Difference between revisions of "User:Jdavis/Armor"
From SpiralKnights
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{{User:Jdavis/row}} | {{User:Jdavis/row}} | ||
− | {{User:Jdavis/cell|[[Sacred Falcon Pathfinder Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Pathfinder Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Pathfinder Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Pathfinder Armor|Sn]] Pathfinder}} | + | {{User:Jdavis/cell|Sacred [[Sacred Falcon Pathfinder Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Pathfinder Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Pathfinder Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Pathfinder Armor|Sn]] Pathfinder}} |
{{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+pier}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+pier}} | ||
{{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun dam+1}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun dam+1}} | ||
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{{User:Jdavis/row}} | {{User:Jdavis/row}} | ||
− | {{User:Jdavis/cell|[[Sacred Falcon Guerrilla Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Guerrilla Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Guerrilla Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Guerrilla Armor|Sn]] Guerrilla}} | + | {{User:Jdavis/cell|Sacred [[Sacred Falcon Guerrilla Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Guerrilla Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Guerrilla Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Guerrilla Armor|Sn]] Guerrilla}} |
{{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+pier}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+pier}} | ||
{{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun bst dam+2}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun bst dam+2}} | ||
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{{User:Jdavis/row}} | {{User:Jdavis/row}} | ||
− | {{User:Jdavis/cell|[[Sacred Falcon Hazard Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Hazard Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Hazard Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Hazard Armor|Sn]] Hazard}} | + | {{User:Jdavis/cell|Sacred [[Sacred Falcon Hazard Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Hazard Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Hazard Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Hazard Armor|Sn]] Hazard}} |
{{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+pier}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+pier}} | ||
{{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun slm dam+2}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun slm dam+2}} | ||
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{{User:Jdavis/row}} | {{User:Jdavis/row}} | ||
− | {{User:Jdavis/cell|[[Sacred Falcon Sentinel Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Sentinel Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Sentinel Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Sentinel Armor|Sn]] Sentinel}} | + | {{User:Jdavis/cell|Sacred [[Sacred Falcon Sentinel Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Sentinel Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Sentinel Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Sentinel Armor|Sn]] Sentinel}} |
{{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+elem}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+elem}} | ||
{{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun dam+1}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun dam+1}} | ||
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{{User:Jdavis/row}} | {{User:Jdavis/row}} | ||
− | {{User:Jdavis/cell|[[Sacred Falcon Keeper Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Keeper Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Keeper Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Keeper Armor|Sn]] Keeper}} | + | {{User:Jdavis/cell|Sacred [[Sacred Falcon Keeper Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Keeper Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Keeper Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Keeper Armor|Sn]] Keeper}} |
{{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+elem}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+elem}} | ||
{{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun cnst dam+2}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun cnst dam+2}} | ||
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{{User:Jdavis/row}} | {{User:Jdavis/row}} | ||
− | {{User:Jdavis/cell|[[Sacred Falcon Wraith Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Wraith Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Wraith Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Wraith Armor|Sn]] Wraith}} | + | {{User:Jdavis/cell|Sacred [[Sacred Falcon Wraith Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Wraith Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Wraith Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Wraith Armor|Sn]] Wraith}} |
{{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+elem}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+elem}} | ||
{{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun grm dam+2}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun grm dam+2}} | ||
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{{User:Jdavis/row}} | {{User:Jdavis/row}} | ||
− | {{User:Jdavis/cell|[[Sacred Falcon Shade Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Shade Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Shade Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Shade Armor|Sn]] Shade}} | + | {{User:Jdavis/cell|Sacred [[Sacred Falcon Shade Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Shade Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Shade Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Shade Armor|Sn]] Shade}} |
