


We've seen people asking for knockbacks, or to disable run temporarily (rather than draining run energy).

Players seemed happy overall with the proposed upgraded Revenant weapons, but some felt that the Ursine Chainmace's Special Attack (Bear Down) was a little underwhelming. We'd also like to fix a bug where High-risk world skulls currently don't affect the Revenant Caves drop table. This feels like a good opportunity to address long-standing concerns regarding their rarity and likely won't affect gold per hour rates too much, since most of the profits here are made up of alchables and other drops. We'd like to propose a boost to the drop rates on these weapons from Revenants. Many players expressed concerns that the existing Revenant weapons (Craw's Bow, Viggora's Chainmace and Thammaron's Sceptre) are exceedingly rare, meaning their supply would limit the availability of their proposed upgrades, thus decreasing the value of the attachments. Please continue to let us know your thoughts using the survey towards the end of the post, and engaging in discussion across any of the platforms linked at the end of the post!
#LIL BRAVE 2 BOW UPDATE#
In women's singles, Malvika Bansod also bowed out in the opening round after losing 14-21 12-21 to Denmark's Line Christophersen.Note: with the release of Tombs of Amascut on August 24th, it will be a little while before we're next able to update this blog. Among others, B Sumeeth Reddy and Manu Attri lost 11-21 21-19 15-21 to Masayuki Onodera and Hiroki Okamura in men's doubles. Soon, five straight points took Lakshya to match points and he sealed it with a smash. At 11-15, Vittinghus made Lakshya twist and turn with his angled returns to win a point, but he was too erratic to put any pressure on his opponent.

In the mid-game interval of second game, Lakshya again managed a four-point advantage after Vittinghus sent one wide, and slapped his head in frustration. There was no lack of effort from the veteran Danish, but he couldn't stop Lakshya from running away with the opening game, with the Indian always staying a step ahead.Ī relentless Vittinghus kept testing the Indian by engaging him in fast-paced rallies, one of which was of 31 shots, but Lakshya used his winners to finish them off or the Danish miscued.Īlso Read: FIFA's ban on AIFF likely to be lifted soon as Supreme Court dissolves CoA Lakshya, seeded ninth, played some exceptional cross court returns from deep forehand to trouble the 36-year-old Danish, who had come into the match with a 2-1 head-to-head count against the Indian. The Indian pair will meet 14th seeds Supak Jomkoh and Supissara Paewsampran of Thailand next. In mixed doubles, Tanisha Crasto and Ishaan Bhatnagar defeated German duo of Patrick Scheiel and Franziska Volkmann 21-13 21-13 in 29 minutes to also make a positive start to their campaign. However, former Commonwealth Games bronze medallists Ashwini Ponnappa and N Sikki Reddy progressed to the women's doubles second round with a 21-7 21-9 win over Maldives' Aminath Nabeeha Abdul Razzaq and Fathimath Nabaaha Abdul Razzaq.Īlso Read: BWF World Championships 2022: India squad, schedule, complete draw and live streaming detailsĪshwini and Sikki will face an uphill task of taming top seeds Chen Qing Chen and Jia Yi Fan of China in the second round.
