Rancour makes it so your rage no longer decays outside combat (for druid forms) but even if there are no enemies using movement skills counts as being in combat making it counteractive to use movement skils to move from pack to pack if want to take advange of the passive. I think this is counter intuative. It forces you to either make the movement skills obselete or the Rancour passive.
Edit: More spesifically if you you use a movement skill AND it doesn’t hit any enemy, it shouldn’t cause your rage to decay.
Rancour doesn’t have anything to do with not being in combat, it’s “if you haven’t used a skill recently”. You can be in combat & not using a skill & your Rage won’t degen.
Rancour has both lines of text, I assumed they meant the same thing, refering to both “Your rage only decays if you’ve used an ability recently” and “No rage decay out of combat.”
I’m not saying it doesn’t decay when you use a skill, I’m saying it’s shouldn’t decay if that skill is a movement skill since that defeats the whole purpose of the movement skill.
Though I meant Rampage and Dive, I didn’t realise Maul was a movement skill too. Perhaps I should have been more spesific since even Rampage can be a beefed up damaging skill. I should have said: If you you use a movement skill AND it doesn’t hit any enemy, it shouldn’t cause your rage to decay.
I know, but it’s definitely not “while out of combat” since you can use the T key to create a portal & that starts your Rage decaying since it’s a skill.
Why are you stuck on semantics the point isn’t how the skill works it’s how imo the skill should work. The portal thing is really dumb too hope that’s a bug.
Yeah I guess you’re right. It obviously works with skill cast and not actual combat to discourage autocasting. But causes a negative effect where even if you don’t autocast you are discouraged from using a skill which you would use only for movement. Causing you to either not use any skills moving pack to pack to take advantage of rancour or not take it at all as it is wasted if you keep rampaging from pack to pack anyway.