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==Make-X==
 
==Make-X==
   
The Make-X interface allows players to control how they produce items. It can be opened by using two items on each other (like [[bow string]]s on unstrung bows) or clicking on a tool like a range or an anvil. Depending on your membership status, skill levels and materials in your inventory, you will be able to process certain items through the Make-X interface, in skills like [[Smithing]], [[Crafting]], [[Cooking]], [[Fletching]] and [[Herblore]]. Once a recipe has been selected and the skilling begins, a new interface will appear, displaying the experience gained, number left and time remaining.
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The Make-X interface allows players to control how they produce items. It can be opened by using two items on each other (like [[bow string]]s on unstrung bows) or clicking on a tool like a range or an anvil. Depending on your membership status, skill levels and materials in your inventory, you will be able to process certain items through the Make-X interface, in skills like [[Smithing]], [[Crafting]], [[Cooking]], [[Fletching]] and [[Herblore]]. Once a recipe has been selected and the skilling begins, a new interface will appear, displaying the experience gained, number left and time remaining. This last interface can be disabled by right clicking the xp counter and selecting "toggle production dialogue". When disabled the make-x operation works at the same pace as when the dialogue is present. The advantage of having it disabled is that the game area is not obstructed, on fixed screen the dialogue takes up the top half of the screen.
 
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Using a fire.png|Choosing which tool to use
 
Using a fire.png|Choosing which tool to use

Revision as of 00:20, 27 November 2012

Timepiece
This article documents a current event.
Details may change rapidly as the event progresses, and the last updates to this page may not reflect the most current information.
The official Evolution of Combat logo.

The Evolution of Combat is a complete rework of RuneScape's combat system, released on 20 November 2012.[1] Billed as "one of the largest updates in RuneScape's history"[2], the evolution brings a variety of new content, including powerful abilities, dual weapon wielding, new Magic and Ranged equipment and Prayers. In addition, the combat triangle has been massively balanced, monsters have new attacks, and the combat level formula has been revised.

To accommodate the enormous changes, Jagex ran a beta[3] for six months, where players could enter specialised worlds with the new combat system loaded on them. These worlds were segregated from the rest of RuneScape: nothing done on them had any effect on the live version of the game.

Intentions

Jagex have introduced the Evolution of Combat for many reasons that they have stated:

  • To balance out the Combat Triangle. Currently, Melee is very overpowered in comparison to Ranged and Magic[4]
  • To make the combat system "more fluid, interactive and exciting for everyone"[2]
  • To refocus combat to be more about player skill[5]
  • To encourage a variety in combat equipment[5]

Pre-release of the Combat Beta

Leak

Attack skill update leak
Defence skill update leak
Magic skill update leak
Ranged skill update leak
Strength skill update leak

On 4 May, five images of ability icons were uploaded to the Official RuneScape Wiki by a Jagex Moderator. Each picture showed 12 different abilities, in Attack, Strength, Defence, Ranged and Magic. They were soon noticed by the community.

News

On 11 May, the first news about a combat update was posted. It laid the groundwork for the future posts, explaining that there would be a beta prior to the full launch. Additional posts were made in the next weeks, showing off pictures of the evolution and explaining the beta registration process. A Combat HQ page was set up that gave more concrete details, including the first explanation of abilities and the ability bar. A week later, there were posts about buffs and weaknesses, adrenaline, and a day before the beta, dual wielding.[6][7][8]

Og Blogs

Mod Mark (Og) wrote four substantial blogs about upcoming update, enumerating Jagex's goals, and explaining many of the major concepts of the evolution for the first time.[5][9][10][4]

Videos

Before the Evolution of Combat beta was released, the official Jagex YouTube channel released four videos regarding some changes to the new combat system.

The first video briefly showed some different types of abilites with melee, ranged, and magic.[11] It did not include much content as it was just a mention of the Evolution of Combat.

The second video first talked about the hit splats that occur, where it was revealed that "no background" hits are normal hits, whereas the red background hits are attacks done with abilities.[12] The video also introduced a new interface which shows the weaknesses of an opponent and the effects currently on them, such as being bound or being boosted by a potion. Another interface was also introduced which allowed the player to choose where the experience would be obtained in from attacking in that style.

The third video introduced the concept of Adrenaline and the action bar.[13] Different categories for abilities were released: the basic, threshold, and ultimate abilities.

The fourth video revealed dual wielding and how it all works.[14] Most weapons have their own offhand equivalent, and that some weapons in the main servers which is mainly used for its special attack, such as the Enhanced Excalibur, will turn into an offhand weapon. Magical orbs and ranged shields were also shown.

