tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20292755.post2496142805201519613..comments2024-01-04T02:49:23.470-08:00Comments on Blessing of Kings: Classes in an Alternate Burning CrusadeRohanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/09090769681887119989noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20292755.post-13302375921819653782019-06-17T10:07:57.563-07:002019-06-17T10:07:57.563-07:00No, Bloodlust boosts both damage and threat, so it...No, Bloodlust boosts both damage and threat, so it's kind of a wash. It does boost damage while it's up. However, If the DPS is threat-capped, Salvation will allow them to do 42% more damage all the time.<br /><br />A simple example, let's say a great tank puts out 100 threat/second. The dps is basically limited to 100 damage/second. However, with Salvation, the dps can do 142 damage/second * .7 threat/damage = 99 threat/second.<br /><br />So long as tank threat is the limit for dps, Salvation is extraordinarily powerful.Rohanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09090769681887119989noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-20292755.post-685115880003367282019-06-17T04:54:42.200-07:002019-06-17T04:54:42.200-07:00Was not Blessing of Salvation the counterpart to B...Was not Blessing of Salvation the counterpart to Bloodlust? I.e. damage output was limited foremost by threat (that's why "interesting" rotations like Frosbolt-Frostbolt-Frostbolt-... did exist), and Alliance's solution was to lower damage dealers' threat by Salvation while Horde's solution was to boost tank threat through haste from Bloodlust.souldrinkerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04763196121640763477noreply@blogger.com