Has a grab range of 15 and 30 for throw when the Astrolabe is held and 25 to targets outside the center and full CC range of 15 when the Astrolabe is deployed. This ability cannot pull/throw enemies through walls.Ītlas suffers a 20% Movement Speed slow while using both versions of the ability. The pull occurs 1s after activation and the throw occurs 1.25s after whether the Astrolabe is held or not. If Atlas has thrown the Astrolabe, enemies who get pulled into the Astrolabe will get held at the Astrolabe’s location before being launched towards Atlas.Ĭan deal up to 100/160/220/280/340 (+70% of your Magical Power) damage on both versions of the ability. After a brief delay, the held targets get launched in the direction Atlas is facing. If Atlas is holding the Astrolabe he becomes immune to knockups, and enemies who get pulled into the Astrolabe get held in front of Atlas. Enemy gods who are too close get pulled into the Astrolabe. The Basic Explosion deals up to 143 damage per hit to gods and 71.5 damage to minions (29 to gods and 14.5 to minions at level 1) at level 20 and benefits from only 33% Lifesteal.Ītlas can use the explosions from basic attacks up to 13 times while costing a total of 130/135/140/145/150 mana from the initial cast and the maximum possible basic attacks with 2.5% Attack Speed.Ītlas' animations change while the Astrolabe is deployed.Ĭan be refired any time, even while under crowd control or dead.ĭamage: 50/85/120/155/190 (+40% of your Magical Power)Ītlas pulls enemies towards his Astrolabe. Atlas' second ability changes based on whether his Astrolabe is deployed or held. After 5s or when he re-fires this ability, the Astrolabe will return to him. This explosion deals 50% damage to Minions and costs 5 Mana to use. While deployed, his Basic Attack will cause an explosion at the target area that damages all enemies and does not trigger item effects. What, he wonders, might happen if he were to t it aside, once and for all?Ītlas throws his Astrolabe to a target location, damaging and slowing enemies where it lands. And as the gods war upon one another once more, he finds himself questioning the nature of his great burden. It is an arrogance that Atlas knows all too well. Olympus might have a new king, but their arrogance is undimmed. But now the world trembles as existence itself threatens to come undone, thanks to the foolishness of the gods. And now he is condemned to bear the weight of that which he once gloried in. It was he who gave mankind the wisdom to read the stars, and know the names of the patterns that stretched across the night sky. Atlas, some whisper, was the first great explorer of the heavens a celestial cartographer second to none. There was a cruel irony in this punishment. All save Atlas, who was condemned to stand in the west and uphold the heavens on his back forevermore. The surviving titans were cast down into Tartarus and bound in the darkness. But despite Atlas' wisdom, and their strength of arms, the titans lost their war, and their freedom with it. Instead, it is a sentence handed down by mighty Zeus and the gods of Olympus, in retribution for Atlas taking up arms against the gods during the Titanomachy - the last great war between god and titan.Ītlas, said to be the wisest of the titans, led them into battle against Olympus at the behest of Cronus, greatest of their number. His name is Atlas, and he is the celestial axis upon which all of creation revolves.īut his burden is not an honorable one, nor a symbol of triumph. Upon his broad shoulders rests the weight of the heavens, and, some say, the totality of existence itself. Far to the west, farther than any mortal eye can perceive, stands a lonely figure.
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