{{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+shad}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+shad}} | ||
{{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun dam+1}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun dam+1}} | ||
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{{User:Jdavis/row}} | {{User:Jdavis/row}} | ||
− | {{User:Jdavis/cell|[[Sacred Falcon Ghost Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Ghost Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Ghost Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Ghost Armor|Sn]] Ghost}} | + | {{User:Jdavis/cell|Sacred [[Sacred Falcon Ghost Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Ghost Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Ghost Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Ghost Armor|Sn]] Ghost}} |
{{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+shad}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+shad}} | ||
{{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun und dam+2}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun und dam+2}} | ||
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{{User:Jdavis/row}} | {{User:Jdavis/row}} | ||
− | {{User:Jdavis/cell|[[Sacred Falcon Hex Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Hex Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Hex Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Hex Armor|Sn]] Hex}} | + | {{User:Jdavis/cell|Sacred [[Sacred Falcon Hex Armor|Fa]][[Sacred Firefly Hex Armor|Fi]][[Sacred Grizzly Hex Armor|Gr]][[Sacred Snakebite Hex Armor|Sn]] Hex}} |
{{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+shad}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|norm+shad}} | ||
{{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun fnd dam+2}} | {{User:Jdavis/cell|gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun fnd dam+2}} | ||
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{{User:Jdavis/end}} | {{User:Jdavis/end}} | ||
− | + | In the table above, armors marked ? come in four flavors: Falcon (sh+4, fr-3), Firefly (fi+4, sh-3), Grizzly (fr+4, po-3), and Snakebite (po+4, fi-3). | |
For gunners, these are the main options other than Black Kat and Chaos. | For gunners, these are the main options other than Black Kat and Chaos. |
Revision as of 21:45, 25 April 2019
This guide helps you plan armor loadouts for play in the Clockworks. It is intended for beginner and intermediate players, although all players may find it useful as a reference.
What Does Armor Do?
Armor does four things: It gives you health, protects you from damage, resists status effects, and grants you abilities. In each of these four aspects, the contributions from your helmet and suit add to produce a total. (Your shield does not contribute; it protects only itself. For more detail, see the Shieldbearer Guide.)
Health
Armor gives you health, which greatly improves your survivability. However, health is rarely a consideration in choosing armor. Almost all armors grant the same amount of health, and the few exceptions are not worth considering strongly. At heat level 5 all armor gains one health point.
Damage
There are four kinds of damage: normal, piercing, elemental, and shadow. Each kind of monster attack contains a specific mixture of these types. Roughly speaking, beasts and slimes inflict piercing, gremlins and constructs inflict elemental, and fiends and undead inflict shadow. However, normal damage is often mixed in. For example, in Firestorm Citadel normal damage is inflicted by Lord Vanaduke, slag guards, and trojans.
Almost all armor protects against normal damage and one other damage type. When an attack hits you, your armor's protections are subtracted from the attack's gross damage to yield the net damage that you incur. For more detail, see Defense.
The overall importance of damage protection is not as big as you might expect. Highly protective armor might let you survive one more hit than weakly protective armor. Also, heat and unique variants improve your armor's damage protection only slightly.
Status
Shock, freeze, and fire are dangerous and ubiquitous. These three statuses should be your top defensive priorities — even above damage protection. Stun, poison, curse, and sleep are less threatening or less common.
Status comes in differing strengths. You become immune to minor status around +7 resistance. You become immune to moderate status around +9. It seems that you cannot become immune to strong status, even at +18.
Abilities
Armor can grant four kinds of abilities: movement speed increase (MSI), attack speed increase (ASI), charge time reduction (CTR), and damage bonus. All are generally useful, but their precise value depends on the weapons in use. For example, if you never charge your Dread Venom Striker, then CTR is not very useful to you.
There are four kinds of damage bonus granted by armor. Ordered from worst to best, they are:
- One weapon type against one monster family. An example is Sacred Falcon Keeper's gun construct+2. This kind of bonus is easily replicated using unique variants on weapons.
- All weapon types, one monster family. An example is Deadly Virulisk's slime+2. This kind of bonus can be valuable to hybrid knights on specific levels. However, it can be replicated using unique variants.
- One weapon type, all monster families. An example is Bombastic Demo's bomb+2. This kind of bonus applies to all six monster families, a few special cases (notably Vanaduke), and opponents in PvP. It cannot be replicated by unique variants.
- All weapon types, all monster families. An example is Chaos' damage+2.
Strategy
Balancing Offense and Defense
In choosing armor, your top priorities should be abilities and status resistance. Which one you favor depends on your experience, lagginess, etc. Damage protection and health are low priorities.