Forums

Just before the Combat Beta was released, Mod Rathe and other Jagex Moderators were hosting Question and Answer threads about the Evolution of Combat on the forums. [15] Many details were mentioned about many topics about the Evolution of Combat.

Combat beta

Main article: Combat beta

Players had to register before the release to gain access to the worlds, and not everyone was accepted to the beta. To do this everyone was given a combat beta contract where a link was found to register the account to play the beta. Players with 12 months of consecutive membership were automatically accepted to the beta, and 50,000 other members were picked.[16] The servers were released on 26 June 2012, [17]but later on all members had access to the beta worlds on weekends.[18]

Action bar

Empty action bar

An empty action bar.

A customisable interface module, the action bar, was added above the chat interface. The action bar consists of five palettes of twelve slots, into which players may add shortcuts to abilities, spells, prayers, items, and even some special interface actions like the quick prayer button. Each shortcut is assigned to a key on a player's keyboard; the default keys are the 1-0 numerical keys, as well as the - and = keys. Players have the option of customising each slot's keybinding to any alphanumerical keyboard key. Players can cycle through the five palettes of slots by clicking on the up/down arrows on the right of the action bar, or by using a keyboard modifier (Ctrl, Shift, Alt) that can also be defined by the user, then pressing the number key that corresponds to the desired palette. For example, if a player who wishes to switch to the third palette has the Alt modifier key set, he or she would press Alt and 3.

Other features of the action bar include a lock icon that fixes each shortcut in place and prevents them from being moved or deleted. While the action bar is unlocked, players can remove shortcuts from the action bar by dragging them into the trash icon beneath the lock icon. The adrenaline bar is at the top of the action bar. Finally, players may minimise the action bar by clicking the small minimise icon in the top-right; right-clicking this icon also allows players to sheathe/unsheathe their weapons, as well as change targets. While the action bar is minimised, shortcuts cannot be used.

Shortcuts are added to the action bar by dragging and dropping an ability, spell, prayer, item, emote, or special interface action into a slot. When a shortcut is triggered, either by clicking on it or pressing the key that is assigned to it, it acts as though its target has been left-clicked. For example, abilities will activate, prayers will activate/deactivate, and items will have their left-click option activated (so a piece of food, or a dose of potion, will be consumed). In this manner, the action bar can be useful for training non-combat skills, as players can keybind activities that would otherwise require repetitive clicking.

Because the action bar's shortcuts can be bound to any alphanumeric key, players must first press the Enter key in order to type into chat. Minimising the action bar allows players to type into chat without first pressing Enter.

Abilities

Main article: Abilities

To replace the old system of weapons having special attacks, Jagex introduced abilities, combat techniques that characters learn and keep with them at all times. There are multiple abilities for every attack style; melee abilities are separated into abilities for Attack and Strength, while Ranged and Magic have multiple abilities of their own. Additionally, there are abilities for Defence and Constitutionthatprimarilyfocus on defence and healing. Most abilities require a certain level in their associated skill to use, and many have equipment requirements; for example, some melee abilities require a two-handed weapon, and some Ranged abilities require dual-wielded Ranged weapons. Additionally, once an ability is used, players must wait for its cooldown period to expire before it may be used again.

Flurry

Abilities are separated into three classes, depending on their adrenaline requirements. Basic abilities require no adrenaline and may be executed at the beginning of combat. Once the adrenaline bar is 50% full, threshold abilities may be used. Threshold abilities are much more powerful and effective than basic abilities. When using, they drain the adrenaline bar minimally. Ultimate abilities may only be used once the adrenaline bar reaches 100% capacity. Ultimate abilities are, as the title suggests, a player's most powerful techniques, and the use of an ultimate ability can easily turn the tide of a battle. Once an ultimate ability is executed, the adrenaline bar drains to 0%.

When not using abilities, players will automatically attack their targets with auto-attacks, with a rate that is dictated by their equipped weapon's speed. The damage of auto-attacks can be increased using the ability Momentum, an ultimate ability found in the Constitution tab.

Effects

Main article: Effect

Abilities can have a wide variety of effects. Some, such as Slice, merely deal extra damage to the target. Some abilities have damage-over-time effects that deal a certain amount of damage over a period of several seconds, in many small damage splats rather than one larger splat. Chain and Ricochet are two abilities that can hit multiple enemies at once. Some abilities stun targets for a short time, which prevents them from taking any action. The abilities for the defence skill can reduce damage taken, reflect damage back at the attacker, heal the user, and even bring the user back to life if the player dies.

