Contest winning costumes are a permanent addition, and unlike all officials, Void has one special perk: permanent promotional costumes. On the contrary, the item mall has quite a large selection of costumes–even special ones not available elsewhere or limited edition costumes. That doesn’t mean, however, that Void doesn’t have any reason to cash.
![void elsword leveling void elsword leveling](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/62cf77_c80f01ecd26243bea92f48ec7acf54bb~mv2.png)
Just about everything on NA is locked behind money, money, money. The player economy makes it possible to obtain Mage’s Necklaces and even Ice Burner sets without paying a dime. Even the Fetch Aura is available without cashing, via the main ED sink of Void, the Hell Soul Burner. Pets and mounts are available with enough grinding, and it’s possible to get something better than the Pocket Phoru.
VOID ELSWORD LEVELING FREE
Free costumes are made available at all times–either via ED sink RNG boxes or events. Void also makes obtaining luxuries much easier. With Void, all of this is eliminated, and players can actually get to the fun stuff faster. Constantly grinding through the last dungeon of Velder for one skill is completely ridiculous. The skill unlocks are even worse, especially the Hyper Active quest–which requires runs of Henir’s Time and Space, something that shouldn’t be attempted without the Hyper Active in the first place. The Lunatic Psyker and Code: Battle Seraph quests are a particularly mindless drag, due to the RNG required for getting the 40 Moonstones for the last part, and I defy anyone to say they enjoyed the Diabolic Esper quest. While some characters’ job quests are actually tolerable, others are a nightmare. The rest of them were created during boost events. I only have a small handful of characters on my NA account, and only two of them I’d actually properly run through the quests for all the skills and the jobs. A F2P MMO shouldn’t be a mindless grind that drives away players. “But Sami, that just means players are lazy!” The only things that aren’t free are the extended quickbar, expanded inventory tabs, and job switching coupons (ex. The B-Slot is available as soon as you create a new character, as are skill pages, and skill unlocks and job advancements are available as soon as you hit the right level. On officials, you have to shell out real money for all the basics (a B-Slot for skills, locked skills on the skill tree, job advancements, and skill pages). Void’s next draw is that it isn’t a money grab. And inflation rates aren’t as bad as one may imagine, because of the aforementioned ED sinks. This means it’s easier to get funds for Void’s various ED sinks to get some luxuries, and it’s easier to get materials for crafting things (Treasure Hunters can make a fortune with how many materials they get). Similarly, Void has a much higher drop rate for both ED and items, with the rate being approximately 300%. Compare and contrast this leveling rate to NA, where it takes multiple dungeon runs to gain one level. In the early game, if you use the boosts offered (the Void EXP Light and job-change promotion costumes), you can get two or even three levels per dungeon, making it even faster. On Void, you’re all but guaranteed to gain at least one level per dungeon for quite some time, only plateauing at roughly level 45-50 (mid-Velder to early Hamel). It’s not uncommon to reach the level cap within two days. This massive experience boost makes leveling incredibly easy and minimizes the grind-time to get to the endgame content (raids, SDs, Henir, and PvP), and Void gives routine experience boosts in the form of double-experience accessories (boosting experience to 800%) to make it even faster. If an enemy gives 25EXP on NA or KR, it gives 100EXP on Void. Void’s experience rate is set to 400% that of officials. So I’m going to go ahead and give an all-around explanation for why people play Void as opposed to officials.įirst of all, Void’s biggest draw is the experience table.
![void elsword leveling void elsword leveling](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/Gv0SmXadvnI/hqdefault.jpg)
The confessions are usually…very, very negative, with people who play the official servers pretty much demonizing Voidies and acting like it’s some horrible crime to play it. So a confessions blog I follow tends to get confessions regarding VoidEls, the only private Elsword server in the world.