Try to obtain at least one piece of "glass cannon" armor: Black Kat or Chaos. These armors offer awesome offense and terrible defense. They are viable because experienced players don't need much defense and can afford status unique variants. Black Kat is hard to get, except for the 3-star helmet, which can be obtained during any Kataclysmic Confrontation event.
If glass cannon armor seems too dangerous, then consider one or two pieces of offensive armor, selected from the Sword, Handgun, and Bomb categories below. If you're hybrid, then mix and match these offensive armors as you see fit.
If you find yourself dying a lot with the offensive armors just described, then frankly armor is not your problem. You need more skill (or a better computer, or less latency to the servers). Be patient when fighting; don't charge into battle recklessly and get surrounded. Consider switching weapons; for example, Brandish-line swords are much easier to use than Cutter-line swords.
If you really want more defensive armor, then consider some of the Other armors below. But the extra defense is noticeable only in specific situations. For example, Dread Skelly is good in Heart of Ice and Dragon Scale is good in Compound 42.
"Just Tell Me What To Get"
The following plan should work quite well for a wide range of players. It offers a mix of offense and defense.
- Start working toward Chaos Cloak.
- Start working toward an offensive helmet based on your preferred weapon. For swords choose Vog Cub Cap. For handguns choose Perfect Mask of Seerus, Shadowsun Stetson, or Sacred Firefly Shade Helm. For bombs choose Volcanic Demo Helm.
- When a Kataclysmic Confrontation comes around, seek out as many black kats as you can. If you are lucky enough to find a Book of Dark Rituals, then you get the 5-star Black Kat helmet and the 3-star Black Kat suit. If you are unlucky, then you can still collect 70 Ancient Pages and obtain the 3-star helmet.
Heating
Recall that heat has only a small effect on armor: one health at heat level 5, slight increase in damage protection, no increase in status resistance, and no effect on abilities. In contrast, heat has a dramatic effect on weapon damage and CTR. Therefore you should heat your armor after your weapons. It's reasonable to keep your 5-star armor at heat level 1 or heat level 5, if Radiant Fire Crystals are scarce.
Unique Variants
Status unique variants can hugely improve your survivability, while damage unique variants have only a small effect. So prioritize statuses — especially fire, shock, and freeze.
Armor by Class
Because offensive bonuses are a crucial consideration in choosing armor, I group armors into four categories: Swords, Handguns, Bombs, and Other. Two armor sets — Black Kat and Chaos — are listed in every category, because they should be considered by every player all the time.
In almost all cases the suit and helmet are obtained identically and enjoy identical statistics. The seven exceptions, marked with * below, are: Radiant Silvermail has no matching helmet, Perfect Mask of Seerus has no matching suit, Divine Veil has a fiend bonus while Divine Mantle does not, and the four Kat armor lines have unusual and asymmetric alchemy paths.
Swords
Name | Damage | Bonuses | Fi | Fr | Sh | Po | St | Cu | Sl |
Vog Cub | norm+elem | sword ASI+2 | fi+4 | ||||||
Skolver | norm+pier | sword dam+2 | fr+4 | ||||||
Snarbolax | norm+shad | sword dam+2 | fr+3 | po+3 | |||||
Starlit Hunting | norm+pier | sword dam+2 | st-4 | sl+4 | |||||
Kat Claw* | norm+shad | sword ASI+1, sword dam+1 | fr+4 | sh-2 | cu-1 | ||||
Heavenly Iron | norm+shad | sword dam+1, fiend dam+1 | sh-4 | cu+4 | |||||
Chaos | norm+elem | all dam+2, all CTR+2 | fi-2 | fr-2 | sh-2 | po-2 | cu-2 | ||
Black Kat* | norm+shad | MSI+1, all dam+3 | fi-2 | fr+4 | sh-2 | po-2 | cu-4 |
For sworders, here are the main options, other than Black Kat and Chaos.
- Vog Cub: This is the most defensive Wolver armor. Its elemental and fire defense are frequently useful, especially in Firestorm Citadel. Its ASI helps you interrupt monsters and shield quickly.
- Skolver: The defense is less useful than Vog Cub's. The offense is more useful than Vog Cub's, because blanket damage bonus cannot be achieved through unique variants.
