GM Instruments?

zaxtor99

Apprentice
Okay, so i hear that a GM sword or whatever gives it almost the same bonus dmg as a force weapon, or +4.

What does a GM lute or tambourine do over just a cheap npc purchased one? And why are some vendors selling GM made tambourines for like 5k each? seems ridiculous. And no, before u ask. it wasnt a silver or slayer or anything just gm instruments and the prices were like 5k each.

Are they that hard to craft, or that rare on vendors? Is it worth this price? again whats the advantage of using a gm tambourine over a regular one?
 

Malkraven

Grandmaster
im not 100% but i think its 20% bonus.

5k ???? i sell gm instruments for 350 gp each lol no wonder they sell fast......
 

halygon

Grandmaster
Yeah, I sell them for about the same as @Malkraven . I can't keep my vendor stocked even though I put 100 instruments on there at a time. In a day and a half they will be gone. My actual problem is finding all the wood to keep up with it. Right now my vendor is empty because of that :(

But for the OPs question. It adds a 20% increase to your skill vs the mob's barding difficulty. This means that if a mob requires 90 skill to provo, then you only need 70 skill and a GM instrument to provo them successfully.
 

Malkraven

Grandmaster
same my vendor is empty atm it gets cleaned out in a day or so . ...

i am gonna go craft/restock it now give it 30 mins and should be stocked.

" Makita" @ TTC first house outside trinsic main gate almost in gz.
 

CVegas

Grandmaster
Yeah, I sell them for about the same as @Malkraven . I can't keep my vendor stocked even though I put 100 instruments on there at a time. In a day and a half they will be gone. My actual problem is finding all the wood to keep up with it. Right now my vendor is empty because of that :(

But for the OPs question. It adds a 20% increase to your skill vs the mob's barding difficulty. This means that if a mob requires 90 skill to provo, then you only need 70 skill and a GM instrument to provo them successfully.

Cost to produce vs. profit...relatively good?
 
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