Zoomancer Guide
The Zoomancer is a Necromancer build that specializes in the use of the summoning tree for its offense and defense. This is intended as a PvM build, and would fare poorly in PvP.
Introduction
The Zoomancer is one of THE easiest builds to create and play. Starting at level one and through the rest of the game, a Zoomancer can be very effective, and offers a break from the traditional clickfest that is Diablo. Relying on only two core skills, it allows for a great deal of customization to your favored play style.
Strengths
- Safety. A Zoomancer must kill his first monster completely alone. Once he's dirtied his wand for hopefully the last time, he may never intentionally get close to another enemy ever again. He will have potentially dozens of minions, all happy to waltz into harm's way so that their master doesn't have to.
- Versatility. Most characters will eventually need help versus the immunes of Hell difficulty. This builds damage is primarily physical, but physical immunities can almost always be broken by the use of Amplify Damage. Later on when unbreakable physical immunes are encountered, they can usually be dispatched with your secondary skills. A summoner can go anywhere in the game and kill anything. And the Zoomancer can do all of this naked or with magic find gear.
Weaknesses
- Minion Dependence. Without you, your skeleton army is useless. Without your skeleton army, YOU are useless. Starting out a new game, especially in Hell difficulty, can be dangerous, and you will usually rely on your mercenary or Iron Golem to make the first kill. In addition, you may have low resistances, low hit points, a low defense rating, and negligible blocking.
- Choke points. Doors and bridges are your enemies. The Maggot Lair and Arcane Sanctuary will make you utter curses more frequently than your character. Your explosion skills can take advantage of these situations, but they are still a nuisance.
Skills
The core skills for this build are Raise Skeleton and Skeleton Mastery. After you've made that 40 point investment, you will be "Hell viable". You could go ahead and max out Summon Resist, Weaken, and Bone Armor if you wanted. But for the love of Trang-Oul and all that is unholy, DON'T!
Summoning
Raise Skeleton
Max it first. It will be the first spell you ever cast, and raising an army at the start of the game will become ritual to you. The best place to do this at the beginning of a game is Nilathak's Garden (aka Pindle Garden, Anya Portal, etc.). There are a lot of corspes there with about 6 seconds to raise as you please. with a good knowledge of what the corpse layout is and fast cast, 12 skellys can be raised.
Skeleton Mastery
Max it second. If you aren't using Skeleton Mages, you should initially build up your character with a 3:1 Raise Skeleton to Skeleton Mastery point allocation ratio. If you're using mages or revives, you may want to opt for a 2:1 ratio instead.
Clay Golem
1 point suggested. The basic clay golem has enough hit points to stay alive most of the time, and can be simply recast when it dies or needs to be repositioned. It has an extremely useful "slows enemies" effect that is particularly of note versus act bosses.
Skeletal Mage
0-20 points. These guys have two main purposes: broadening your damage, and defending your flank. Their damage output is rather low, but will sometimes chill monsters and prevent their healing, and can harm those physical immunes that refuse to die even after you've reduced the corpses around them to chunky kibbles. Also, a monster will sometimes sneak up behind you or around your front lines. This is particularly frequent when facing blowgun fetish and demon imps. Your mages will hang out in back with you, and you can hide amongst them instead of having to frantically block with your clay golem.
Golem Mastery and Summon Resist
1 point wonders. With +skills items, they get as high as they need to be. More, however, is generally a waste. Summon Resist suffers major diminishing returns, but your minions do not suffer the same resistance penalties that you and your mercenary do in Hell difficulty.
Blood Golem and Iron Golem
1 point each as prerequisites. A blood golem is a liability, one that is made unnecessary by the use of healing potions. An Iron Golem is immune to poison and returns damage to melee attackers, so it has its uses.
Fire Golem
0-1 point. It attracts enemies with its fire aura, which can help keep the heat off you. It has a tendency to pull extra monsters, but Zoomancers are seldom afraid of a large crowd, especially if they have....
Revive
0-10 points. With the exception of NASTY monsters like Urdars and Frenzytaurs, their damage output is not helpful, but for those three minutes you have them they are practically indestructible. In addition to these two, you may want to bring along the following...
