Effective warrior guide

''Note: This article is intended to provide guidance for experienced characters playing new warrior PvE characters or inexperienced warriors looking for additional options. If this is your first time playing guild wars, please see Getting started in Guild Wars Prophecies.''

A Warrior's Place
A warrior's place is in battle knee deep in foes and first to the fight. Warriors have the highest natural Armor rating of any class, as well as defensive and enduring skills such as Dolyak Signet, "Watch Yourself!" and Defensive Stance.

Being a Warrior
As a general rule, warriors should be among the first into a battle and among the last out. In PvE, the primary responsibility is to mitigate damage to the rest of the group by absorbing as much as possible. Attempt to block or hinder foes attacking casters. Engage other warriors attempting to attack the rest of the party. Once the serious threats to the casters have been dealt with, move on to the opposing casters. In PvP, many effective warrior builds revolve around spiking, pressuring, linebacking or a combination of the preceding tactics. In PvP, engaging opposing casters is typically more important and more useful than fighting other warriors.

Warriors can make use of adrenaline skills that take no energy. These skills have to be charged by successfully attacking, either with a melee weapon, a bow, a spear, or a wand. Warriors can also use shouts, which have no activation time, and often aid the entire party.

Always carry a resurrect skill of some kind, as a higher armor rating and survival skills means the warrior will be most likely to survive a near-wipe situation. Monk and Ritualist secondaries should carry reusable resurrection spells like Rebirth or Flesh of My Flesh.

It is also advisable for warriors to carry self-healing skills, such as Healing Signet. Skills like these can keep the warrior effective longer, and allow primary monks to concentrate healing on more vulnerable allies.

Weapon of Choice
It is important to choose a single weapon to use with your warrior. Attribute points are in short supply, and focusing on a single weapon is the only way to use them effectively. See Runes and Armor for options on creating a weapon-flexible warrior. Be sure to read the associated page for details on your chosen weapon.

Strength
Strength grants 1% armor penetration per attribute level when using attack skills, and controls the effectiveness of strength skills. Strength based armor penetration stacks with sundering weapon upgrades, but is replaced by skill based armor penetration.
 * Interesting Strength Skills:
 * Power Attack, Griffon's Sweep,Counterattack and Leviathan's Sweep are direct damage attack skills may be used with any melee weapon.
 * Protector's Strike and Bull's Strike are skills that may be used with any weapon to deal extra damage to moving foes.
 * Endure Pain and Defy Pain grant extra health to survive when health is low near the end of battle.
 * Sprint and Rush allow the player to move faster into or out of battle.
 * Signet of Strength, Warrior's Cunning and Berserker Stance can make attacks more effective or faster.
 * Warrior's Endurance is an excellent way to gain energy in combat.
 * Dolyak Signet is a great way to gain large amounts of armor and immunity to being knocked down for no energy cost.

Tactics
Tactics controls the effect of Party wide or personal countering skills. Most Tactics skills are defensive in nature.
 * Interesting Tactics Skills:
 * Protector's Defense, "Shields Up!", and "Watch Yourself!" grant additional armor or additional chance to block attacks to other party members
 * Gladiator's Defense, Riposte and Deadly Riposte block incoming attacks and cause damage to the attacking foe.
 * Defensive Stance, Wary Stance, Bonetti's Defense, Deflect Arrows, Shield Stance, and Disciplined Stance grant blocking or armor bonuses against incoming attacks.
 * "Charge!" and "Retreat!" grant speed bonuses to allies or party members
 * Desperation Blow and Drunken Blow are melee attacks that cause a self-inflicted knockdown when used them. Steady Stance, Balanced Stance and Dolyak Signet let them be used safely.

Stances
Warriors have a great selection of stances, offensive and defensive, generic and specific. The most popular are IAS stances which increase the damage output and help build adrenaline for other skills. Examples are Flail, Flurry, Frenzy, Tiger Stance, and Berserker Stance. All these stances come with a penalty and there is no single, best skill in all situations. Due to the warrior's role in combat and the perfect situational awareness of monsters, Frenzy should be used only in specially planned PvE situations.

