What should I bring to a raid?

A raid is a major adventure for up to 12 players that requires all players to have more preparation to join, much less contribute and survive it.

Raids are a major part of end game content in DDO. Many veteran players spend most of their time doing raids as these quests generally drop some of the best loot and require the highest level of skill to complete. Sooner or later, most people will want to take part in these challenging quests. This article is aimed at new players that wonder if they are ready for a raid and how they should prepare taking part.

So, what should you bring to a raid, whether you lead it or join a group?

Bring a Flagged Character
Most raids in DDO require the player character to complete prerequisite quests--that is, to be flagged before you may enter a specific raid. The Chronoscope and Tempest's Spine are raids that don't require flagging. Your character must meet the level minimums as well to gain experience points. In addition to a flagging requirement, some raids may require gathering of ingredients or collectibles as "keys," in a sense, that also qualify you to enter a raid.

Bring Friends
You can try completing a raid alone. But you will likely need class-specific talents that are very unlikely to be available at the difficulty class needed in the raid for any single character class. It is highly inadvisable to enter most raids without at least one (non-multiclassed) Cleric, Rogue, Wizard or Sorcerer, and Fighter or other melee-class.

Bring some Headphones
Experienced raid leaders are player characters that have completed the raid before (often several times) and know the challenges, prerequisites and dangers ahead.

Raid leaders often uses voice chat to quickly communicate what's needed of party members. Raids are fast-moving and complicated adventures where typing out instructions is usually highly impractical--and perilous. It's a very good idea to activate voice chat in your game options, even if you haven't a microphone yourself, so you can hear the raid leader's instructions.

Good raid leaders will bring you to fortune and glory--if you follow their instructions. A zerging or inattentive party member may not only get themselves killed but get the entire party killed or otherwise cause the quest to fail. Don't be a Leeroy Jenkins.

The harder a raid's difficulty, the more likely that a "pick-up group" (a party filled with players who have little to no history in questing together) will fail in the quest, as some players may "fib" about their own experience or character strength needed to aid the party successfully. Guilds often help in organizing raid parties for greater effectiveness.

See the Fighting in groups article for more tips on how to best help in a party.

Bring Your Own Healing
While experienced raid leaders often invite Clerics and other healing classes, it's very rude of other players to assume that they needn't bring healing potions, scrolls or adjust their own spells to heal themselves. (You can't bring hirelings to help here.) Be sure to bring sufficient potions or spells to help yourself (or others out) in the likely event that the Clerics are busy keeping the tanking fighters alive or reviving characters who have died. Remember that Clerics have to pay for healing wands and resources, just as you do.

Bring Effective Weapons
Enemies in a raid are not affected by dungeon scaling but are generally much stronger and tougher than a similar enemy in a normal quest. That said, you must bring your best game.

Before joining a raid:


 * Study the raid's information here on DDO Wiki or other sources
 * Know what weapons you must have to break the damage reduction of the foe
 * Bring the weapons with you to the raid

Some raid bosses can't be defeated at all until you bypass their virtual invulnerability to damage through mechanisms in the game. Sor'jek Incanni, the boss of the Tempest's Spine raid, can't be damaged until you disable his weather-control powers. Xy'zzy, the boss of the Hound of Xoriat raid, can't be damaged at all until you trick its spawns to attack for you.

Bring Effective Protection
Raids easily test how truly fortified your character is against the elements, enemies or critical damage. Have gear that meets these minimal needs if you plan to survive long.
 * Good armor. By level 10, you should be wearing sufficient armor/cloth that resists at least one major attack type (Deathblock, Axeblock, elemental damage, et al.) and/or is made of special material (such as mithril).
 * Moderate or Heavy Fortification. By the time you're raiding beyond level 10 you should not be completely vulnerable to critical hits. Always enter a raid wearing an item that gives you at least Moderate Fortification, if not Heavy Fortification.
 * Hit Points. Surviving more than one hit is critical. Look for a +Constitution item. Many raid bosses have hundreds of thousands of hit points and can deal single-blow damage in the hundreds. If you are a melee character, get your hit points to at least 300 HP by level 16 if you expect to have a chance to survive a direct attack.
 * Protection against poisons, disease, curses and the like. In some raids (such as A Vision of Destruction) you might get a healing curse that prohibits you from being healed by any spell or potion. Be prepared to remove that curse by yourself. Don't expect the Clerics to heal you often or automatically. In a raid, Clerics must watch players who are critical to the raid's completion at times, and that means others must fend for themselves at times.
 * Underwater Action or Water Breathing items. New players can get the Ring of Waterbreathing as a reward from their very first quest, The Grotto. For more complex raids (and many more quests), underwater action items are needed for longer swims where both loot access and raid completion necessitates them.

Bring a Clue
It pays to use DDO Wiki or other resources to study the quest and know its basics before you join it. While in the raid:


 * Items and objects in the raid: In some raids there are quest items that will determine the raid's success or failure. As a rule of thumb, do NOT pick up any shards, runes or equipment, do not activate altars or speak to NPCs, and do NOT use any runes, levers, switches or altars if you don't know what they do.
 * Know your role: If it looks like a big fight is coming up and you're unsure of what to do - ask!
 * Know your limitations: If you don't know the raid, don't know the raid boss and don't know what will happen, it is usually a bad idea to start tanking the boss or running off by yourself. Ask when the next shrine is coming up, where you should go or if you should do something special. Likewise, if you don't have the minimal equipment, stats, spells or weapons for a raid (even if flagged), please don't join the raid until you have these items available--your lack of resources will tax others in the party.
 * No summoning: Never summon creatures in a raid without explicit permission from the raid leader. Summons can bug out parts of raids, wreck careful aggro-management, or destroy optionals, causing people to lose their loot.  Nobody likes this.
 * Know about special raid features: Hirelings cannot be summoned in raids, and Spirit Cakes cannot be used to return dead characters to life. Higher-level raids (The Reaver's Fate, the Shroud, Accursed Ascension, Tower of Despair) also have mechanisms in place that prevent late-joiners from entering the raid once the raid is started. Triggering the raid before everyone is ready can force a restart and will be sure to annoy people.

Are you SURE you're raid ready?
See the article, "Help! Am I Raid Ready?" for specific flagging, level, tactical and weapon needs for all raids (and a couple of raid-type end-quests).