Armor
Armor
“When you attack an enemy, or when you are attacked, the attack strikes a specific location instead of striking the entire person. Because of this, each piece of armor you wear on a different body location is used to determine how much damage you take when that specific body location is struck by an attack. For example, if you are wearing poor armor for your helm and strong armor on all other body locations, and you take a blow to the head, you won't gain any additional protection from the strong pieces of armor. Only your headgear is taken into account for that particular blow. Note that some defenses, such as shields, absorption runes, item upgrades, and spells will give you additional armor on all body locations simultaneously. Furthermore, effects that reduce a target's armor, reduce it on all armor locations simultaneously.
Armor is worn by a character to partially protect them from damage. Every character starts with a weakest-level set.
Armor pieces[edit]
A character may wear up to five pieces of armor at a time, and a set consists of these pieces:
- Helm/headgear (often shared between basic armor sets)
- Chest armor
- Hand armor
- Leg armor
- Footwear
Properties[edit]
Armor has three properties:
- Armor art – the appearance, both when worn and as an inventory icon
- Armor rating – the numerical value that determines damage protection
- Armor bonus – other bonuses on each piece, both profession-specific and by upgrades
Acquisition[edit]
Armor is acquired from armorers or collectors in exchange for currency and materials or trophies respectively.
Notes[edit]
- Certain salvage items are also labeled as armor, but they can't be equipped or upgraded. They symbolically represent the armor that enemies wear. They are the source of runes and insignias, though the creatures that drop these items do not directly benefit from them.
- Armor pieces cannot be swapped in a PvP match, after the October 25, 2006 update.
- For information on how to acquire specific armor, see Armor art or a profession's page and follow the links to the separate armor articles.
- When attempting to sell an armor piece to a merchant, it asks for confirmation before the armor piece is sold.
- Top and leg armor, as well as costume bodies, do affect the sound you make while walking.
- Usually the lighter and the less metallic the armor is the less sound you make, although this is not always the case.
- The sound is determined by the top or leg armor with the highest sound, and any costume body will override the sound of the armor if shown.
See also[edit]
- See also: Order of damage modifiers
- Armor art comparison
- Armor calculation
- Damage calculation
- Costume
- Festival hat
- List of armor effects by category
- Perfect/maxed armor
- Prestige (or "elite") armor