarian passives provide a benefit to Leap, runed or not:


Development

Leaping at a few Fallen in the Borderlands.

Leap (as Leap Attack) was revealed at WWI 2008 when Diablo III debuted. Originally, it was a Tier III skill in the Berserker Skill Tree. By BlizzCon 2009, Leap Attack was at Tier IV but was otherwise unchanged.

At BlizzCon 2010, with just one point in it the Barbarian could leap all the way to the visible edge of the screen, over any number of enemies, and at a very high speed. Flux enjoyed using it in the Battle Arena:[2]

I loved it in the Arena, even though I seldom hit with it, just since the visual is great. The 3D works nicely with it, since your perspective lurches upwards when the Barb jumps, and you feel like you’re flying for a second. There’s a great grunting “RAHHH!” sound too, and you must want to knock something in half with a massive club when you trigger this skill. Ideally that Wizard whose been sniping you with that damn Disintegrate from the far edge of the screen for the entire round. “Hold still and die, maggot!”

Skill tiers were removed for the July 2011 Press Event, allowing skills to unlock steadily from levels 1 to 30. Consequently, all skill levels were adjusted and Leap Attack became a level 6 skill.

Beta

The Diablo III Beta started in September 2011, and while it ran, all of the skills continued to undergo extensive iteration. Skill changes varied from changing the levels the skills are unlocked, to changes in resource cost, damage, and even function. A few skills were removed altogether, and a few new ones were added. Also, the entire skill system received an overhaul with the Beta Patch 13 update in February 2012, with physical runes replaced by rune effects that automatically unlock at various levels for the different skills.

Leap Attack remained at level 6 when the beta started. With the Patch 13 changes, it was classified as a Tactics skill and moved to level 9. For the Beta Patch 14, Leap Attack was renamed Leap, re-classified as a Defensive skill, and moved to level 8.

Previous Versions

See the Barbarian skill archive for more details on previous versions of Leap (or Leap Attack) and other Barbarian skills.

In Other Games

Leap seems to combine Leap and Leap Attack from Diablo II, whilst requiring Fury to use. The main difference with the D3 version of this skill is that minor damage is dealt to everything nearby when the Barbarian lands, rather than major damage to one particular monster.


Media

Leap can be seen in action on video here:

You can find pictures in the Diablo III screenshot and picture gallery:



References