If you end up getting fiended, save vs. mental helps a lot toward getting a fiend that isn't absurdly strong, which equates not only to damage reduction, but also makes the illusion easier to kill. I'm not positive (and please correct me if I'm wrong), but I thought resist mental was just damage reduction vs. mental akin to resist fire or resist cold which don't actually help
If you ever played any Diablo 2 back when it was all the rage, you know how vigorously Blizzard tried to crack down on botting action by banning accounts, CD keys, etc. Granted there were no law suits involved, but as far as I know no one ever sold any d2 bot software for profit. Now people DID profit selling items that they botted so... I'm not sure how that all shakes out legally.
I d
And I wish you'd shut up too. Nobody cares and furthermore you can't offer any proof. You just bitch, bitch, bitch, bitch, whine, and complain incessantly about an inordinate number of people.
I've made some small gains weight wise, but I feel like I'm getting into the whole routine mentally, and my stamina is increasing. I don't feel so easily fatigued anymore. I'm still feeling positive about working out and I feel like if this continues I'll have a good foundation to kick it up a notch soon and really focus on the muscle building part of things.
So far
Depending on what kind of traffic the router is responding to, it could be about the same to DoS attack a router as a personal system directly connected to a modem. Many routers can be set to ignore specific kinds of traffic, which helps.
Just to be clear I don't believe Torak's story, or anyone else here that claims they got DoS attacked so that they would lose a PK. I wont call i
It would pretty much have to someone other than the person you are fighting in PK executing a DoS attack on you. The basic idea of something like this is to overwhelm your modem/router with traffic such that you essentially have zero bandwidth left at your disposal, which takes a lot of bandwidth not only on your end, but the attacker's end as well. In the world of broadband connections, i