Fire Strike + Ember: strike is the best damage, and Ember seems like it might be the best all-around effect for Strike of the Giants; potentially giving your allies advantage on hitting everything around you for a turn, and giving them disadvantage on all attacks is insane, in addition to passively resisting fire damage
Frost Strike + Fury: modest damage with a good control rider, but they'll just smack you anyway unless you move away; Fury is just a ranged version of the base strike but as a reaction and 30-foot range
Stone Strike + Keenness: strike seems "meh," not that impactful; but Keenness gives a bonus action option with all the benefits of Hill Strike but at a 60 foot range - this just seems like a no-brainer, effectively complete upgrade over Hill
Storm Strike + Soul: strike seems fine enough on its own, probably a bit better than Frost Strike for preventing damage to your party; but Soul being a bonus action that automatically makes you harder to hit (no save), in addition to forcing a STR save against halving movement speed, makes this look like the best for control and preventing damage to your party
Basically see title for my question. I know it's a bit stupid but just want to know if anyone has hit this implicit modifier using lesser eldritch embers specifically. I've been rolling for this mod all week and have yet to hit. Every chaos I drop goes toward more embers.
Just a quick question about the title. Is it possible to get the strike skills target # additional nearby enemies as an implicit on gloves?
Are there any hidden requirements to landing it? Is it possible at all?
As you exit the tent, turn left and confront Nurah about carrying Alchemist's Fire. Run around the camp, taking out gargoyles and picking up party members. To the south, loot the human body (near a few gargoyles) to acquire Phylactery of Positive Channeling.
True Strike is any auto attack that cannot miss or be evaded by the target. True strike ignores evasion and blinds, allowing the user to always hit the target. True strike does not guarantee the hit if it is disjointed. True strike does not work against buildings.
It is made from high carbon steel, professionally cut and heat treated right here in Utah. Like all our strikers, it will fit comfortably inside of an Altoids tin fire kit. It can also be included as part of a Fire Necklace. And we have suitable stone for striking sparks if you can't find any in your area.
Our strikers can rust and tarnish. This is why they cast a spark when struck against stone; rust is just a slow form of burning. This is only cosmetic and harmless. They polish up easily with an abrasive sponge or sand paper.
On Monday, March 20, GEO members voted yes to authorize the strike process. In a press release shared with The Michigan Daily, GEO wrote that they hope the strike will improve the current state of negotiations and encourage the University to consider their demands.
In a letter sent to the campus community Friday morning, University President Santa Ono and Provost Laurie McCauley addressed the strike authorization by GEO. If a strike happens, Ono and McCauley said the University will continue to function and will respect the rights of groups to peacefully protest.
Houses with wood shake or shingle roofs are many times more likely to be destroyed during a wildfire. Using wood shakes or shingles for roofs in high fire hazard areas is like stacking hundreds of pounds of kindling on top of your home. During the hot summer months, the shakes or shingles can be nearly bone dry and easily ignited by embers. The embers come from pieces of burning material that can be lofted high into the air during a wildfire and travel a mile or more from the actual fire.
Unfortunately, there is no effective, inexpensive long-term solution to the ember threat to wood roofs. We recommend replacing wood shake or shingle roofs with a rated, fire-resistant roofing material, such as asphalt composition shingles, metal, or concrete or clay tile. Although this can be expensive, it may well be the one thing that saves your home when the embers arrive.
Rain gutters attached to the edge of your roof are perfect for catching embers during wildfire. Burning embers can land in the gutters and if they are filled with dried leaves, pine needles, and twigs, a fire can start and possibly ignite the roof, roof sheathing, and fascia. Even houses with fire rated roofs are vulnerable to this type of ember attack. Rain gutters made of vinyl will melt and drop into flower beds, igniting plants next to the house and maybe even combustible siding. To keep your home safe, we suggest that you:
One of the most common ember hazards homeowners create is the placement of firewood stacks next their home. During a wildfire, hundreds of burning embers could become lodged within the stack. The dry, high winds that often accompany wildfire can fan the embers and cause ignition. Once burning, the firewood stack can jeopardize just about any home, regardless of construction material, because of its ability to ignite combustible siding, provide a flaming exposure to windows and break the glass, or climb to the eave and possible enter into the attic.