- Snarbolax: This armor is like Skolver with more useful defense. It is the best of the Wolver armors. But you can craft it only in the Shadow Lairs, so it is not easily accessible.
Handguns
Name | Damage | Bonuses | Fi | Fr | Sh | Po | St | Cu | Sl |
Deadshot | norm+shad | gun ASI+1, undead dam+2 | cu+4 | ||||||
Justifier | norm+pier | gun ASI+2 | st+4 | ||||||
Nameless | norm+elem | gun ASI+2 | fr+4 | ||||||
Seerus* | norm+elem | gun CTR+2, gun ASI+1 | fi+4 | fr-2 | sh+4 | po-2 | |||
Shadowsun | norm+shad | gun dam+2 | po+4 | ||||||
Kat Eye* | norm+shad | gun ASI+1, gun dam+1 | fr+4 | sh-2 | cu-1 | ||||
Chaos | norm+elem | all dam+2, all CTR+2 | fi-2 | fr-2 | sh-2 | po-2 | cu-2 | ||
Black Kat* | norm+shad | MSI+1, all dam+3 | fi-2 | fr+4 | sh-2 | po-2 | cu-4 |
Name | Damage | Bonuses | Fi | Fr | Sh | Po | St | Cu | Sl |
Sacred FaFiGrSn Pathfinder | norm+pier | gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun dam+1 | fi? | fr? | sh? | po? | |||
Sacred FaFiGrSn Guerrilla | norm+pier | gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun bst dam+2 | fi? | fr? | sh? | po? | |||
Sacred FaFiGrSn Hazard | norm+pier | gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun slm dam+2 | fi? | fr? | sh? | po? | |||
Sacred FaFiGrSn Sentinel | norm+elem | gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun dam+1 | fi? | fr? | sh? | po? | |||
Sacred FaFiGrSn Keeper | norm+elem | gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun cnst dam+2 | fi? | fr? | sh? | po? | |||
Sacred FaFiGrSn Wraith | norm+elem | gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun grm dam+2 | fi? | fr? | sh? | po? | |||
Sacred FaFiGrSn Shade | norm+shad | gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun dam+1 | fi? | fr? | sh? | po? | |||
Sacred FaFiGrSn Ghost | norm+shad | gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun und dam+2 | fi? | fr? | sh? | po? | |||
Sacred FaFiGrSn Hex | norm+shad | gun ASI+1, gun CTR+1, gun fnd dam+2 | fi? | fr? | sh? | po? |
In the table above, armors marked ? come in four flavors: Falcon (sh+4, fr-3), Firefly (fi+4, sh-3), Grizzly (fr+4, po-3), and Snakebite (po+4, fi-3).
For gunners, these are the main options other than Black Kat and Chaos.
- Perfect Mask of Seerus: This valuable gunner helmet offers excellent defense and offense. There is no matching suit, to plan accordingly. You obtain it only through Operation Crimson Hammer, but it's worth the cost, especially because of the accompanying sword, bomb, and recreation.
- Pathfinder, Shade, and Sentinel: These are the best Padded-line armors, because of their blanket damage bonuses. Their defense is generally worse than Seerus'.
- Shadowsun: All of the Gunslinger variants are fine, but Shadowsun's blanket damage bonus is disproportionately valuable. Its defense is neither terrible nor great.
Bombs
Name | Damage | Bonuses | Fi | Fr | Sh | Po | St | Cu | Sl |
Bombastic Demo | norm+elem | bomb dam+2 | fr+4 | ||||||
Mad Bomber | norm+elem | bomb dam+2, bomb CTR+2 | fi-2 | fr-2 | sh-2 | po-2 | |||
Mercurial Demo | norm+elem | bomb dam+1, MSI+1 | sh+4 | ||||||
Volcanic Demo | norm+elem | bomb CTR+2 | fi+4 | ||||||
Starlit Demo | norm+pier | bomb CTR+2, slime dam+1 | st-4 | sl+4 | |||||
Kat Hiss* | norm+shad | bomb CTR+1, bomb dam+1 | fr+4 | sh-2 | cu-1 | ||||
Chaos | norm+elem | all dam+2, all CTR+2 | fi-2 | fr-2 | sh-2 | po-2 | cu-2 | ||
Black Kat* | norm+shad | MSI+1, all dam+3 | fi-2 | fr+4 | sh-2 | po-2 | cu-4 |
Bombers deserve some special remarks. MSI is highly valuable for bombers, because they so often rely on dodging, because they cannot shield while charging. ASI affects the speed of animations, and therefore has a small effect on bombers. CTR helps all aspects of bombing tremendously — inflicting damage, spreading status, spending less time vulnerable — while damage bonus is valuable only for damage-oriented bombs. With that in mind, these are the best armors for bombers, other than Black Kat and Chaos.
