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# Armour **Armour** is a form of [defence](Defences) that mitigates incoming [[physical damage]] from [[hit]]s. Armour rating can be increased by wearing equipment, taking certain passive skills, using skills (e.g. [[Molten Shell]]), and drinking flasks (e.g. [[Granite Flask]] and [[Basalt Flask]]). ## Mechanics Along with evasion and energy shield, armour is one of the three defence types that can implicitly appear on equipment. Unlike resistance, armour has diminishing returns as its effectiveness is based on the magnitude of incoming physical damage (multiplied by 10). As a result, armour is most effective in mitigating small hits (i.e. 50% and better reduction for initial damage less than a tenth of the armour value) and least effective in mitigating very large hits (where its absolute reduction can at most be one tenth of the armour value). Supposedly the most armour monsters have in the game is about 983. Physical damage reduction from armour only mitigates physical damage from hits. It falls under the modifier <span class="explicitMod">#% additional Physical Damage Reduction when Hit</span>. Physical Damage Reduction is capped at 90%. Armour does not mitigate [[damage over time]], as armour will only mitigate damage from [[hit]]s. [Bleed](Bleeding) is a damage over time debuff that is based on the initial physical hit, armour would reduce the initial hit but not the damage over time. However both the initial hit and the damage over time can be mitigated with other sources for example [[endurance charge]]s because they don't only apply to hits. Armour will only mitigate physical damage hits, not for elemental or chaos damage. If the [[Transcendence]] keystone is taken, armour mitigates elemental damage hits, but not physical. ### Rule of thumb - To prevent one third of damage (33%), you need armour 2.5 times the damage (e.g. 250 armour for 100 damage) - To prevent half of damage (50%), you need armour 5 times the damage (e.g. 500 armour for 100 damage) - To prevent two thirds of damage (66%), you need armour 10 times the damage (e.g. 1000 armour for 100 damage) - To prevent three quarters of damage (75%), you need armour 15 times the damage (e.g. 1500 armour for 100 damage) - To prevent 90% of damage, you need armour 45 times the damage (e.g. 4500 armour for 100 damage) - Armour will never prevent more damage than its value divided by 5 (e.g. 1000 armour will never prevent more than 200 damage) ### Armour on monsters Monsters also have armour values. The general amount of armour on monsters will increase as monster level increases, with monster types like stone golems and zombies having relatively high amounts of armour compared to hellions or sea witches. Boss monsters similarly increase in armour rating throughout the campaign. For example, [[Malachai, The Nightmare]] has 783 armour, while early map bosses such as [[Piety the Empyrean]] can have around 7000 armour depending on map level. Endgame bosses such as [[The Elder]] or [[Sirus, Awakener of Worlds]] have over 20000 and 32000 armour respectively. ## Formulas The amount of physical damage reduction is a function of armour rating and the physical damage taken. ### Relative Physical Damage Reduction (Base Formula) This is the base formula all other formulas are based upon. It is used to calculate the <span class="explicitMod">#% additional Physical Damage Reduction when Hit</span> factor, i.e. the percentage by which the physical damage is mitigated.  where A is the defender's armour rating and Draw is the raw physical damage. ### Required Armour Rating To calculate the armour rating you need to mitigate a given amount of Physical Damage at specific ratio, you can use this formula:  ### Reverse Physical Damage You can also calculate the raw physical damage that would have resulted for a given Physical Damage Reduction and Armour rating:  ### Resulting Physical Damage To calculate the net physical damage (i.e. the damage after damage reduction, the following formula can be used:  Absolute Physical Damage Reduction Another way of looking at it is in terms of absolute physical damage reduction:  ### Defense factor  ### Examples Mitigated Damage as a function of Incoming Damage and Armour Rating. Note that Rounding is usually decided in the monster's favor.  % Mitigated Damage as a function of Incoming Damage and Armour Rating 
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