Torchlight 2 outlander6/6/2023 As a shotgunner, Rapid Fire gives you a significant increase over your base DPS, and some useful range besides. Rank 15 probably isn’t worth it, as it makes an already expensive skill significantly worse, and you’re not going to be able to run it as often as you’d like anyway. Don’t put more points into the skill until you can get the next breakpoint it gets more expensive without getting all that much better, and you’ll be perpetually mana-starved as it is. You can get 5 ranks at level 10, and 10 ranks at level 40. Rapid Fire has useful breakpoints at 5 ranks (increases the damage output by 50%) and 10 ranks (increases the range to 12 meters). I would suggest just picking one of these, and not selecting Rapid Fire if you are using pistols. Your three core offensive skills are Rapid Fire (great for shotguns), Chaos Burst, and Shadowshot. Feel free to pick it up and be nearly impossible to close on in melee. Once you hit level 40 and get tier 2 Rapid Fire, your range is such that you don’t have to worry about Repulsion Hex pushing enemies out of range. This is a decent option for shotgunners who don’t rely on Repulsion Hex to clear enemies away. A shotgun master using Glaive Sweep triggers the stun and blind effects easily, and if your weapon has a chance to trigger a spell when it hits, this also applies to Glaive Sweep. Shotgun Mastery applies its effects to any skill based on weapon damage with the exception of Rune Vault (which requires 10 ranks before it does this, but isn’t worth it) even the ones that don’t use a gun at all. If you use another skill like Chaos Burst or Shadowshot, go ahead and get Shotgun Mastery too. If you’re using Rapid Fire, don’t get Shotgun Mastery. This is great for keeping you safe from melee opponents, but it’s extremely annoying. If you get both of these skills at the same time, you’ll blast enemies out of range before you can kill them. It increases your knockback to truly ridiculous levels, and I use Rapid Fire. Shotgun Mastery seems like a no-brainer for shotgun users, but I actually passed on this skill. It will improve the damage of every attack and every skill in your arsenal. You should be seeing the pattern here: every shooty Outlander should get Long Range Mastery and max it out. Bow users don’t have anything specific to them, but if you want to use a bow, get Long Range Mastery. Pistol users should get Akimbo in addition to Long Range Mastery. Shotguns benefit from Ranged Weapon Mastery for damage, but not for range keep that in mind, because you’ll need all the damage you can get. This makes big slow shotguns awesome for them, and quick little pistols bad. I’ve experimented with various weapon types, and my preferred weapon is the Shotgun, because the two key skills I use (Rapid Fire and Venomous Hail) are based on your weapons’ damage per shot, not damage per second. They walk that line closer than most other characters to begin with. For now, just know that if you keep raising your Dex to equip the best guns before your level allows you to, you will end up with a crap character, and shooty Outlanders don’t have a whole lot of margin for screwing up before they’re utterly worthless. Some builds can swap between weapon types easily, while others are more specialized based on skill selection. Stat-wise, you will use the same attribute allocation regardless of what type of weapon you want to use. ![]() If you have 109 and max all the appropriate skills, you can hit the dodge cap, but nice round numbers appeal me more than putting one more stat point into something else. I started with a 50/50 split between Strength and Dex until I got to 115 Dex, and then put everything into Strength from that point on. The first thing you need to know about shooty Outlanders is that too much Dex is crap, but you need some anyway. ![]() Maybe you feel guilty and you need to punish yourself, or maybe the suffering just makes you feel more alive, but whatever it is, you’ve decided to use guns or bows instead of throwing that ridiculous overpowered glaive like everybody else. Torchlight 2 Outlander Shotgun Build Guide by Empyreanįirst up, I have a disclaimer: playing a physical Outlander instead of a Focus-based one is the Torchlight 2 equivalent of cutting yourself.
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