General

Anti-Desctruction Success Chance Increase?

Say I have an equip, and enhancement tells me that it's:
25% success, 60% decrease, 15% destroy.

If I were to select the anti-destruction option, it will turn 15% destroy into 0% destroy.
However, how are the % success and % decrease affected?
Will it turn into 40% success, 60% decrease?
Or will it turn into 25% success, 75% decrease?
Or will it turn into 32.5% success, 67.5% decrease?

February 14, 2017

7 Comments • Newest first

ryanawe123

All responses I have received are fully based off "makes sense" inner convictions, 101% devoid of evidence.
Anyone got info from Nexon, or large samples of recorded data?

Reply February 14, 2017
Ecarina

@ryanawe123: It's less a gut feeling and more a "you would have to live in a parallel universe with completely different rules for it to be anything else" type deal.

Reply February 14, 2017
GakiNoTsukai

The safest assumption to make is that you should still screenshot before and after when your item explodes.

It also makes the most sense for all the boom chance to go into failure(drop).

The possible outcomes are pass, fail(no drop on multiples of 5), fail(drop), fail(boom). By paying extra you're removing fail(boom) from the possible outcome. However a fail is still a fail and as such should be added to the other failure outcome not distribute evenly between pass/fail or add to pass.

I still say the extra does absolutely nothing and it'll boom your equipment though.

Reply February 14, 2017
ryanawe123

@ecarina I'm a truth seeker, not a fan of gut feelings, nor inner convictions.
Is it 40% success 60% decrease, 32.5% success 67.5% decrease, or something else?
Anyone got data?

Reply February 14, 2017
keyan22

Most scrolls and enhancements only boom if they fail, some boom at a lesser chance upon failing, but I never heard of one having a 15% chance to boom regardless of succeeding or failing.

Reply February 14, 2017 - edited
ryanawe123

"There's no way they'll give you more success rate when they allowed you to not boom it."
Is that a supported assertion?

Reply February 14, 2017 - edited