Dual Wielding

Many one-handed weapons can now be dual-wielded, with one weapon in each hand. Dual-wielding allows for faster attacks and an overall higher damage per second (DPS) value, but it sacrifices the defensive advantages of a shield. Some melee and Ranged abilities require that two weapons be wielded. Magic spells cannot be dual-wielded, but players can equip spellbooks or orbs into the off-hand, which increase casting speed. This results in roughly the same effect as dual-wielding.

Special off-hand versions of many one-handed weapons exist. For example, instead of equipping two regular dragon scimitars, players must equip one dragon scimitar and one offhand dragon scimitar. The offhand versions of these weapons are obtained in the same manner as the regular versions, either through monster drops, NPC stores, or the Smithing, Crafting, and Fletching skills.

It is revealed in-game at the release time of EoC, but not mentioned in earlier updates, that Dual Wielding is limited to members. All off-hand items can only be accessed and created by members.

Make-X

The Make-X interface allows players to control how they produce items. It can be opened by using two items on each other (like bow strings on unstrung bows) or clicking on a tool like a range or an anvil. Depending on your membership status, skill levels and materials in your inventory, you will be able to process certain items through the Make-X interface, in skills like Smithing, Crafting, Cooking, Fletching and Herblore. Once a recipe has been selected and the skilling begins, a new interface will appear, displaying the experience gained, number left and time remaining. This last interface can be disabled by right clicking the xp counter and selecting "toggle production dialogue". When disabled the make-x operation works at the same pace as when the dialogue is present. The advantage of having it disabled is that the game area is not obstructed, on fixed screen the dialogue takes up the top half of the screen.

Equipment

As part of the Evolution of Combat, many aspects of equipment were entirely overhauled.

Weapons

Weapons give bonuses to Accuracy and Damage (damage dealt) to their respective classes. Each player now derives their offensive potential almost entirely from their equipped weapon(s). This solved a balancing issue that had previously existed for years, wherein melee users could wear any set of armour and still be offensively effective, but rangers and mages had to wear their class' respective armours. Weapon speeds were refined, reducing the number of available speeds. While some melee weapons may have had multiple attack styles, such as a longsword having stab and slash attacks, all weapons now have only one attack style. As a result, longswords and swords now give the same bonuses, and the only difference is their attack style.

All weapons of the same equipment tier (for example, all rune weapons) have had their stats adjusted in order to have roughly the same damage per second (DPS) value. Slower weapons such as rune spears and rune battleaxes are as effective in combat as faster weapons like rune scimitars and rune daggers. This has essentially rendered the concept of different weapons useless. [19] Two-handed weapons have a 50% higher DPS than one-handed weapons of the same tier, to compensate for the lack of an off-hand item.[20]Additionally, two-handed crossbows were released to give Ranged an equivalent to the various melee two-handed weapons. Magic staves were all made two-handed, with slower casting speeds, but providing a significant damage increase in return.

Armour

Pieces of armour now give bonuses to the Armour value of their respective class, which is a single value as opposed to the multiple possible defensive bonuses previously available. The Armour value is combined with a player's current class in order to determine their defence against different attacks. A player who equips a set of melee armour will have a high Armour rating that is of the melee class. According to the combat triangle, that player will have a strong defence against Ranged attacks, a moderate defence against melee attacks, and a weak defence against Magic attacks.

Many, if not all, pieces of armour boost lifepoints, in a similar manner as torva, pernix, and virtus armours did previously. However, the boosts are much more substantial; players who equip armour sets that are appropriate for their levels receive as much as 60% of their total lifepoint pool from their armour - more if wielding a shield.[21] Currently, with the best tier of armours and a bonfire boost, with either Rocktails or Saradomin brews can a player go over 10,000 lifepoints.

Armours of different classes, but of the same tier, were adjusted to have the same stats. For example, a dragon platebody is of the same tier as a black d'hide body and a grifolic poncho, as all require level 60 Defence to wear. These three items all give the same bonus to Armour and the same life points boosts, but each gives its armour bonus to its class (Melee, Ranged, and Magic, respectively).

Weaknesses

Weakness interface

Player and monster weaknesses in combat were expanded and made more prominent. The combat styles tab was replaced with the Combat tab, where players can view certain information about themselves and their opponent, such as remaining life points, any active buffs or debuffs, and weaknesses. Players have weaknesses as dictated by the style of armour they wear; a player wearing ganodermic armour, a type of Magic armour, will have a weakness to Ranged attacks. Players who attack a monster with that monster's weakness will be more effective offensively, although players are not outright prevented from fighting a monster with a style other than that monster's weakness.

