The thing I thought was missing in Book I that I'd like in Book II is a mage's staff, something that is a bit stronger than the regular staffs, and adds to intelligence and/or perception. I kept wanting my caster to be walking around with his staff, but even the best quarterstaff in Book I is pretty lousy as a weapon.
how about tow handed weapons it would be a great idea of 2 handed weapons which takes the shield away and have better attacking damage than one handed weapons(giant axe club or sword) it would terrify the enemies on sight hehe also holding 2 weapons at the same time is good attack with 2 swords for example ( like spinning in your place like a fan with 2 blades hurst all the foes if ur trapped between 3 or more enemies
Why Hurt Each Other While Fighting The whole World
srry for the spelling mistake at the begginig hehe i mean two handed weapons like holding 1 axe with bothe hands that counts as the light and heavy armor \ light and heavy sword,axe.......
Why Hurt Each Other While Fighting The whole World
There were two-handed weapons in E1. Specifically the quarterstaff, though the animation showed a one-handed attack. Though I'm pretty sure I had a two-handed sword I sold, as well as a two handed axe. Still haven't gotten a traditional fighter run in yet.
I think a cannon would be a good idea: you mix Cotton Wick (for the fuse) and Gunpowder on a Cannon Arm and you get a Cannon you can use at a weapon slot. It is used the same way a bow is, but with cannonballs instead of arrows. However, I don't know if it's very realistic to be able to carry a whole cannon by hand. Perhaps you can carry cannonballs, put them at a fixed cannon and fire it.
King_ov_Death wrote:I think a cannon would be a good idea: you mix Cotton Wick (for the fuse) and Gunpowder on a Cannon Arm and you get a Cannon you can use at a weapon slot. It is used the same way a bow is, but with cannonballs instead of arrows. However, I don't know if it's very realistic to be able to carry a whole cannon by hand. Perhaps you can carry cannonballs, put them at a fixed cannon and fire it.
Hand Cannon FTW! There was effectively just that in the early days of gunpowder weapons. Often just a iron tube, but sometimes mounted on a "stock" (loosely speaking) of some kind. Very inaccurate, unreliable, but inexpensive and easy to train troops to a degree of competence.