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Neutral
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Well, the title says my main question. I've playing this game for awhile and didn't really questioned until now about how damage works. Honestly I didnt notice any difference in damage between trained and untrained wolves. As soon as theirs CP in battle maxed out they reach their full potential. Basically damage depends on wolfs CP and weight. My 1kBE wolf literally deals less damage than a 100BE young wolf just because that young wolf a few pounds heavier. Soo why do people are training BE (or paying someone to train their wolves)? I really dont understand how it works and would highly appreciate if someone help me figure it out <3
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Art Team Darkseeker
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your wolves will deal more damage after learning certain moves (listed in that guide).
but yes you still want high CP and a heavy weight wolf.
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Neutral
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Fox said: your wolves will deal more damage after learning certain moves (listed in that guide).
but yes you still want high CP and a heavy weight wolf.
Yeah, I checked this guide before, when was searching for info and it says that new battle moves don't increase battle damage, just the little bit of accuracy. In PVP wolves with around 100BE still can win from wolves with 1k+BE. Mostly depends on your rng luck. So it doesn't really answer my question about why do people hardly training BE or paying plenty of mushrooms for someone to train their wolves :')
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Darkseeker
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Mainly since later animals/creatures in explore will hit much harder than wolves (and it's just easier to kill something using a team of death grips than bites). . There are other things that will make a wolf hit more (i.e weight, some boosts, CP,) hence why a lot of battle/explore packs focus on heavyweight boosts for their wolves. Battle moves are just an extra thing for more damage.
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Darkseeker
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Having wolves at the highest BE (Death Grip) with the max damage allows them to be the most efficient in explore. This allows explorers to make a profit. I used to have a lot of battle wolves as my primary mush source. When I started out I just had my alphas, which I maxed CP on and started trying to make mush in explore. It took a long time to save up, then I got them trained to DG by a friend. With them, I profited much more in explore and could make more mush faster, in return allowing me to get more wolves trained and become a "battle pack." I would explore 200+ moves at once by buying pottery- and I had to have good wolves to tackle high level enemies and make a lot of mush per enemy to even the spent mush, and then go over. I had multiple wolves so if my 6 got beat by a tough enemy I could use others. Training was not something I had the time or patience- and resources- to do myself. By paying another player I could get a 525 BE (highest damage a wolf will hit) in 3-5 days depending on the trainer for a decent price, and keep my pack self-sustaining through the profit. Players also PvP competively for mush and alliances, which make a TON of mush, especially with Wolves of Warfare event. Short answer: It's wanted when explore is your main mush making method and/or you don't have time to train wolves yourself.
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Neutral
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Thanks y'all for answering my question^^ And thanks Volks for such a detailed answer! BE make more sense now. As I also want to develop my pack mainly for battling so this was really helpful to me
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Art Team Darkseeker
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Haunted Nights said: Fox said: your wolves will deal more damage after learning certain moves (listed in that guide).
but yes you still want high CP and a heavy weight wolf.
Yeah, I checked this guide before, when was searching for info and it says that new battle moves don't increase battle damage, just the little bit of accuracy. In PVP wolves with around 100BE still can win from wolves with 1k+BE. Mostly depends on your rng luck. So it doesn't really answer my question about why do people hardly training BE or paying plenty of mushrooms for someone to train their wolves :')
I think you missed the part I was talking about: Notable moves: 275-299 = Slashing Bite (Off +11) Your wolf will do an additional +2 damage after reaching this move. 525-549 = Neck Snap (Off +21) Your wolf will do an additional +2 damage after reaching this move This is why. If you have a HW wolf trained past neck snap they will deal more damage than a wolf without these features.
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Neutral
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Fox said: Haunted Nights said: Fox said: your wolves will deal more damage after learning certain moves (listed in that guide).
but yes you still want high CP and a heavy weight wolf.
Yeah, I checked this guide before, when was searching for info and it says that new battle moves don't increase battle damage, just the little bit of accuracy. In PVP wolves with around 100BE still can win from wolves with 1k+BE. Mostly depends on your rng luck. So it doesn't really answer my question about why do people hardly training BE or paying plenty of mushrooms for someone to train their wolves :')
I think you missed the part I was talking about: Notable moves: 275-299 = Slashing Bite (Off +11) Your wolf will do an additional +2 damage after reaching this move. 525-549 = Neck Snap (Off +21) Your wolf will do an additional +2 damage after reaching this move This is why. If you have a HW wolf trained past neck snap they will deal more damage than a wolf without these features.
Oh sorry, I indeed missed that. My english is not the best. Thank you again! Edited at January 11, 2024 04:21 PM by Haunted Nights
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