- Mercurial Demo: In the long term, this is the best Demo variant, because its MSI and blanket damage bonus are not easily obtained from other sources. However, this armor can be crafted only in the Shadow Lairs, so it is hard to obtain.
- Bombastic Demo: After Mercurial, this is the best Demo variant in the long term, because of its blanket damage bonus.
- Volcanic Demo: This is the best Demo variant in the short term, because CTR is so helpful to every kind of bomb. If you're just trying out bombing for fun, then use Volcanic Demo (or Chaos).
For more detail check out the excellent Bombing Guide.
Other
Name | Damage | Bonuses | Fi | Fr | Sh | Po | St | Cu | Sl |
Almirian Crusader | norm+shad | fi-2 | cu+2 | ||||||
Azure Guardian | norm+pier | ||||||||
Dread Skelly | norm+shad | fr+4 | po+4 | ||||||
Grey Feather | norm+elem | fi+4 | sh+4 | ||||||
Ice Queen | norm+pier | fr+4 | st+4 | ||||||
Royal Jelly | norm+pier | st+4 | sl+4 | ||||||
Arcane Salamander | norm+elem | slime dam+1, beast dam+1 | fi+4 | ||||||
Deadly Virulisk | norm+pier | slime dam+2 | po+4 | ||||||
Dragon Scale | pier+elem | beast dam+2 | fi+4 | po+4 | |||||
Radiant Silvermail* | pier+shad | undead dam+2 | po+4 | cu+4 | |||||
Divine* | elem+shad | fiend dam+2 (Veil only) | fi+4 | sh+4 | cu+4 | ||||
Valkyrie | norm+shad | fiend dam+2 | fi-4 | po+4 | cu+4 | ||||
Volcanic Salamander | norm+elem | slime dam+2 | fi+4 | ||||||
Volcanic Plate | norm+elem | all ASI-1 | fi+4 | st+4 | sl-4 | ||||
Ironmight Plate | norm+pier | all ASI-1 | st+4 | sl-4 | |||||
Ancient Plate | normal | health+3, MSI-1, all ASI-1 | st+4 | sl-4 | |||||
Mercurial | norm+pier | MSI+1 | sh+4 | ||||||
Fallen | norm+shad | all ASI+1, fiend dam-2 | fi+4 | po+4 | cu-4 | ||||
Chaos | norm+elem | all dam+2, all CTR+2 | fi-2 | fr-2 | sh-2 | po-2 | cu-2 | ||
Black Kat* | norm+shad | MSI+1, all dam+3 | fi-2 | fr+4 | sh-2 | po-2 | cu-4 |
These miscellaneous armors vary widely in quality. For example, Volcanic Salamander makes no sense, because it's offensive against slimes, which inflict piercing, but it doesn't defend against piercing. Azure Guardian is completely outclassed by Skolver and Mercurial. (These imbalances have gotten worse over time, as the developers have tweaked the rules and the other items.) But some armors here are worth considering, other than Black Kat and Chaos.
- Divine, Grey Feather, and Dread Skelly: These armors protect well against common combinations of damage and status. Some players also like the other non-normal armors: Radiant Silvermail and Dragon Scale.
- Mercurial: MSI and shock protection are both valuable. But Mercurial Demo is better, if you can get it.
Specific Situations
Bosses
The Gloaming Wildwoods are three levels of beasts, with some constructs and undead. There is no status, other than lumber stun. Hazards include spikes, exploding blocks, and briars. You want normal and piercing armor. There may not actually be much piercing damage in there, as it's only Stratum 2.
