Sharper play and the right build are simply far more important than ilvl in this game. To illustrate the point, here's a video where I solo an HoT champion in level 60-65 blue/green gear on my weaver. At about 50%, another player enters, presumably geared in 80 exotic (or better) as most players in HoT are.
I am a new player to gw2 and for the life of me, i cannot decide on what class i want to level and play. I've tested all the classes except for warrior up to level 10-20. One thing about me is that I love pvp, and the World versus World mode really intrigues and appeals to me.I love the look of revenant, but i hear it is hated in both pvp and
Well, they are the most original race of GW2, I'd say its normal that they attract as many players. And yeah, I notice sylvari a lot more when I'm looking at players fashion game, otherwise I think it's a human character: if the skin isn't showing, a tall sylvari looks just like a medium or small human. Edit: Sylvari are the same size as humans.In Guild Wars 2, the last elite specialization the Engineer has is the Mechanist. The Mechanist really emphasizes the versatility of the Engineer. It has a Power build, a Condi build, a Healer build, and even a Power Alacrity Support build. All made possible by their new profession mechanic, the Jade Mech.
Simplifying mechanics is an easy way to make the game new player friendly, and new players is just a fundamental need for any multiplayer game; especially MMOs like GW2. I'm not against the idea of having homogeneous playstyles starting out to get players' feet wet, but after a while, if everything feels the same, it just gets mT5K7w.