Weaknesses could simply be melee attacks, or stab/slash/crush attacks in particular. Monsters could be weak to Magic attacks in general, or specifically weak to air, water, earth, or fire spells. Different Ranged weaknesses include bolts, arrows, and thrown weapons. However, players will only be weak to one of the three combat styles, not any of the more specific weaknesses.

Most boss monsters, such as generals in the God Wars Dungeon, have no weakness. Against these monsters, all attack styles are equally effective, and players may use whichever offensive styles they like. This was part of an effort to balance the combat triangle, and to make Ranged and Magic more effective in combat. Players may also have no weakness if they equip armour with Armour bonuses to all classes, such as Void Knight equipment. However, such armour usually has lower bonuses than class-specific armour.

New content

New armour types exist to fill gaps in Ranged and Magic armour and to thus balance the Combat triangle. Additionally, there exist new shields and boots for all classes.

New melee equipment

For melee, there are new offhand weapons, such as the offhand chaotic rapier and off-hand dragon scimitar. Some new shields, such as the Bandos warshield, were planned for the Evolution of Combat but were released beforehand into the main game. As the claws were separated into a main-hand and an off-hand weapon, players who had any kind of claws in their banks before the release of the EoC, were notified about the change and had their regular claw and the offhand verison.

New ranged equipment

  • New Ranged armour was created to fill in a low-level tier. Carapace armour can be crafted from Carapace, and it requires 30 Ranged and Defence.
  • Hard leather armour and Studded leather armour were given boots, gloves and shields to fill out the sets.
  • Ranged armour sets from leather to black dragonhide now include dragonhide shields.
  • Longbows have been turned into shieldbows, which in addition to their offensive bonuses also give Defence and lifepoint boosts.

New magic equipment

New Magic armour was released to fill in missing tiers.

In addition, all magic armour sets were updated to include one-handed main weapons (wands), off-hand weapons (orbs) and shields (books). Other sets like Virtus and Ganodermic were given boots and gloves.

Other changes

Combat level

The combat level formula has been greatly simplified; it is now , where is a player's highest skill level among Attack, Strength, Magic, Ranged and Summoning. Consequently, players will start off at combat level 4, and the maximum combat level is 200. Constitution and Prayer no longer affect combat level.

Experience gain

Previously, players would get combat experience for hitting their opponent after every successful hit. However, players now get the experience after they defeat their opponent, ranging from very little to extremely high XP at a time. This has removed some popular training methods, such as throwing red chinchompas at mummies and attacking a Dagannoth sentinel in the Dominion Tower. To balance this out, there is an interface where you can choose where your experience goes for each combat style. For example, while attacking an opponent with melee, a player can choose to receive all experience in Attack, Strength, Defence, or all; while attacking with Ranged, a player can choose to receive experience in either Ranged, Defence, or both.

Attacking/Weapons

Attacking is much different in the EoC, as there is no more combat modes to pick when fighting. An example are Rune crossbows, they have a much shorter range now, making some bosses like Dagannoth Prime harder to kill. Also, if a player has a maging/ranging weapon and a defender, the player will go into the melee range of the monster and attack them with both the defender and the maging/ranging weapon.

Staffs are now two-handed, meaning no shields can be used for them. This can provide a problem to mages trying to kill dragons that use dragonfire.

Monsters

Monsters were greatly affected by the EoC. Their combat levels were formatted and range from very low levels up to 210. Some monsters had an increased combat level and were much more harder to kill then before (Goblins were from level 13-17 and are now 120-123). Some monsters were much more agressive then before; Saradomin Spiritual warriors and mages were maken more agressive towards players not wearing Saradomin-related items. Also, monsters will retaliate back against the person that first attacked them, instead of attacking the monster that they are currently fighting. Some monsters are much more difficult to kill then before; the Dagannoth Kings are much more dangerous then before, but some were more easier to kill with a simplified inventory of Prayer potions and Rocktails.

Some monsters were refitted with a new style of attack, and some had a boost in their defenses against combat styles they were strong against. For example, Bloodvelds, who usually use a magic-based melee attack, now use pure magic attacks instead. Other monsters, such as Aberrant spectres, were weak to range now and had much more stronger defense against melee attacks then before.

