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'''Runestones''' are small items that can be socketed - one each - into any [[skill]], but not into [[traits]] or into [[item]]s, as were runes in Diablo II. Diablo III's skill runes grant special bonuses to the skills with which they are used, altering their effects and generally enhancing them, although the changes that a rune makes to a skill may dramatically alter a its utility.
* [[Rune Archive]] -- Runes evolved greatly during the development of Diablo III. See the archive page for a history lesson.
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==Rune Basics==
[[File:Runes5.jpg|left|thumb|115px|The five Runes.]]Runestones come in five types, and a particular kind of bonus or alteration is typical of each. For instance, the [[Crimson Rune]] often generally adds damageor a fire effect. However the effects that runestones have vary greatly with the skills themselves - a skill that doesn't deal damage may not gain a damaging effect from a Crimson Rune, but rather be altered in some other way.
In addition to the five types, Runestones also occur in seven levels of quality, with increasingly potent effects. A Runestone of one level always has a more dramatic effect than a Runestone of a lower level, usually in the sense that it affects a given skill in the same way, but to a greater extent. It is not generally known whether or not it will be possible to combine Runestones of one quality level to generate higher-level Runestones, however all seven quality levels are dropped by [[monsters]]<ref>[http://diablo.incgamers.com/blog/comments/runestone-info-galore/ Bashiok forum post] - Blue Tracker, January 2011</ref>.
[[Diablo III]]'s Runestones are nothing like the '{{iw|runes runes}}' found in [[Diablo II]]. In D2 there are thirty-three kinds of runes, which are small items that have no use on their own, but can be placed in item sockets to add various bonuses to those items, and in certain combinations produce {{iw|Runeword RuneWords}}, which add powerful, predetermined sets of bonuses, provided that the item has precisely the right number of sockets.
Diablo III's runes are socketed into [[skills]], not item. See the [[Gem]]s and [[Socket]]s articles for more details about [[item]] socketing in Diablo III.
===Rune Tool Tips===
[[File:Indigo-rank1-2.jpg|thumb|Nondescript description.]]
The tool tip that displays when a rune is hovered over is not informative. It simply says, "socket in skills for a special bonus." To obtain information about what a rune actually does, players need to click on the rune to pick it up, then hover it over their available skills. The tool tip will then briefly describe what effect the rune will grant that skill.
Since just the word descriptions aren't that informative, most players will want seek out additional information from a wiki or video of the skill in action. Or simply plan on testing out a lot of rune functions before deciding on what they want to use long term.
==Runestone Functions==
Prior to Blizzcon 2010, the Runestones (which had different names at the time) were generally accepted to do the following:
* [[Indigo rune]]: Generally provides multishot in some form.
* [[Obsidian rune]]: Wild card functions.
At Blizzcon it was revealed that this simple, predictable approach, had largely been discarded.
===Higher-Level Runestone Functions===
A Runestone's function tends to vary in a quantitative way with its level of quality, rather than in a qualitative way. For example, an Indigo Rune adds multishot to Magic Missile; higher level Indigo Runes don't change that function, but rather increase the number of projectiles generated. However Runestones of some quality levels also have qualitative advantages over lower-level Runestones of the same type.
<blue><font color="#FFFFFF">Will the increase in rank continue the change that the first rank made to the skill? For example, with the WD blow dart skill, the alabaster runes turn the dart into a snake. What does a higher ranking alabaster rune do?</font><br><b>Bashiok:</b> Yes, the mechanic stays the same for the rune type in all ranks (more or less). It simply increases in power. For the Alabaster-in-Poison Dart example I’m actually not sure the increase in effect, but it likely plays off of the stun effect (higher ranks stun the target for longer). Runes that reduce cost reduce even more cost as the rank increases. A rune that would cause multiple projectiles would fire even more projectiles as the rank increases, etc. It’s not necessarily a hard and fast rule though that the increase must only be one thing. Maybe it means more projectiles AND ups the damage a little to make sure it remains competitive with other runes or skills. It has to be a somewhat fluid system.</blue>
==Runestone Scarcity==
[[File:Runes-level.jpg|thumb|300px|Runestone levels]]
There are seven Runestone quality levels, roughly distributed so that levels one through three are found as a character progresses through Normal, four and five are found in Nightmare, and six and seven are found in Hell (each Runestone's quality can be determined by the number of points around its edge). It's not known how common or rare Runestones will be, or whether or not all five types will be equally difficult to find. The most recent information about the subject came from a forum post by Bashiok in January 2011.<ref>[http://diablo.incgamers.com/blog/comments/runestone-info-galore/ Bashiok forum post] - Blue Tracker, January 12, 2011</ref>
===Rune Crafting/Upgrading===
The D3 Team has confirmed that the [[Mystic]] will have some [[crafting]] [[recipes]] to create new Runestones, though there are no details yet, other than that they will use old Runestones in the process. It will also be possible to [[salvage]] unneeded Runestones for magical materials, and even make new ones from scratch.
==Easy Socketing==
[[Image:Runestone_ui.jpg|frame|left|The [[interface]] for runestone socketing.]]Socketed runestones will be freely swappable. Players will be able to replace runestones at any time, at no cost and without risk of losing the runestone. The [[D3 Team]] has committed to easy runestone swapping in the final game, but they have said there will be some sort of limitation, purely to prevent macro-switching exploits. They want swapping to be easy and forgiving, but not something that can be done automatically by a third party program, which could lead to constant, effortless switching, which they think of as contrary to their intended style of play. The team has not yet revealed what form this limitation will take, but it could be something as simple as requiring players to return to town, or to use one of the [[Artisans]] to switch out runes.
==Confirmed Runestone Examples==
While one or two rune properties are known (or can be easily guessed) for most skills, we Blizzard has only know revealed all five rune bonuses runestone effects for a few skills; ones that Blizzard has revealed in panels or interviews. There may yet be additional changes to these effects, as development continues up to and even after release.
===Poison Dart===
The rune functions for [[Poison Dart]], a [[Witch Doctor skill]], were revealed during a panel discussion at Blizzcon [[BlizzCon 2010]]. The basic skill is a fairly slow-working spell that fires a single poison dart that deals poison damage and some [[DoT]].
* [[Alabaster rune]]: Blows out a face-biting snake that stuns the target
* [[Crimson rune]]: Adds fire damage to the poison dart.
** Level Two: Four darts.
* [[Obsidian rune]]: Slows the poisoned target.
==Runestones In VideoRunestone Videos==
In May 2011 Blizzard released a set of five videos, one for each of the classes, demonstrating various runestones in a single skill each.
===Barbarian's [[Whirlwind]]===
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