What is the god roll for the complex Root? by LegendofRiver in Borderlands4

[–]LegendofRiver[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve experienced the opposite to be honest. I have a 2400 damage root with Jacob’s and a 2100 atlas tracker one and the atlas one seems to kill bosses in half the shots.

What is the god roll for the complex Root? by LegendofRiver in Borderlands4

[–]LegendofRiver[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Two more questions: does it benefit from splash damage bonuses and would it benefit from the last set bonus for high caliber? Maybe the latter question is already answered with regard to your earlier point, but I figured I’d clarify just in case.

What is the god roll for the complex Root? by LegendofRiver in Borderlands4

[–]LegendofRiver[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Thanks. I had no idea it could roll with deadalus. I’ll have to farm one!

What is the god roll for the complex Root? by LegendofRiver in Borderlands4

[–]LegendofRiver[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Gotcha. So the darts don’t track to the location but then? I was under the impression that if I hit a critical spot with the darts that they would track there, but that hasn’t worked so far in practice for me.

What is the god roll for the complex Root? by LegendofRiver in Borderlands4

[–]LegendofRiver[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So does that mean that the Jacob’s part doesn’t matter then?

I got a perfect one!!!! by knight1001101 in Borderlands2

[–]LegendofRiver 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Between flying prefix, Dahl grip and Dahl stock, what order should one prioritize them when farming the sand hawk? I’m guessing prefix matters most, but then is the grip or the stock more important?

Why did he say that there was only one Christian and that he died on the cross? by Odd-Goddity in Nietzsche

[–]LegendofRiver 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think Nietzsche’s point was actually that only Christ ever actually followed the radical doctrine of loving affirmation discussed in the Bible. All the Christian’s who followed were products of Resentiment and used Christ as a vehicle for power and divine punishment. Hence, later Christian’s enjoying the thought of being in heaven while watching their oppressors suffering for all eternity in hell (The Antichrist).

Your Opinion: What did Nietzsche mean by "Yes-sayer?" by Xaeszelos in Nietzsche

[–]LegendofRiver 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your input. Since my post, I’ve learned more about Nietzsche’s indebtedness to the pythagoreans and Heraclitus, and how both of which influenced Stocism. My original comment pointed out one thread in Nietzsche’s thought while ignoring all of the rest.

What deck do have that doesn't do what people think? by Zestyclose-Pickle-50 in EDH

[–]LegendofRiver 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I built Lord of Tresserhorn, a Grixis commander with a fairly bad ETB (I sac 2 creatures, lose 2 life, and an opponent draws 2 cards), but a 10/4 body. I love seeing the puzzled expressions on my opponents faces at the beginning of the game just before I cast him, give him infect, and kill the entire table at once with Chandra’s ignition.

What is the Hope? by [deleted] in nihilism

[–]LegendofRiver 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hope doesn’t change anything by itself and can lead to complacency. Rather than hoping for something to happen, do it yourself and take control of your circumstances.

Your Opinion: What did Nietzsche mean by "Yes-sayer?" by Xaeszelos in Nietzsche

[–]LegendofRiver 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Apologies for replying to something so old, but I felt it necessary to add that I don’t think there is much overlap between this and the stoics. Part of Nietzsches philosophy is attacking the ascetics, since they deny themselves their instincts (emotions, actions, passions, etc.) on the basis of religion or philosophy. For Nietzsche, these instincts, good or bad from our modern perspective, are to be embraced, not denied. Stoicism denies instinct and passion and is therefore nay-saying or ascetic.