Because of the combat level changes, some many previously agressive monsters were now tolerant depending on the player's combat level. Such examples are Aberrant spectres in the Slayer Tower, most monsters in Kuradal's Dungeon, Trolls (execpt Thrower trolls at Death Plateau). Some were extremely agressive then before, such as Revenants who will attempt to attack the player whenever they can, even going to the borders of their wander range to attack the player.

Multi-Combat

Everywhere on RuneScape is multi-combat, including the Wilderness. As a result, familiars can be used anywhere and attack anything. Due to complaints over the multicombat Wilderness because of large numbers of rushers and player jumpers, the Single-Way Wilderness was introduced that allows you to swap from Multi-combat to Single-combat in the Wilderness, or vice-versa. However this requires around a 10 second wait which is interruptable. Multi-combat players are shown with two swords crossed on their head.

Wilderness

Along with the combat updates to the Wilderness, players are now automatically skulled. This means that if you die, you will lose every item, unless the Protect Item prayer is active. A warning is given in a game or chat box when you enter the Wilderness. Wilderness levels were also changed. For example, if you use a Waka canoe to enter the Wilderness, you will end up at level 42 Wilderness. This was to make up for the range of combat levels, making the Wilderness twice as deadly as before.

Food

The healing power of food has been drastically altered. Each piece of food has an optimal Constitution level where that type of food heals more than any other. The amount healed starts off at 200, and is equal to 16 times your Constitution level, up to the optimal level, then it will heal 20 times your Constitution and stop increasing. This optimal level is usually tied in with the Cooking level requirement for the food, if any.

For example, level 80 Constitution is Shark's optimal level. At that level, eating a shark will heal 1600 lifepoints, and eating a Rocktail will only heal 1280, even though the rocktail is of a higher tier. This creates a demand for many types of food, as the best food is dependent on your Constitution level.

Prayers

Prayer active

Protection prayers and Deflect curses no longer provide full protection from monsters, but instead give a 50% damage reduction. The Augury and Rigour prayers are no longer unlocked through Dungeoneering. They are available by completing the Knight Waves Training, and any dungeoneering tokens used to purchase them were refunded[22]

There are two new Ancient Curses, unlocked after completing The Temple at Senntisten. Both require 95 Prayer.

There are three new prayers in the standard prayer book that increase Magic Strength:

There are three new prayers in the standard prayer book that increase Ranged Strength:

Ammunition

Rune requirements for spells have changed, and on the whole are significantly lower. For example, it is possible to cast Wind Surge using only air runes, instead of air runes, death runes, and blood runes. Ice Barrage costs two blood runes and five water runes. Rush and Burst spells use death runes, whereas Blitz and Barrage spells use blood runes. Additionally, only auto-attacks consume ammunition for rangers and runes for mages; abilities do not consume ammunition.

Poison

Main article: Poison

Previously, poison was applied to specific weapons (spears, daggers, arrows) and stayed on permanently. Now, poison works in a manner similar to other potions; drinking a dose of weapon poison will temporarily poison all weapons for a predetermined period. The poison counts as a buff for the player. While fighting monsters, there is a small chance that they will be poisoned for about a minute, and a small poisoned hit will be displayed every ten seconds.

Monster poison was affected too. K'ril's starting poison can vary, and he has the ability to decrease the duration of antipoison effects and increase his poison against players.

Miscellany

  • Magic blastboxes and celestial surgeboxes provide unlimited air runes in the ammunition slot, instead of storing runes for combat spells.
  • The Inspiration aura affects the adrenaline bar instead of the special attack bar.
  • Barrows equipment and void Knight equipment still retain their set effects. However, they only trigger on auto-attacks, not when abilities are used.
  • Godswords' special attacks were replaced with passive abilities that mimicked their former special attacks. The enhanced excalibur, now the offhand abyssal whip equivalent, has a passive healing effect.
  • Untradable potions such as extreme potions and overloads are usable in the Wilderness.
  • The ring of vigour allows players to retain 5% of the adrenaline bar after using an ultimate ability, instead of the bar draining to 0%.
  • Korasi's sword has had a stat increase, to compensate for its loss of special attack, and is now stronger than the abyssal vine whip but slower.
  • All Dominion Tower gloves are now wielded in both hands and are now the equivalent of a level 80 weapon of their combat style. They still retain their previous special effects. They were, however, reverted back to items in the gloves slot but still retain a passive ability.
  • The polypore staff has had its spell removed from the staff and placed in the spellbook instead. The staff must be wielded to cast the spell, and still degrades based on usage.
  • With the addition of new equipment, some of the old equipment's level requirements were rebalanced to better fit on the new scale. Among the prominent changes, rune equipment was raised from level 40 to 50 Attack and Defence, ganodermic armour was lowered from 85 to 75 Magic and Defence, and glacor boots were raised from 75 to 85 Defence and relevant combat skill.

