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Dwarf Fighter class guide (Dwarf) — strengths, skills and step by step

The Dwarf Fighter is the dwarf of fortune: tough, practical, and the best in the server's economy. Learn its skills, attributes, and a step-by-step way to start from zero.

by admin 6 min read

In short: The Dwarf Fighter is the dwarven warrior built for gathering resources, with the highest toughness (CON) in the game. It's the ideal class for anyone who loves to farm, pile up Adena, and build wealth while punching monsters in the face.

Picture a short, stubborn fighter with pockets full of stuff — always eyeing what can be ripped from a defeated enemy. The Dwarf Fighter isn't the biggest damage dealer or the flashiest mage, but it's the one that turns every monster into profit.

In practice, playing a dwarf is a calm and rewarding experience. You take hits like few others, you rarely die, and every fight has the chance to grab extra materials to sell or craft. It's the class for the patient player who thinks long term.

Overview

Sheet
Race Dwarf
Archetype Crafting/Utility
Playstyle Gathering and farming
Difficulty Easy
Main weapon Fists/blades
Position in the line Starting

The Dwarf Fighter is the starting point of the dwarven warrior line: Dwarf Fighter (Starting). From there you pick the more advanced gathering and crafting paths as you level up and change professions.

Strengths

  • Sky-high toughness (CON 45) — It's the highest life-and-resistance stat on the server (top 4%). In practice that means you die very rarely, survive ambushes, and can farm for hours without scares.
  • Solid physical defense (pDef 80) — You absorb melee blows far better than fragile classes. You can hold off groups of monsters without constantly running away.
  • Resource gain with Spoil and Sweeper — Only the dwarf can "loot" extra materials from enemies. That turns into Adena and crafting items right in your inventory, something no other class does.
  • Your own economy with Dwarven Craft — You make your own items and rely less on the store and other players. Long term, that's money saved and market power.
  • Easy to play and maintain — Simple kit, no complicated rotations. Great for learning the game and perfect to leave on auto-hunt while you do other things.

Weaknesses

  • Low raw life in the late game (HP at level 85 sits below average) — Despite the high CON, the absolute HP value at the top is low (0th percentile). Tip: prioritize armor with good upgrades and use healing potions in the auto-supply.
  • Scarce mana (low MP, 0th percentile) — You won't sustain many magic skills back to back. Tip: save utility skills for the right moments and keep MP potions in the automatic slot.
  • Weak magic power (INT 20, 28th percentile) — Forget dealing damage with magic; that's not your game. Tip: focus 100% on physical attack and gathering, which is where the dwarf shines.
  • Modest damage per hit — The dwarf isn't a fast "killer" like pure damage classes. Tip: make up for it with updated weapons and the economic edge to buy better gear.

Class-defining skills

  • Dwarven Craft — The dwarf's signature ability: it lets you make items from recipes and materials. It's the heart of your personal economy.
  • Spoil — A debuff you apply to a monster before killing it to "mark" it for looting. Always use it before the final blow on targets that give good materials.
  • Sweeper — After killing a target with Spoil active, use Sweeper to collect the extra materials. It's Spoil's inseparable partner.
  • Weapon Mastery — A passive that raises your attack power with your weapon. It works on its own and improves your melee damage.
  • Armor Mastery — A passive that improves your defense with armor. It reinforces the dwarf's "tank" reputation even more.
  • Lucky — An early-level luck passive that helps reduce death penalties early in the game. A comfort for those still learning.
  • Maphr's Shield — A blessing passive that reinforces your protection. One more reason you'll rarely fall in combat.
  • Maphr's Might — A blessing passive that gives your attack power a push. It stacks with Weapon Mastery to make your punches firmer.

Attributes: what to prioritize

The Dwarf Fighter is born with very high CON, and that's exactly where its identity lies: taking hits and farming non-stop. Next comes STR, which sets your physical damage. INT, WIT, and MEN have little value for this class.

  • CON (toughness/life) — Your natural and strongest stat; it's what keeps you alive on auto-hunt.
  • STR (physical damage) — Important to kill faster and farm efficiently.
  • DEX (crit/accuracy) — Helps you hit and land criticals; useful as a secondary stat.
  • INT/WIT/MEN — You can ignore these; the dwarf doesn't live off magic.

Since the attack type is fists/blades, prefer close-range melee weapons and always keep them updated to your level.

Because it's a class built to take hits, wear heavy armor to maximize defense and survival. Start by updating the weapon (more damage = faster farming) and right after that the armor (more defense = less risk on auto-hunt). Use the resources you gather yourself to upgrade your gear without spending everything in the store.

Step by step for beginners

  1. Create the character — Choose the Dwarf race and the Dwarf Fighter class. Aim at farming from the very start.
  2. Do the first quests in the starting area — They give easy levels, basic gear, and teach the controls. Don't skip this part.
  3. Turn on auto-hunt — With auto-hunt the character farms by itself in zones at its level, hitting monsters automatically. It's the most practical way to level up.
  4. Follow the professions base → 1st → 2nd → 3rd — With each profession change you gain new skills and more power. Make the transfer as soon as you reach the required level.
  5. Prioritize the right skills and blessings — Learn Spoil and Sweeper early and use the pair whenever possible. Keep Weapon Mastery, Armor Mastery, and Maphr's blessings active.
  6. Get Adena and L-Coin — Sell the materials you loot with Spoil/Sweeper and complete missions to stack L-Coin. The dwarf is the best class for this.
  7. Keep weapon and armor updated — Whenever you have spare resources, upgrade the weapon first and then the armor. Old gear is what slows your progress the most.
  8. Reinvest in the economy — Use part of your profit to craft and resell. That's how the dwarf becomes the richest player on the server.

Where to farm

  • Auto-hunt on monsters at your level — Start in calm zones and let the character farm with Spoil active to maximize loot.
  • Move up to harder zones as you grow — As you gain levels and gear, shift to areas with stronger monsters and better rewards.
  • Party for raids and bosses — In a group, your toughness helps hold the line while the team focuses the boss; and you still loot what drops.
  • Season Pass and daily missions — Complete them every day to earn Adena, L-Coin, and items with no extra effort.

Common beginner mistakes

  • Killing the monster without using Spoil first — Without Spoil applied, Sweeper collects nothing. You lose the class's main benefit.
  • Trying to deal damage with magic — With low INT and MP, that just wastes mana. Focus on physical and gathering.
  • Ignoring crafting and selling everything raw — Materials turned into items are worth much more. Using Dwarven Craft is half the profit.
  • Leaving the weapon outdated — The dwarf already kills slowly; an old weapon makes farming way too slow. Upgrade whenever you can.

It's for you if…

  • You enjoy farming and stacking wealth more than dealing explosive damage.
  • You prefer a tough class that rarely dies and forgives beginner mistakes.
  • You like playing with auto-hunt and thinking long term, building your own economy.

Quick summary

Attribute Value
Archetype Crafting/Utility
HP at level 85 1638
MP at level 85 698
Base physical attack 4
Base magic attack 6
Attack type FIST (fists)
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