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Falx of Olympos: Difference between revisions
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! colspan="11" |Enhanced skill | ! colspan="11" |Enhanced skill | ||
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| colspan="11" |'''Death's Door''' | | colspan="11" |'''Death's Door:''' ''When near death, strike with deadly precision''.<br>Rank 1: Critical Chance is increased by 20% when Health is below 20% | ||
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Revision as of 16:28, 31 May 2020

The Falx of Olympos was a legendary spear in 5th century BCE Greece.
During the Peloponnesian War, the spear laid in the depths of the sunken Palace of Amphitrite, in the bottom of the Aegean Sea between the islands of Thera and Paros. While exploring the underwater location, the Spartan misthios Kassandra claimed the spear.[1]
Weapon statistics
| Rarity | DPS (Level 99) | Default Engravings | Availability | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Legendary | 8257 | +25% Assassin Damage +40% Adrenaline per CRIT +100% Damage but Health Capped to 25% |
Loot the legendary chest in the Palace of Amphitrite | |
| Description | ||||
| High atop Mount Olympos, in the Pantheon, is the meeting place of gods. It is a holy place. | ||||
Mobile Animus 4.38
| Tier | Lvl | Damage | Speed | Defense | Health | Critical Chance | Critical Bonus | Miss Chance | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| * * * * * | 46 | 4k–4.1k | 1.50 | +270 | +260 | +8% | +80% | 5% | ||
| Description | ||||||||||
| A weapon found at the peak of Mount Olympos, said to have been forged by the gods themselves. Can only be equipped by Alexios. | ||||||||||
| Enhanced skill | ||||||||||
| Death's Door: When near death, strike with deadly precision. Rank 1: Critical Chance is increased by 20% when Health is below 20% | ||||||||||
Gallery
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Concept Art
-
Kassandra wielding the Falx
-
The head of the Falx
Behind the scenes
A falx is a weapon with a curved blade that is sharp on the inside edge; it was often used by the Thracians and Dacians. In light of this, the Falx of Olympos more closely resembles a spear.
Olympos is the name of the mountain that served as the home of a number of gods in Greek mythology, as referenced in both descriptions of the spear.