A wizard capable of using the Ice Dragon's magic powers after being cursed. He uses powerful icebound magic to freeze enemies.
Skills[edit]
Wedge of Cold Snap[edit]Mana 12 sec Cooldown Deal 101,254 M.DMG to the targeted enemy and inflict Freeze for 5 sec. If any enemies are inflicted with Frost, deal DMG and inflict Freeze to them as well.
Options are Fire, Light, Water, Shadow (duh). Monster cards come in Common, Uncommon, Rare, and Unique variants indicating their rarity. The number doesn't specify if it's a% or not, but the cards that can add elemental damage are.
Ice Spear[edit]Mana 8 sec Cooldown Attack random enemies 5 times dealing 226,115 M.DMG and inflicting Frost. When attacking enemies inflicted with Frost, creates an additional spear that deals extra half DMG. Additional spears do not inflict Frost. Enemies inflicted with Freeze take 50% increased DMG.
Icy Conquest[edit]Mana 20 sec Cooldown Deals 194,715 M.DMG to all enemies. Enemies inflicted with Frost becomes inflicted with Freeze for 3 sec. Enemies inflicted with Freeze take 100% increased DMG.
Dmg 2 3.5 pdf.
Chill of Early Dawn[edit]Passive Every 15 sec, deals 42,268 M.DMG to 3 enemies and inflicts Frost.
Note: Frost debuff lasts 8 sec. It is not removed when Freeze is activated.
Transcendence Perks[edit]Transcendence 3[edit]Wedge of Cold Snap[edit]
[Light] DMG is increased by 40%.
[Dark] In exchange for 1 additional Mana cost, Freeze duration is boosted by 5 sec. Ice Spear[edit]
[Light] Mana cost is reduced by 1.
[Dark] In exchange for 1 additional Mana cost, targets the enemy with the highest ATK. Icy Conquest[edit]
[Light] Mana cost reduced by 1.
[Dark] Gain CC immunity while using said skill. Chill of Early Dawn[edit]
[Light] Target's CC resistance reduced by 250 for 10 sec.
[Dark] Upon hitting an enemy, reduces target Mana recovery per sec by 50% for 10 sec. Transcendence 5[edit]Pavel[edit]
[Light] ATK, DEF, HP +15% / Crit DMG +20%.
[Dark] Every 3 sec, attacks all enemies and deals 50% of ATK as M.DMG and has a 50% chance to inflict Frost. Enemies already inflicted with Frost take 300% of ATK as M.DMG over time for 3 sec. Unique Weapon[edit]
Unique Treasure[edit]
2nd Unique Treasure[edit]
3rd Unique Treasure[edit]
4th Unique Treasure[edit]
Dfo Inflict Light Dmg For SaleTrivia/Lore[edit]
Story from the game: A curious case of a human wizard possessed by the soul of an ice dragon. Having fought alongside Kyle 100 years ago, this ancient ice wizard has actually existed far before then. The dragon's soul is usually asleep, but wakes up occasionally to speak to him in the voice of a lover.The empire considers him a key figure, and has dispatched Rodina to monitor and protect him. He himself, however, only wishes to live in peace and quiet, away from the concerns of this world.
Gallery[edit]
Retrieved from 'http://www.kingsraid.wiki/index.php?title=Pavel&oldid=20615'
Direct Factory Outlets, abbreviated as DFO, is the name for a no-frills group of discount shopping centres in Australia. They are large-floor warehouse buildings containing partitioned stores where retail outlets sell excess or previous seasons' stocks at reduced prices.
Business model[edit]
Former logo until 2018
Its model is to find cheap land, build a cheap but air-conditioned shopping mall.[1]
The Direct Factory Outlet retail chain is owned by the privately owned Austexx Group, led by David Goldberger and David Weiland with their first centre opened at Moorabbin Airport (Cheltenham) in 1997.[2] Former Australian Competition & Consumer Commission chief Graeme Samuel holds a $50 million interest in Austexx through a blind trust.[3] Valued at A$1.5 billion, in early 2010 the business was put up for sale with a number of retail investment funds expressing interest.[4]
DFO centres have traditionally been located around airports: a side effect of the Airports Act of 1996, the Commonwealth Government has planning control over the land, meaning state planning legislation can be bypassed by developers.[5] In addition the property developer is able to exploit the cost difference between retail and industrial rents, gives outlet centre operators a distinct advantage over traditional shopping centres. A survey by Melbourne newspaper The Age in 2007 found that in all three DFO-owned centres, most shops carried at least some full-price, current-season stock, available at normal shopping centres.[6] By 2008 five legal challenges to DFO developments have been made by competing retail developers and the Shopping Centre Council of Australia, all being unsuccessful.[5]
On 16 August 2010, lead bank Suncorp-Metway, along with St George Bank, National Australia Bank and Lloyds Banking Group, issued a notice to parent company Austexx demanding repayment within 24 hours of the A$450 million they are owed.[7] The South Wharf centre was under an A$500 million debt, with work on completing the centre stopped after workers placed bans over non-payment. Parent company Austexx is understood to have total debts of A$1.2 billion, with the four relatively successful DFO sites used as cross-collateral for bank-funded expansion into five other less successful locations (Canberra, Cairns and Hobart). The group of banks appointed insolvency specialists KordaMentha as advisers, with the entire group facing receivership.[8] Negotiations continued until a deal was struck on Thursday 19 August, the four banks extending their funding to allow the South Wharf development to be completed. The ten DFO shopping complexes will then be sold off separately to repay the $1 billion owed to the banks.[3] The banks hope to recoup most or all of the money they are owed by avoiding a 'fire sale' of assets, but neither Austexx founders or other investors are expected to be repaid until the bank debts are settled.[3]
Locations[edit]
Direct Factory Outlets (DFO) locations are:
Australian Capital Territory[edit]
New South Wales[edit]
In 2009, a DFO in Wollongong near the Kembla Grange Racecourse was proposed, but was rejected by the Wollongong City Council.[9]
Queensland[edit]
DFO Brisbane Airport
Tasmania[edit]
Victoria[edit]
Former Direct Factory Outlets on Spencer Street
Dfo Inflict Light Damage
Between 2005 and 2009 DFO Spencer Street operated as part of the Southern Cross railway station complex. Tenants were relocated from 15 October 2009 to the new DFO at South Wharf, the Spencer Street centre being refitted and rebranded by Austexx as 'Spencer Street fashion station'.[14]
Dfo Inflict Light Dmg 2Western Australia[edit]
Essendon Centre plane crash[edit]
On 21 February 2017 just before 9am, a Beechcraft Super King Air on a passenger charter flight bound for King Island, Tasmania crashed shortly after takeoff from nearby Essendon Airport. All 5 people aboard the flight were killed. As the shopping centre had not opened yet, only staff were at the centre, all of whom were accounted for. The incident was the worst aviation accident in Victoria for 30 years.
See also[edit]References[edit]
Dfo Inflict Light Dmg 3External links[edit]
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Direct_Factory_Outlets&oldid=918476913'
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