Market effects

The removal of special attacks and the reordering of equipment have caused significant price changes in the main game, even prior to the implementation of these changes. In the lead-up to the combat beta, the future removal of special attacks and the equality of godswords was announced. This caused dragon claws and the more expensive godswords to gradually crash to historic lows, although much of this loss was later made up as the Evolution of Combat took so long to implement. When the full release was announced on 7 November, many staples of the old combat system like amulets of fury, dragon claws, dragonfire shields and berserker rings immediately, with the claws specifically losing half of their value in a matter of hours. Torva armour, Pernix armour and the more expensive Spirit shields also gradually lost value as the release date approached. Many potions also lost their value as potions like Saradomin brews, Super restores were considered bad.

Other items however, such as the Fremennik rings (except Berserker), Barrows equipment (execpt Karil's and Dharok's) rose in price because the rings gave a 2.7x bonus of their combat type, and Barrows equipment had the same health and defense as God Wars equipment. Some potions were unaffected because players need it (such as Antifires and Prayer potions).

Free players play minor but noticeable roles inside the market effects. Since the EoC favor weapons with higher damage output and accuracy per hit, Rune warhammer, battleaxe and 2h sword stayed high in price, while rune scimitar losing its focus and dropped towards 13,000 coins throughout the six months of beta. Adamant equipment slightly rose because players with 40 to 49 attack/defense would have to train it to 50 or use adamant, which required 40 attack/defense.

Release

Entering the Evolution of Combat

The Evolution of Combat update happened in the morning of 20 November 2012. The servers were taken offline at 10:16am UTC and came back online at roughly 10:20am UTC.

When first logging in after the update, players' items were unequipped to their inventory if there was space there, or to their banks otherwise. All players were given 15 extra bank spaces to ensure that this was possible. They were also teleported to a safe location, randomly chosen from Lumbridge, Varrock (East or West bank), Edgeville, Draynor, Falador (East or West bank), Al Kharid or the Grand Exchange.

References

  1. ^ Jagex. "Evolution of Combat Launches 20th November!." RuneScape News.
  2. ^ a b Jagex. "The Evolution of Combat." 11 May 2012. RuneScape News.
  3. ^ Jagex. "Combat Beta Sign-Up." RuneScape News.
  4. ^ a b Jagex. "Og Blog: The Final Challenges." Developers' Blogs.
  5. ^ a b c Jagex. "Og Blog: Evolution of Combat." Developers' Blogs.
  6. ^ Jagex. "Combat: Buffs and Weaknesses." RuneScape News.
  7. ^ Jagex. "Combat: Action and Adrenaline." RuneScape News.
  8. ^ Jagex. "Evolution of Combat: Dual Wielding." RuneScape News.
  9. ^ Jagex. "Og Blog: Skill, Variety and Fun." Developers' Blogs.
  10. ^ Jagex. "Og Blog: Tradition and Challenge." Developers' Blogs.
  11. ^ runescape. RuneScape Behind the Scenes - Behind the Scenes - BTS#3 - Fish Flingers and Combat's Abilities. 03:33, November 8, 2012 (UTC).*
  12. ^ runescape. BTS#4 Combat Buffs & Weaknesses and the Crucible. 03:33, November 8, 2012 (UTC).*
  13. ^ runescape. BTS#5 - Combat's Action and Adrenaline Bar. 03:33, November 8, 2012 (UTC).*
  14. ^ runescape. BTS#6 - fingers, fighting and a special reveal!. 03:33, November 8, 2012 (UTC).*
  15. ^ Mod Rathe. "Q&A Answer Thread." RuneScape Forums.
  16. ^ Jagex. "Combat Beta Information!." RuneScape News.
  17. ^ Jagex. "Evolution of Combat Beta - Live!." RuneScape News.
  18. ^ Jagex. "Combat Beta Weekends: Featured Events & Essential Info!." RuneScape News.
  19. ^ Jagex Talks Combat - More Info. Jagex.*
  20. ^ Dual Wields VS 2Hands??. Jagex.*
  21. ^ Og Blog: The Final Challenges. Jagex.*
  22. ^ Moerdred. "Jagex Talks Combat - More Info." RuneScape Forums.