Healing
Self-healing is especially important for a warrior because of their position on the frontline, often out of range of the monk, taking the brunt of the damage.

The 3 staple warrior heals are:
 * "Victory is Mine!" - When a team is based around Conditions this skill can easily heal for over 200 hp instantly.
 * Lion's Comfort - A Nightfall skill is good for warriors using strength.It can be used more often than Healing Signet and doesn't carry the sometimes-dangerous armor penalty, however it is an adrenaline skill which puts a limit to its flexibility even if it provides adrenaline when used.
 * Healing Signet - The original and most powerful, for a character that specs into Tactics. It subtracts 40 armor from the current armor while casting, so an emergency stance or a solid tanking skill are often used to "cover" while activating the signet.

Other good skills for healing are:


 * Vigorous Spirit - The "Paladin" skill. This provides excellent healing over time, preventing the need for emergency healing.  It can also be shared with allied warrior, ranger, and assassin. Consider using this skill with AoE skills, such as Cyclone Axe or Triple Chop.  This is a Monk skill.

Extra


 * Mending - This skill is extremely popular due to its ease of use among newer players, however Warriors will learn after playing that it is nether cost efficient (with the least Healing/Energy), nor the most reliable (As an enchantment it can be removed). This skill is the butt of many infamous jokes about how Mending is such a good skill, when in reality it is terribly inefficient.

Runes and Armor
Here is an example armor set for a flexible warrior that allows the warrior to change weapons, skills and attribute bonuses at will.
 * One helm for each preferred weapon, for example,
 * Swordsmanship helm with a Rune of Swordsmanship for when wielding a sword
 * Hammer Mastery helm with a Rune of Hammer Mastery for when wielding a hammer


 * Two sets of armor with different insignia, infused with a Rune of Vigor in the chest piece, and a Rune of Absorption in the leggings.
 * Radiant insignia for 5 extra energy with high-energy builds such as Warrior's Endurance or Flourish
 * Dreadnought's insignia for extra armor with adrenal or tactical builds
 * Stonefist insignia when using skills that knock down foes, especially with a hammer
 * The remaining gauntlets and boots of an armor set can be infused with a rune of minor tactics, minor strength, rune of clarity or rune of purity, depending on personal preference for strength and tactics skills

Sword Warrior
The sword warrior uses his weapon to duel a single enemy at a time, causing conditions like bleeding and doing heavy armor ignoring damage with his attack skills. Use Dragon Slash or Hundred Blades to quickly charge up all equipped adrenaline attacks simultaneously. Energy can be used for skills to increase adrenaline gain even further, like "For Great Justice!" and "To the Limit!", or for energy-based attacks like Pure Strike.

Axe Warrior
The axe warrior has 2 important PvE skills which can hit multiple opponents at once: Cyclone Axe and Triple Chop. These attacks give adrenaline for each foe hit, the same as Hundred Blades, and allow easy use of adrenaline attacks.

Hammer Warrior
The hammer warrior disrupts foes by knocking them down, over and over and over. A common attack chain is Staggering Blow, Heavy Blow, Crushing Blow, Irresistible Blow. Other skills can be added or substituted for these ones as they become available. A stance that increases attack speed is important with a hammer, because of the weapon's slower speed.

Tank
This character uses Strength and Tactics skills to reduce the damage done by monsters, so that the party needs less healing over all to survive a battle. S/he attracts the attention of melee enemies, as well as protecting his/her party members from ranged attacks. Some popular tanking skills are Dolyak Signet, Flail, Shield Bash, "Shields Up!", "Watch Yourself!", Bonetti's Defense, and Gladiator's Defense.

Choosing a Secondary
For further information on choosing a secondary profession, including information about PvP Warrior builds, see Secondary professions for a Warrior.

