[ad_1]
<div _ngcontent-c14 = "" innerhtml = "
After trying to steal the E3 with a pre-show announcement, Destiny 2 The first year went into free game mode and implemented cross-backup, Bungie continues to introduce massive changes in the game after the Activision era. We do not know if all These movements are due to the agreement reached with the late suzerain of the company, but it seems to be so.
Season of Opulence has made quite significant changes to the Eververse store, with less confidence in the safest boxes and more direct purchase options, but starting this fall with Destiny 2: Guarding shadows, the store corrects a problem I have complained about endlessly.
In one blog post last night, Bungie announced that they were changing the operation of the Eververse armor. That is, it is no longer armor, but future Eververse armor sets will only be sold as ornaments that can be applied to any legendary equipment.
This includes all the old Eververse seasonal and event armor that you may have already collected, and Bungie says it's safe to empty your vault of any reserves you might accumulate given this upcoming change. According to Bungie, this change was made to free Eververse's armor from the problem of potential sale of power through benefits. In fact, they admit that before, they tried to give Eververse armor of bad advantage so that they could not be accused of payment system to win, which I had secretly suspected for a long time. But simply making ornamental armor solves this problem instantly.
It's a win-win for everyone. Players have never really managed to make the most of their Eververse armor, because you will have at most 1 to 3 pieces for a place in the limited time, without any guarantee that it will have the benefits you want. Whether you're working hard or throwing away hundreds of dollars, your odds are still just as bad as they are not worth pursuing. But now, this armor is immediately useful because it is purely aesthetic and can be applied to any equipment with any combination of benefits set up under the next slot armor system this fall.
On the Bungie side, it actually makes it much more difficult to buy armor from Eververse. more probably now that it is really useful from an aesthetic point of view. There are few points spending 1200 silver (~ $ 10) on an Eververse armor set with bad rollers at the moment, but if this set of armor can be combined with all benefits to come because of its ornamental nature? This will upset a number of people, including myself.
The armor bit is not the only change proposed by Bungie at the Eververse post. There are also some changes in the brilliant dust economy, I still do not know what to do. Bungie eliminates both the concept of dismantling Eververse equipment for Bright Dust, but also the cost of recovering Eververse material from the collections for Bright Dust, converting it into splinters / shine instead for both sides. Bungie also allows players to win dust with normal Vanguard, Crucible and Gambit bonuses.
I thought It's a better system, but I'm not 100% sure. It all depends on the amount of dust released by these bonuses because it is obvious that you can recover a limited number of these during a given week. huge stocks of dismantling products before (I have 45,000 brilliant dusts, and that spends a lot when I can). We will have to see how this will happen, but it is possible that it means less brilliant dust than before, as Bungie has to encourage purchases to ensure the viability of Eververse. Bungie advises you to dismount everything you currently own at Eververse and that you do not use to build a stock of bright dust before this change occurs. And do it before the change, because after that, it will be rather dismantled.
The change of armor is fantastic, and the shiny dust that one could possibly have is fine too. It really seems to me that Bungie took a decisive step last month and continues to introduce many more changes than I would have even imagined in the post-Activision period. I really hope that everything will be fine, because from my point of view, they seem to make only good popular decisions that the community is always celebrating. It's the right time to be a destiny fan, new or old.
Follow me & nbsp;on Twitter& nbsp;Facebook& nbsp; and & nbsp;Instagram. & nbsp; Read my new science fiction thriller novel & nbsp;Herokiller, now available in print and online. I also wrote & nbsp;The trilogy born of the earth.
">
After trying to steal the E3 with a pre-show announcement, Destiny 2 The first year went into free game mode and implemented cross-backup, Bungie continues to introduce massive changes in the game after the Activision era. We do not know if all These movements are due to the agreement reached with the late suzerain of the company, but it seems to be so.
Season of Opulence has made quite significant changes to the Eververse store, with less confidence in the safest boxes and more direct purchase options, but starting this fall with Destiny 2: Guarding shadowsThe store solves a problem that I constantly complain about.
In an article published yesterday on her blog, Bungie announced that she was altering the operation of Eververse's armor. That is, it is no longer armor, but future Eververse armor sets will only be sold as ornaments that can be applied to any legendary equipment.
This includes all the old Eververse seasonal and event armor that you may have already collected, and Bungie says it's safe to empty your vault of any reserves you might accumulate given this upcoming change. According to Bungie, this change was made to free Eververse's armor from the problem of potential sale of power through benefits. In fact, they admit that before, they tried to give Eververse armor of bad advantage so that they could not be accused of payment system to win, which I had secretly suspected for a long time. But simply making ornamental armor solves this problem instantly.
It's a win-win for everyone. Players have never really managed to make the most of their Eververse armor, because you will have at most 1 to 3 pieces for a place in the limited time, without any guarantee that it will have the benefits you want. Whether you're working hard or throwing away hundreds of dollars, your odds are still just as bad as they are not worth pursuing. But now, this armor is immediately useful because it is purely aesthetic and can be applied to any equipment with any combination of benefits set up under the next slot armor system this fall.
On the Bungie side, it actually makes it much more difficult to buy armor from Eververse. more probably now that it is really useful from an aesthetic point of view. There are few points spending 1200 silver (~ $ 10) on an Eververse armor set with bad rollers at the moment, but if this set of armor can be combined with all benefits to come because of its ornamental nature? This will upset a number of people, including myself.
The armor bit is not the only change proposed by Bungie at the Eververse post. There are also some changes in the brilliant dust economy, I still do not know what to do. Bungie eliminates both the concept of dismantling Eververse material for Bright Dust, but also the cost of recovering Eververse material from the Bright Dust collections, converting it into splinters / shine instead of both sides. Bungie also allows players to win dust with normal Vanguard, Crucible and Gambit bonuses.
I thought It's a better system, but I'm not 100% sure. It all depends on the amount of dust released by these bonuses because it is obvious that you can recover a limited number of these during a given week. huge stocks of dismantling products before (I have 45,000 brilliant dusts, and that spends a lot when I can). We will have to see how this will happen, but it is possible that it means less brilliant dust than before, as Bungie has to encourage purchases to ensure the viability of Eververse. Bungie advises you to dismount everything you currently own at Eververse and that you do not use to build a stock of bright dust before this change occurs. And do it before the change, because after that, it will be rather dismantled.
The change of armor is fantastic, and the shiny dust that one could possibly have is fine too. It really seems to me that Bungie took a decisive step last month and continues to introduce many more changes than I would have even imagined in the post-Activision period. I really hope that everything will be fine, because from my point of view, they seem to make only good popular decisions that the community is always celebrating. It's the right time to be a destiny fan, new or old.
Follow me on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram. Read my new sci-fi crime novel Herokiller, now available in print and online. I have also written The trilogy born of the earth.