- Vile Children and Sand Maggot Young. All revives have enough hit points. These little buggers are very fast and very aggressive.
- Corrupt Rogues. Like Vile Children, they are fast and aggressive, and will patrol a wide radius looking for trouble when not in combat.
- Claw Vipers are nasty and fire bone spears!
- Thorned Hulks are very similar to Urdars.
- Council Members and Vampires make excellent revive mages.
Poison & Bone
You may want to eventually put points into the higher-level damage skills for this tree. Poison in particular may be useful, as those skills require a lower skill point investment to be effective and can be boosted by Lower Resist.
Teeth
1 point. It is a prerequisite to Corpse Explosion, and may be the only skill you can bind to your left click button. You can bind the "throw" action instead, but Teeth will remain bound even when you switch weapons. You do NOT want to accidentally walk up to monsters you click on!
Corpse Explosion
1-20 points. The greatest skill of all time. Even with only one point, your +skills items will bring it up to a useful radius. It really shines at choke points and with tightly packed mobs. That, and it's really good at making a cool mess. You should Amplify Damage or Lower Resists all monsters in the vicinity before you cast CE, to maxime its potential. One thing to note is that CE does not scale with higher player count, so your CE damage will drastically be lowered in games with many people, doing only 2/9 of the damage in a 8 player game.
Curses
Dim Vision
1-20 points. This is your primary defense against ranged attackers, particularly piercing ranged attackers, and even MORE particularly against Gloams. It also helps to keep enemies from attacking your army all at once, which is useful for getting that crucial first corpse before the bone hits the fan.
This skill can also be very useful by preventing enemies from casting spells. Shamans will not resurrect their minions, Pit Lords will not use their Inferno attack, and Vampires will not drop meteors on you. However, Oblivion Knight mages are immune to Dim Vision, Attract, and Confuse... the only way you can effect their AI is with Terror, which often is not desirable at all.
Confuse and Attract
0-20 points. Some players hail them as incredibly useful because they trick monsters into fighting each other. However, that damage is not particularly high, and is chiefly a bonus before your skeletons get in for the major damage. Attract in particular can be useful, as the defeated monster can quickly avenge himself by blowing up all of his traitorous friends via Corpse Explosion. These skills tend to make a more chaotic battlefield, so they are often ineffective when you are trying to keep piercing ranged attackers from shooting all over the place wildly. To best achieve this defensive effect, use Attract on a monster in the rear of the pack.
Everything else
1 point wonders. Amplify Damage is a MUST for your skeletons. Lower Resist is great for parties, poison skills, and skeleton mages. Decrepify is most useful versus bosses, and ideally is attained before facing Diablo. Life Tap will keep your minions (most importantly your mercenary) alive when the going gets tough.
Stats
Strength
You can get through the whole game leaving it at base. You will need 81 strength to equip the entire Trang-Oul's Avatar, widely considered the best Necromancer set in the game. Bringing it to above 100 is pushing it, but some players like to do so for alternative gear.
Dexterity
Base. You aren't swinging at anything, and the amount of points you need to invest for blocking just isn't worth it. The only exception is if you're using Poison Dagger as an alternate skill.
Vitality
CRANK it! You won't get hit much, but when you do, it will HURT. You will never regret putting points into Vitality.
Energy
How much you need is entirely depend ant on your auxiliary skills, as Raise Skeleton is rather cheap. Around 100 points should be enough for most summoners. You'll encounter more mana potions than you need, and running out of mana will rarely be as disastrous as it would be for the other classes. If you use an Insight weapon on an Act II mercenary, you will regenerate all of your mana quickly enough to spam Corpse Explosion and Revive to your heart's content.
Mercenary
You're going to want to use an Act II mercenary. Their auras are far more useful than anything the other mercs have, have better survivability than the Act I or Act III mercs, and comparable damage potential to the Act V merc.
- Prayer is useful at lower levels, but later on the healing just isn't significant. It's nice to regenerate, and great if you're waiting for one of the Nightmare difficulty auras, though.