The Royal Jelly Palace is three levels of slimes, some constructs, and some silkwings. There is no status, other than lumber stun. The only hazards are spikes and exploding blocks. You want normal and piercing armor. Elemental and stun armor are slightly useful.
Ironclaw Munitions Factory is three levels of constructs and gremlins, with a shock theme. Hazards are plentiful, including missiles, shock grates, exploding rockets, exploding blocks, and lasers. You want normal, elemental, and shock armor.
Firestorm Citadel is five levels of zombies and trojans, with some constructs and silkwings, and very few beasts and slimes. The theme is fire, but keep in mind that trojans can stun and shock. Hazards include wheel throwers, spikes, fire grates, shadow fire, exploding blocks, and revolving balls. You want normal, elemental, shadow, and fire armor. Of these, shadow is arguably the least important, because zombies are easy to dodge. Vanaduke, slag guards, and trojans all inflict lots of normal damage.
Shadow Lairs
The Shadow Gloaming Wildwoods are similar to the regular Gloaming Wildwoods, but with many additional undead. The gun puppies have been replaced with howlitzers. There is a strong poison theme. You want normal, piercing, shadow, and poison armor.
The Shadow Royal Jelly Palace is much like the ordinary Royal jelly Palace, but with a freeze theme. Also, the gun puppies have been replaced with polyps. You want normal, piercing, and freeze armor.
The Shadow Ironclaw Munitions Factory is much like the usual Ironclaw Munitions Factory, but with a fire theme in addition to the regular shock theme. You want normal, elemental, shock, and fire armor.
The Shadow Firestorm Citadel resembles the Firestorm Citadel, but with a curse theme in addition to the usual fire theme. Also, the gun puppies have been replaced with howlitzers. You want normal, elemental, shadow, fire, and curse armor.
The Unknown Passage is an extra level that comes after every Shadow Lair boss. It is the same for all Shadow Lairs; it has nothing to do with any of their themes. Normal damage is most prevalent, but piercing, elemental, and shadow damage are all present. Status is not a major consideration, but poison and stun can occur.
Danger Missions
Legion of Almire is two undead-stuffed levels, like an amped-up graveyard where the phantoms have been replaced by worse monsters. There is no status, except for lumber stun and occasional shadow fire on the floor. Hazards include exploding blocks, briars, and spikes. You want normal and shadow armor. The lack of status gives you great freedom in optimizing your offense.
Compound 42 is two levels filled with slimes, gremlins, poison, and fire. Hazards include poison grates, fire grates, flamethrowers, and shadow fire. You want normal, piercing, elemental, fire, and poison armor. Dragon Scale is perfect for this mission.
Heart of Ice consists of two freeze-themed levels filled with fiends and beasts, and scattered howlitzers. Hazards include freeze grates, spikes, exploding blocks, and revolving balls. You want normal, piercing, shadow, and freeze armor. Of these, piercing is probably least important, because beasts are easy to dodge. The ideal armor is Black Kat or Dread Skelly.
Ghosts in the Machine consists of two shock-filled levels filled with constructs and undead. Hazards include shock grates, revolving shock balls, and lots of drones. You want normal, elemental, shadow, and shock armor. Of these, shadow is arguably least important, because zombies are slow. Seerus is excellent armor here, for example.
Other Missions
Operation Crimson Hammer is five levels filled with gremlins and constructs. Hazards include briars, exploding rockets, missiles, and shadow fire. You want normal, elemental, and fire armor, although there is not much fire.
Dreams and Nightmares is three levels filled with void-themed slimes, beasts, gremlins, constructs, undead, and lost souls (but no fiends). The damage is mostly normal, with some piercing and elemental. There is a small amount of poison and stun.
Final Thoughts
Ultimately, armor is boring in Spiral Knights. It doesn't give you any special powers. At best it enhances your weapons slightly or improves your survivability slightly. When collecting gear, you should diversify much more in weapons than in armor, because trying different styles of weapon is fun. This guide exists, just to help you avoid a lot of costly exploration in armor.
Thanks to the Arsenal forum regulars for enlightening discussion. Happy travels.