Pillars of Eternity Wiki
Advertisement

Amra is a battle axe in Pillars of Eternity II: Deadfire.

Description[ | ]

Items in italics are quoted directly from the game.

This double-bladed axe has gone by many names over the years - notably Burden, Ponderous Edge, and the Unbalanced Blade. Most would consider a weapon too heavy to wield a liability, and yet its value is beyond question. The pirates who named it "Amra" rallied around the weapon as a kind of standard or totem, likely because of the unusual way they came to possess it. After sailing through a maelstrom to evade pursuers, Amra was found lodged in the deck of their ship. They left it there as a good luck charm for years, but whatever fortune they gained from its presence evidently didn't last.

Acquisition[ | ]

Enchantment tree[ | ]

Note: Riven Gore / Wanton Gore and Tempered Fury / Unstable Temper are mutually exclusive.
 
 
 
 
 
Riven Gore
 
 
Gore
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Wanton Gore
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Tempered Fury
 
 
Temper
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Unstable Temper
 

Upgrades[ | ]

BaseEnchantmentEffectsCostIngredients
GoreRiven GoreIf the wielder's Might is 25 or above, Critical Hits with this weapon cause 25% of base weapon damage in an area around the wielder (Enemies under 50 Health are killed instantly)

Removes: Gore

Copper pires (cp)6,000222
Wanton GoreIf the wielder's Might is 25 or above, Critical Hits with this weapon cause 33% of base weapon damage in an area around the wielder

Removes: Gore

Copper pires (cp)6,000222
TemperTempered Fury25% Chance on scoring a kill with this weapon to Frenzy the wielder (Without a Deflection penalty)

Removes: Temper

Copper pires (cp)6,000222
Unstable Temper1% Chance on receiving damage to Frenzy the wielderCopper pires (cp)6,000222

Notes[ | ]

  • Amra is unique in that it is a two-handed, and has an +50% increased base damage over other battle axes.
  • Unlike other battle axes, the turn-based damage is identical to the RTwP damage.

Behind the scenes[ | ]

  • Added in patch 2.1.0.0034[1]

Gallery[ | ]

Concept art and renders by Ian Randall

References

Advertisement