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Basic Hunter Pet Info

February 15th, 2009

If you are new to the game or have never played a Hunter before, chances are you’ll need a little basic Hunter pet info. Once you reach Level 10 you will be able to tame one of many types of beasts to be your pet. This pet will fight with you and do damage on mobs, as well as take the brunt of most attacks for you. Some of its skills will be invoked automatically, others will need to  be triggered by you.

The single most important thing about choosing a pet is what Talent tree you will choose from: Cunning, Ferocity, or Tenacity. Every beast type is classified as one of these three types. There are also “Exotic” pets, but these are just special kinds of beasts available to Beast Master Hunters, but all of them still fall into one of the three types.

Deciding with type of pet you get will depend on how you want to play. In fact, you can tame more than one pet, and keep all but one in the stables that you find near most Inns. That way you can switch pets depending on what you are doing.

Most Hunters will pick Tenacity pets to begin with, as these types of pets will keep aggro and withstand a lot of damage. This makes them great to use as tanks when soloing, whether you are questing, grinding or farming. Gorillas are a very popular choice, as are bears turtles and boars. Personally I use a gorilla for farming.

Ferocity pets are the opposite: they will deal out  large amounts of damage but not hold aggro or withstand damage as well as Tenacity pets. These are the best choice for raids, since neither the Hunter nor the pet are expected to take a lot of direct damage under most circumstances. Cats are the most common choice for Ferocity, but wolves and raptors are also popular. Core Hounds make an interesting choice for an exotic Ferocity pet, but the consensus seems to be that they do not deal as much damage as regular ferocity pets do.

Cunning is a hybrid type of Talent tree, and these pets are in between for both damage dealt and damage taken. In addition, they have available to them some talents that make them pretty useful under certain circumstances. I don’t know many Hunters who use them, but as I understand it they can be useful in PvP or raids, and workable in solo play. Most Cunning pets are of the winged variety (birds, bats, winged serpents) plus spiders and ravagers.

Once you have a pet, you will need to take care of it. That means feeding it to keep it happy, so knowing what kind of food it eats is critical. Keeping the pet happy is important, as it increases the amount of damage it will do when fighting.

Leveling the pet is simple, as it will gain xp from kills just as you do. Also, if you tame a pet that is well below your level, it will automatically be “leveled” up to 5 levels below yours. Skills and ranks of skills (not the same thing as Talents) are automatically learned as the pet levels, so you don’t need to do a thing about that anymore. In previous versions you would have to tame a pet that “knew” that skill, use it until you “learned” it, then get your main pet back out so it could “learn” it from you. Now new skills and new ranks of skills are based entirely on what level your pet is.

Talents are chosen from the pet’s Talent tree, much as your own Talents are chosen from yours. The pet Talent tree is limited in comparison, so there won’t be many Talents left out, but you do want to be careful and pick the ones that enhance the role of your pet as much as possible. Talent points are given to the pet for every 4 levels starting at Level 20. Also, Beast Master Hunters have an option that gives them an extra Talent point for their pets.

The last thing I will mention on this post is that the specific animal you tame will not affect any of its stats: any type of cat that you tame will end up with the same stats, even if it is one the “elite” mobs. The only thing that will be affected is the look of the pet.

Erik Basics, Pets , , ,

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