Smithing Guide

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smithing guide

gear

Generally speaking, there are a few must-haves for smithing: A piece of jewelry with Haste.

A piece of jewelry with Pyromancy,

Pure metals on your Crest of Chaos.

Enchants on your chest and legs.

Metallurgy on your tongs.

Refining on your boots/gloves (try to get to 7 slots; it's worth it). Refining is basically your bread and butter. A lot of the time, refining will be more of your revenue than the bars (especially in Forge 2).

Inferno on your boots/gloves (try to get to 7 slots; it's worth it)

. A Void Cloak.

Now, there are two skill-defining items outside of that: the Dwarven Pendant and the Elven Pendant. Each of them is extremely valuable—Dwarven for making you super fast and Elven for making you super efficient.

general idea of the skill

Your goal in smithing is to reach breakpoints and calculate your costs. Generally, there are only two useful forges (sorry, first forge, you are kind of useless): Forge Number 2, aka the Dwarven Forge: This is a very low-economy (low-cost) forge because it requires no resources per hour, making it a prime location to use the Dwarven Pendant. In the Dwarven Forge, refining, which is the most important aspect of smithing (more than the bars a lot of the time), will dominate your revenue. Your goal here is to crank the heat as much as possible, unless you are using an ore/core frag that needs a different heat—work that out yourself. Use the Dwarven Pendant because the cost per hour will basically never come close to your profits from refining. Forge Number 3, aka the Volcanic Forge: This is an interesting one. It is by far the fastest forge, allowing you to smith a lot of ores into bars in a very short time, but it is also high-economy (costs a lot). The heat cost and material cost mean you basically must use the Elven Pendant because the heat alone can save you tens of thousands of heat per hour. It is generally very efficient with your ores, so you can make a lot of bars

talents

Now we come to talents. When it comes to talents, if you are not going to go all in on smithing, you can narrow down your options to these few:

Pyromania: Even a 5% reduction in heat use will save you millions in the long run.

Smithing Master: It’s cheap, only costing 3 points, and provides a significant benefit.

Overheating: This talent is generally amazing. More heat is beneficial in both Forge 2, where it costs very little and has a meaningful impact, and Forge 3, where it could provide another option when market conditions make running at higher heat viable.

Slag Refinement: This is quite good because slag is essentially worthless, and you get a lot of refining procs over time.

Molten Metal: This is a weird one because it almost always isn’t the best option due to economic reasons, except for scenarios like working with core fragments.(probly not worth it for most people)

Dwarven Refinement: This will likely be a must-have due to the power of refining, but it is not yet implemented.

tips and advice

Forge 2: Recommended Ores: Gold and Runite ores are generally recommended because they are readily available and usually come at a low price. This makes them prime targets for using the Dwarven Pendant and max heat in Forge 2. Alternative Options: Iron bars can be efficient if you can hit a good breakpoint with the Elven Pendant. I found that at heat 11, iron ore is the most efficient (outside of Forge 3) per ore. However, if you can’t reach heat 11, it’s generally most efficient at heat 7. With the new talent, using pure metals on your tongs might increase efficiency even further (though I haven’t tested this yet, it could be promising).

Forge 3: Basic Strategy: Equip an Elven Pendant and calculate the math to determine what will give you the most bars per price. Advanced Tips: With the new talents, the ability to reach heat 12 without heat enchants opens up potential niche use cases for pure metals or other enchants. While I haven’t fully tested this, it could offer interesting opportunities.

guide made by zoomba