![]() And the difference between somebody who has invested all of their points into one spec and somebody who has split them becomes considerable.įor example, take somebody who has acquired 65 million total Artifact power. The increase in point-by-point cost gets very small after you're invested in all of your primary traits. The vast majority of your secondary trait grind occurs at AK25, and it takes a *long* time, and during that time you're getting basically no benefit to your alt specs. Blizzard has made the claim that Artifact Knowledge makes it so that you're never more than a couple of percentage points away between specs, but as we've largely all reached AK25, it's pretty plainly obvious that that's no longer the case. This kind of gearing is nothing new and has been basically the case forever in WoW, although it's become less of an issue over the last three expansions or so as Blizzard has made a lot of gear more applicable to all specs.īut then. You'll probably also want different rings/ring enchants to optimize your gear as well. Obviously, you need a different set of trinkets, and generally you'll want at least a different neck for each spec to benefit from the power neck enchants (Mark of the Heavy Hide is particularly important for tanking). ![]() So here's my question: Is playing with multiple specs just unnecessarily punishing in Legion? When one of our two main tanks can't make it for whatever reason, I tank raids as well. When I do dungeons, I almost always tank. ![]() But historically, most of what I've done on my warrior is tank I also have paladin, DK, and DH at 110 which I also tank on occasionally. ![]() I primarily raid with my guild as Fury, in part because we had two tanks when I joined and in part because I competently do damage without standing in fire. For some background, I main a warrior who is ~885 equipped ilvl. ![]()
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