Tips and Tricks for Crusaders Quest ? ^_~
Action Tips and Tricks
Mix melee and ranged characters. In Crusaders Quest, your melee fighters run up to the front of the battle while your ranged characters hang back away from the action. If you have all ranged characters, you’ll get trounced by enemies. And if you only have melee characters, you’ll be unable to damage the enemy from a distance without the use of skills.
Have a healer. My goodness, it’s amazing how much difference a healer can make in this game. Since you’ll have a tank up front taking the damage, you’ll want to have a healer on tap so that enemies don’t break through your first line of defense.
Pick your skills wisely. Skills are so vitally important as you play through dungeons. My favorite options are giving a melee character a ranged special attack and making sure my ranged fighters have team boost skills. It will all depend on your playing style, but put some serious thought into your skill lineup as it’ll save you a lot of grief later.
Call a friend. If there’s a level that is just kicking your butt, then you can call in a hero from a friend. So if you’ve made some strong friends while playing, they can do the grunt work and allow you to level up some of your weaker characters.
Carefully time your special blocks. Yes, it’s absolutely important that you get combos of 2 and 3 special blocks so that you build up your skill meter. But just as importantly, enemies bounce around and you can also get knocked around the level, so you don’t want to misuse a special block, or miss completely because you didn’t get close enough to the enemy.
RPG Tips and Tricks
Train one character at a time. One of the major limitations that will keep you playing on and on is the lack of coins available to you. Playing levels and completing quests will help you get valuable money, and selling items helps too, but even then you’ll be sorely short on money. So you will have to big as choosy as possible when deciding which character/s to train. Don’t bother training 1 star characters and you should probably skip the 2 star characters as well.
Level up your weakest characters. Early on in playing, you get a jewel for maxing out a character’s level (level 10 for 1 star, level 20 for 2 stars, etc.). And this is the best way for you to accumulate the all-important jewels which serve as the dominant currency in the game. Because you’ll get a jewel for taking a 1 star character to level 10, that should only take a few runs in the dungeon.
But don’t promote your weakest characters. Limitation number 2 is on the amount of honor you can accumulate. It’s cruel how after you’ve gone through all the trouble of leveling up your characters how you’ll often end up waiting and selling other characters to gain an additional star. So skip promoting your 1 star characters – you can do better than that.
Jewels are for shopping. When shopping for a new character to add to your roster, using 250 honor only guarantees a character between 2 stars and 5 stars, whereas a purchase using 6 jewels guarantees a character between 3 stars and 4 stars. So the game is begging you to use jewels to shop for new characters. Not only that, but you can even get a 2nd character for the discounted price of 5 jewels, so save up 11 jewels and cross your fingers for the best.
Honor is used for promotions. So if you’re only using jewels for shopping, then you need to save up honor for promotions. Don’t be fooled by the 50 honor price on a 1 star promotion, because it quickly becomes a lot more expensive to promote 2 star, 3 star, 4 star and 5 star characters.