![]() Cast on Death + Portal (saves so much time!) Flame Dash + Faster Casting or any movement skill you like Summon Skitterbots (+ Bonechill, not needed in Bitterdream setup) BUT: If you wait until Library, the gem will be level 1 and you should level it a bit, before you switch! I highly recommend to get one at level 12 or as early as possible and level it during the early acts already!Ĥ-L Icicle: Icicle + Pierce + Trap and Mine Damage + MinefieldĤ-L Icicle: Icicle + Trap and Mine Damage + Minefield + Charged Minesģ-L Icicle in Bitterdream: Icicle Mine + Minefield + Charged MinesĦ-L Icicle: Icicle + Charged Mines + Trap and Mine Damage + Minefield + Increased Critical Strikes + InspirationĦ-L Eye of Winter: EoW + Blastchain Mine + Charged Mines + Minefield + Trap and Mine Damage + Increased Critical Strikes I recorded a full Act 1 to Act 3 Library run for you, see under "Videos" further down. There you can buy Icicle, EoW, Charged Mines. It's located in The Library in The Imperial Gardens. Or you use something else till Act 3 Library Quest ("A Fixture Of Fate". You have to ask someone else to buy it for you in the end of Act 1 - or get one from trade. Note: As Ranger, you can't buy Icicle Mine in Act 1 already. This works really good, because you are not required to invest into this build to be able to farm T14-16 maps. Then you already have a Deadeye :) and can just farm currency with it, until you have saved enough currency to craft or buy everything you need for your bow build. ![]() It's also a good choice, if you're looking forward to make a bow build later. Some players were playing Icicle Deadeye to do "No Hit" Sanctums. You can make the build tanky and also increase the single target dps many, many times, if you invest into it. This version of the build is the cheap, league start atlas completion + mapping version. ![]() Doesn't really require Uber Lab! (it's only a small & situational defence bonus) 4500 life & 100% spell suppression pretty early already It's able to farm T16 maps 1st day of league with only a few chaos invested It's able to progress the entire Atlas 1st day of league (if you don't sleep :D) I've been league starting with it about 10 times already This build is a mapper, it's NOT a bosser It is thought that less than 50 examples of taaffeite exist-many of which are housed in geological and private collections, making this gemstone so rare the ordinary public are unlikely to ever encounter it.- This build works very well to complete the Atlas at league start and farm maps fast Finally the source of the stone was tracked down to Sri Lanka, although a handful have also been found in Tanzania and China. Fortunately, once the new stone had been announced, many other collectors re-examined their own spinel collections and a number of other samples were uncovered. The results revealed that he had discovered a hitherto unknown gemstone-a serendipitous but frustrating situation, since he had discovered a cut gem and had no idea where the mineral naturally occurred. But on closer inspection, he noted that one of the pale mauve gems was not reacting to the light in the same way as the rest of the spinels, so he sent it off to be analyzed. ALEXANDRITE // COLOR-SHIFTING GEMĭonGuennie (G-Empire The World Of Gems) via Wikimedia Commons // CC BY-SA 3.0Īustrian-Irish gemologist Count Edward Charles Richard Taaffe bought a box of cut stones from a jeweler in Dublin in the 1940s, thinking he had purchased a collection of spinels. It’s safe to assume that if a gem of similar quality were to be unearthed, its scarcity alone would ensure it fetched an extremely high price. The gem was only identified as grandiderite after expert analysis and was subsequently sold for an undisclosed sum. In fact, the stone was initially assumed to be another rare gem, serendibite, because grandiderite of that color and transparency had yet to be seen. The majority of the known stones are translucent, but the most rare, and therefore most valuable, example ever found was transparent. This extremely rare blue-green mineral has been found in a number of places around the world, but so far only Madagascar and Sri Lanka have produced any gem-quality stones, and these are still extremely scant. Grandiderite was first described in 1902 by French mineralogist Alfred Lacroix, who found it in Madagascar and named it in honor of the French explorer Alfred Grandidier, an expert on Madagascan natural history. DonGuennie (G-Empire The World Of Gems) via Wikimedia Commons // CC BY-SA 3.0 ![]()
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