Decks are a common feature of homes situated in high fire hazard areas. They are also one of the parts of your home that are vulnerable to embers during wildfire. This applies to decks comprised of wood boards as well as those made from plastic and wood-plastic composite deck boards. If your deck ignites, the flames can ignite your combustible siding, break the glass on an adjacent window or sliding glass door, or climb to the eave and burn into your attic. If you have a deck and live in a high fire hazard area, you should consider the following tips:
During a wildfire, vent openings have also been shown to be one vulnerable spots for ember entry into your home. This creates a dilemma for homeowners. Many vents use wire mesh coverings. Some building codes set the minimum mesh size for these at 1/4 inch. Smaller mesh sizes can become clogged by paint, cobwebs, debris, etc. that will reduce air flow. Unfortunately, the 1/4-inch mesh is not effective in preventing ember entry into the attic, eave, and crawl space vents. For existing homes, consider the following:
During a wildfire, thousands of windblown embers may pelt your house like hail during a storm. Many of the embers that strike the side of the house can fall to the ground and accumulate next to your home. If your neighborhood is asked to evacuate as wildfire approaches, the embers can lie there, glowing unattended for hours or even days. If the embers are in contact with a wood or other combustible material sided house, or something that can ignite in the flowerbed, your home could be in jeopardy.
Unfortunately, fuel breaks can also provide a false sense of security to the members of a community. Some homeowners assume that once the fuel break is created, they are fire safe and that no further action on their part is required. This is not true. Wind driven embers can be transported over the fuel break and ignite new fires on the other side. Homes that have not prepared for the ember threat are vulnerable despite the presence of the fuel break.
While community level fuel breaks are important in reducing the wildfire threat, they are not enough. Homeowners must continue to do their part by creating defensible space around their home and making their properties resistant to ignition from embers.
Now assume that your home is exactly as you left it this morning when you left for work. Would it survive under these conditions? Did you leave a window open? Did you forget to close the garage door? Is the firewood pile stacked next to the house? Are the garbage cans on the back porch full and not covered by lids? Take steps now to reduce the ember threat to your home. Waiting until the fire starts may cost you your home.
For skills, max out ember lightning and critical strikes (plus equipment that provides bonuses to crit). With these two, you can hold SHIFT and click to attack remote enemies, even through walls and across chasms. It's almost too easy - the lightning bolts ricochet, attacking multiple foes, and with critical strike it's not uncommon to deal 1000-2000 hp of damage per hit.
A DSE spokesman said there were potential fire outbreak points this morning on the south side of the Moondarra Dam, and that residents in the towns of Tyers, Yallourn North, Moondarra and Erica should be on alert for embers.
At about 3:30 PM on a Saturday afternoon, Kevin Marnell was hiking along Eagle Creek in the scenic Columbia Gorge, along the border between Oregon and Washington. The National Scenic Area has been protected for over 30 years and contains the only navigable river to run through the Cascade Mountain range to the Pacific Ocean. Rainforests and grasslands have created a thriving ecosystem along both the Oregon and Washington sides, with humans living there for some 13,000 years. On the afternoon of September 2nd, Marnell heard loud banging sounds, like gunfire. He soon realized it was worse than gunfire, as thick smoke began rising nearby.
President Obama's foreign policy has been a disaster, and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was one of its chief architects. Under the Obama-Clinton doctrine, there has been no strategy to confront the threats to our nation. They have acquiesced to our adversaries and alienated our allies. They have made critical decisions based not on circumstances on the ground, but on political calculations. The net effect of this approach has been to embolden the forces of violence and chaos, to disquiet the forces of security and stability, and ultimately leave our nation less secure. Today we stand at the brink of a nuclear and enriched Iran, while facing more radical Islamic groups with the capacity and desire to strike our homeland than at any time since 9-11.
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