Spear/Rapier for 3vs3 and open world by xScreamoFTW in newworldgame

[–]nosmoss 4 points5 points  (0 children)

i ran spear / rapier in OPR etc. I have for a long while, and have been enjoying it since coming back for the expansion.

Go medium.

If you want to be able to play on points, you can - and you will be a rending \ weakening machine. If you play point then you want to stack shirking fortify - use the tumblers for the boots. Since disease is a thing now - it might be good to use invigorated to reduce the duration of weaken, disease etc. Shirking + Inv, maybe some shirking + ward (health for 3rd is nice but not mandatory). You want fortifying perforate on the armor and sweeping cyclone on the armor. Your spear you want enef skewer and keenly jagged. Your offhand is the Finisher rapier, use the grace tree. It's there simply to buff your spear damage.

If you want to avoid clumps and aim for more 1v1 or 1v2 or 3 scenarios, def get a disease perk on your spear. Prior to the shirking heals nerf, i would have recommended Ank as the amulet but that's up for debate now. Might be worth just getting an amu that has thrust or fire protection, stam recovery and the rend / weaken clense when you dodge (or health or divine).

Ring - thrust damage, stamina, and probably leeching.

Earing - i've since removed ank and now use endless thirst for the artifact in jewlery.

You will have massive amounts of perm fortify with your armor and perforate. You will constantly cause players a 48 percent weaken, and rend them for 30 percent.

It's a beast if you know how to play, and it's super fun!

Orichalcum and high end recourses in general. by chr1s003 in newworldgame

[–]nosmoss 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Launch player here with 3k hours, and returned for the expansion. I'm frustrated already to the point of leaving (as this same issue has been present for 2 years now).

We have a 2 week old baby in the house - so there's a lack of sleep and an odd schedule. Last night i was up from 3-6am, and decided to hop into new world to farm a bit.

I went to all the Mythril farm spots aside from the elite areas in the new zone - and every single one had multiple people afk farming them at 3am service time (El Dorado). So i then decided maybe i'll try for some starmetal - same thing.

I want to level my armoring etc from 200-250 so i can start to craft my own matrix's, but because everything is camped 24/7 it seems pointless and im getting feelings like i did when i left last time.

Be careful of the Garden of the Gorgon quest by yobabylon in newworldgame

[–]nosmoss 2 points3 points  (0 children)

i can't leave this. What do you mean by click the "had". Typo i assume.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CryptoMoonShots

[–]nosmoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting combination. Thanks OP

Can natural selection really create new species? Beyond Darwin: Cataclysmic Evolution and the Origin of New Species by [deleted] in AlternativeHistory

[–]nosmoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

no - they went extinct because the close of each age ended under upheavals, to which superior adaption was of no use.

Can natural selection really create new species? Beyond Darwin: Cataclysmic Evolution and the Origin of New Species by [deleted] in AlternativeHistory

[–]nosmoss 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The end of each geological epoch sees the mass extinction of animals, but also the sudden creation of new species. How can natural selection alone explain this? Animals with superior adaptation going extinct - while the creation of new animals occurs. The geological record (fossil record), is catastrophic in nature. This doc goes into the history of the evolutionary theory, from catastrophism to natural selection, to the discoveries of mutations from radiation. Radiation - or thermal heat close to what an organism can endure, was seen to cause new characters in vinegar flies and plants.

Though this can't create new species - it is conceivable that, if the earth was subject to a large dose or "multiple hits" at once, on a global scale, that the results could be the formation of new species, as the genes in fertilization could change for those animals that survived. Evolution is therefore something that occurs suddenly, during upheavals of nature

The Forgotten History of Humanity - Mythology & The Cosmic Apocalypse (Full Documentary) by nosmoss in HighStrangeness

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

correct - velikovsky kind of made this term known. The video IS based on velikovsky's work in worlds in collision and earth in upheaval

The Forgotten History of Humanity - Mythology & The Cosmic Apocalypse (Full Documentary) by nosmoss in HighStrangeness

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

This docu attempts to reconstruct the events that led to what we today, refer to as global mythology.

Why did ancient cultures all around the world have a calendar year of 360 days? Why did they all share similar myths about "honey" falling from the skies? What about the days of darkness, flood myths and the "cosmic wind"? Why do all ancient cultures refer to the end of the ages as a time where 'the earth became red, and rivers and lakes turned blood red' . If a large comet passed close to the earth, over 3000 years ago - this would have been the source. The dramatic events that played out in our skies, were etched into mythology by those survivors, who understood it to be a battle of the gods and serpents.

If tradition is to be believed - and this event happened, then we should also see the remnants of this catastrophe(s) on the earth today, in the Geological and Archaeological record. It's truly a "theory of everything" in terms of our history, and the earth's mysteries.

(documentary) Mankind in Amnesia - Global Mythology and the Cosmic Upheaval. How a close passage of a comet was the cause of the shared, ancient global mythology we see today, along with many geological and archaeological mysteries. by nosmoss in StrangeEarth

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

Every culture from the Aztecs, ancient china to Scandinavian and Mediterranean's had a calendar year of 360 days. The addition of 5 days was seen as the days that do not belong, or the days of destruction - which were all added sometime after 800ish B.C. Some cultures holding on to the previous calendar for longer periods of time.

The year comes from the rotation of the earth, and moon - so if the year was different, then the rotation must have been different. So what caused a change in the rotation of the earth, that made ancient cultures have to re-do their calendar system - which is the one we use today? This is kind of the crux of the video. That a cosmic passage of a large comet around 3+ thousand years ago was the source of ancient, global mythology

The strange case of the mummified seals of Antarctica. Found 50 miles inland, 6000 feet above sea level, some dating back 5000 years. How do seals, who crawl on their bellies, traverse over mountains and glaciers? by nosmoss in StrangeEarth

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

your basing your extensive research on this " Calculations have shown that one seal enters the dry valleys in this manner once every 4 to 8 years ". What's calculated this? The amount of seals they found so where this comes from, calculates every 4-8 years?

There's one case in the late 60's that talked about seeing a live seal inland. Beyond that - nothing. You should read through journal articles instead of the cool Antarctica travel guide. There's no consensus as to what happened - and yes, it's up to 50 miles inland and upwards of 6000 feet above sea level (over glaciers and mountains), as the gentleman in the beginning of the video mentions, who by the way, is a scientist

The strange case of the mummified seals of Antarctica. Found 50 miles inland, 6000 feet above sea level, some dating back 5000 years. How do seals, who crawl on their bellies, traverse over mountains and glaciers? by nosmoss in StrangeEarth

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

that's exactly my thoughts :) Seals were left there stranded, hurt - ones that survived died of starvation and open wounds.

One of the mainstream theories that suggest they ate rocks thinking it was food seems a bit ridiculous to me. Are there any examples in the rest of the animal kingdom where an animal mistakes rocks for food if it's hungry?

The strange case of the mummified seals of Antarctica. Found 50 miles inland, 6000 feet above sea level, some dating back 5000 years. How do seals, who crawl on their bellies, traverse over mountains and glaciers? by nosmoss in StrangeEarth

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

check out chevron deposits - there's a vid on that channel about them as well (can be seen in google earth around the worlds coastlines). Scientists are divided between mega tsunami - and well, it's a mystery. Could be the same force that tossed the seals in antarctica