Suggested Skills

 * Warriors Endurance, Berserker Stance, and "while in a stance" equipment: at 12 strength, Warriors Endurance lasts 29 seconds, Berserker Stance lasts 10, and both recycle in 30 seconds, allowing a player to remain "stanced" and gain constant benefit from stance equipment. Additionally, the energy gain from Warriors Endurance allows the use of energy-expensive attack skills and/or maintained enchantments.
 * Watch Yourself provides a moderate armor bonus with enough points in Tactics. Due to its low adrenaline cost, it is easily maintainable with few or no points in Tactics.
 * Skull Crack and Berserker Stance: at 12 Strength, both Dazed and Berserker Stance last 10 seconds, allowing tactics that interrupt a target caster once a second for 10 seconds.


 * Enraged Smash: Unlike most attack skills, this one is not meant to be combined with other attack skills, but to be used by itself, over and over. And unlike most Hammer elites, it doesn't knock enemies down.

Warriors in PvP
Warriors are arguably the most versatile class in PvP, being the main force of the offense, and being able to switch between different play-styles mid-battle. For the sake of the article, the somewhat dated Cripslash build will be used as an example.

This build includes a very powerful and somewhat spamable snare, and a speed buff. The build allows for constant pressuring through conditions, damage, and the natural resiliency of warrior armor.

There are several tactics that warriors employ in PvP, but the most common are pressuring, spiking, and linebacking. Each of these tactics, using the example build, will be discussed here in relation to the PvP Warrior.

Pressure
The point of pressure is to stretch the enemy monks' energy pools thin by attacking many enemies at once. This is more effective at draining energy then simply attacking one target mostly because of the Protection Prayers tree of skills. If a warrior were to attack a single character, then the damage could be cut in half by skills such as Aegis or Guardian. Good pressure is often a precursor to spikes, to reduce the likelihood that a spike will be countered. Mini-spikes may also be used in pressure to bait antispike measures. Mini-spikes are performed by either part of the frontline using their entire skill set, or all of the frontline using varying parts of their skill set.

Spiking
The spike chain in the example build is Frenzy -> Crippling Slash -> Gash -> Sun and Moon Slash -> Rush.

This combo is effective because Frenzy allows for the entire chain to be delivered in half the time, Crippling Slash offers minor degeneration pressure, Gash reduces the maximum health by a fifth through Deep Wound, and Sun and Moon Slash provides a potent finishing move. Rush is then used to cancel Frenzy, so that the player doesn't take double damage. It will always be ready at the end of a spike chain.

The mini-spike combo in this build is often Crippling Slash and Sun and Moon Slash, without a Frenzy active.

Line Backing
This tactic is deployed defensively, when the battle is not going favorably, often in response to heavy pressure or to stave off spikes. Linebacking essentially revolves around not allowing any enemies beyond your frontline.

Players using the example build would make heavy use of the skills Crippling Slash, Bull's Strike and Rush. By maintaining Rush, the player can be near-guaranteed to be able to keep up with the enemy forces that may try to pass, and force a slow advance with Crippling Slash. Should the opposing players continue their offensive advance, Bull's Strike can be employed for constant knockdowns. This tactic allows monks to regain energy through the luxury of predictable targets, and relaxed spot-healing.

Quarter knocking
Quarter Knocking is when you keep another character on the ground (by various KD skills) and only allowing minimal time not KDed. A successful Quarter Knock will keep a character above the ground for less than a 1/4 of a second, and therefore cannot use any skill. This gives quarter knocking its name. Quarter Knocking's biggest advantage is best used on monks. Keeping a monk quarter knocked allows a warrior and his team to pressure/spike the monk without allowing him to throw up many 1/4 second prots, such as Spirit Bond, Protective Spirit, or Reversal of Fortune. Quarter knocking is mostly done on hammer warriors, but warriors with Shock and Bull's Strike can sucessfully quarter knock a target as well.