- Defiance is useful early on, but eventually your skeletons will rock so much later on that you just don't need it.
- Blessed Aim is also good early on, but like Defiance it eventually becomes unnecessary.
- Thorns will rock while your character level is low compared to the monsters, but loses effectiveness as you level up. You can also get the Thorns aura easily from an Edge runeword weapon.
- Holy Freeze is good defensively, but can cause monsters to shatter and rob you of a corpse.
- Might is generally considered to be the most useful aura for a Zoomancer, as it will significantly improve your minion damage. Once you get to Act II Nightmare, grab it!
Equipment
In general, stock up on Magic Find. You won't be getting hurt much, and don't really need equipment to be effective.
Helms
- The Lore runeword is very useful, and not too difficult to create.
Body armor
- Stealth is easy to make early in the game.
Shields
Good luck with that! A good shrunken head is very hard to find.
Gloves
- Frostburns are great for the mana bonus, although you may end up not needing it.
Boots
- Marrowalk is good for the skill bonus, but otherwise a pair of magic find boots may be more worth it.
Belts
- Anything with four slots should be adequate. A common practice is to imbue the first exceptional sash you find.
Weapons
Remember to use weapon switch! You only need those high summoning skill levels while you're raising your army... after that, you can equip something that provides them with an aura or boosts your curses.
- Any wand with good skill bonuses is nice.
- For an alternate weapon, try using an Edge bow. That Thorns aura really comes in handy, especially when you encounter an extra strong, extra fast, cursed Urdar boss pack.
Rings
As usual, skiller will be nice, and a Stone of Jordan will help your CE'ing as it gives quite a bit of mana. Otherwise, rare rings with stats/resists/FCR will be awesome.
Amulets
Charms
As a Zoomancer, your primary purpose in combat is to pick up loot. Charms make you less effective at this. Don't use them unless they give you something VERY nice.
Strategy
Shamans and Greater Mummies
Dim Vision on the monster raising its allies is your best bet. It will force it to mill around until your troops come in to attack it melee, and by then it's in big trouble. If the target is immune to AI curses (Champion/Unique) or your Dim Vision skill level is too low, try summoning a clay golem next to it instead. The golem will distract the monster more than simply hanging in back would have, and slow it as well.
Act Bosses
In general, Decreptify is your best bet against bosses, since it will slow them to a crawl and they will be struck down by your skellys slowly. The Clay Golem alos provides slow, but usually not enough to get them to stay still. Some Act bosses have large "bases" meaning they take up a large sapce, so more skellys can crowd around and attck, but with smaller ones charges of teleport is really handy and makes the fight a lot faster. These strategies below are all for normal, there is no boss you cannot take down in NM/Hell as long as you have Decreptify.
Andariel
This shouldn't really be a problem if you chug mana pots and cast Clay Golem next to her as his health goes down. Meanwhile, you skellys are beating down on her. She will only focus on the Golem as long as you keep casting it, so if you are fast she may never cast her poison attack.
Duriel
A good strategy here is to cast Iron MAiden on him and watch him beat himself up on a skelly. Sometimes he hits too hard for your skellys to take, in that case revert to the Clay Golem strategy with Andy again. He doesn't seem as attractted to the golem as Andy though.
Mephisto
He is a wuss, his close up attacks don't really do anything, and his life is low. Amp him and be done is about 15 seconds.
Diablo
Considered the bane of all summoners, even with Decreptify, at around level 30 your skellys cannot take his powerful attacks. This battle is based on luck, hopefully you have Decrep by now, or it will definately be a lost cause. You can help out if you have a wand with Bone Spirit, but all it comes down to is who kills the other faster.
Baal
In normal, if you STILL do not have Decrep he will be quite hard, as he like to teleport away frequently and cast a clone if you spare him some time. Get close, slow him down, and hit hard.
Contributors
If you've helped build this guide, brag about it here!
- Yo. --Explodicle 03:56, 24 Aug 2006 (BST)
- I did something! :) Masterkilla 22:52, 13 Sep 2006 (BST)