4 Answers2025-11-07 20:05:08
If you’re heading into greater demons in 'Old School RuneScape', I usually lean toward a straight-up melee setup for speed and simplicity. I like an Abyssal whip in the main hand with a Dragon defender if I’m doing longer trips — it keeps the kills fast without needing to sacrifice too much defence. On top of that I’ll wear a mix of high-accuracy melee pieces: think about a mix of Rune or Barrows pieces depending on your bank, a good pair of gloves (Barrows gloves if you’ve got them), and whichever cape gives the best offensive boost you own. Prayer-wise I turn on Piety if I’ve got the level; it absolutely shaves time off each kill.
Inventory is basic but effective: high-heal food, a few prayer potions if I’m using Piety, a teleport out, and a bit of space for rune or bolt drops. If it’s a Slayer task I slap on a Slayer helmet — just makes everything smoother. If you prefer ranged, Toxic blowpipe with high-quality darts and black d'hide makes them trivial from a distance, and for magic the trident-style weapons or high-damage spells work fine if you like AFK-ish kills.
Tactics matter: single-target DPS wins here. Bring enough supplies to avoid banking constantly, stand where you don’t get agro from extras, and use your slayer or prayer bonuses when you can. Personally, I find whip + defender runs the most satisfying — quick, clean, and good XP — and I always come away with more loot than I expected.
4 Answers2025-11-07 00:45:58
Whenever I go on a slayer trip in 'Old School RuneScape', I reach for a mix of speed and solid damage. For pure melee I usually bring an abyssal whip for its speed and accuracy — it makes the kills feel effortless and keeps XP ticking. If I need raw crush power I switch to an abyssal bludgeon or another high-strength crush weapon because crushing hits tend to rack up damage quickly on tougher targets; it’s heavier but satisfying when it connects.
If I’m trying to finish a task faster or handle a higher-defense greater demon, I’ll throw a Dragon Warhammer or a heavy-hitting special weapon into the rotation to lower their defence for a burst window. For non-melee approaches I love the toxic blowpipe for range: it’s fast, efficient with darts, and melts through health on long tasks. For magic, a trident (or other high-damage, castable staff) gives consistent single-target damage without swapping spells or worrying about runes. In short, pick a weapon that matches your attack bonuses and playstyle: fast accuracy for steady kills or heavy-hitting specials for burst — both feel great depending on the mood. I usually leave the bossing session smiling, especially when the special strikes line up just right.
5 Answers2025-11-06 12:02:30
Grinding abyssal demons on a shoestring taught me to treat melee as the gold standard for speed and low cost. For the absolute cheapest effective setup I rely on a sturdy scimitar — if you can swing a 'Dragon scimitar' great, but a 'Rune scimitar' will carry you fine and is much easier on the wallet. Pair that with a decent helmet (something with solid defence bonus but not an expensive trim), rune platelegs or similar, and a simple kite or defender if you have one. Boots and gloves can be the basic mid-tier pieces you already own.
You don't need flashy prayer gear or expensive capes for tasking these. Bring good food, a few super restores only if you're using prayer, and a teleport for escapes. If you're doing them on a Slayer task, wear a Slayer helmet or the cheapest Slayer-boosting alternative you own. Little things matter: use a strength-boosting potion if you want faster kills, but they aren't mandatory. Overall, keep it simple: prioritize a reliable melee weapon with high strength bonus, mid-level armour for survivability, and a sensible inventory — you'll be surprised how far a modest setup goes, and you get to pocket the drops rather than replacing broken pride.
3 Answers2025-11-06 19:53:56
If I had to build one all-out melee kit for putting Brutal Black Dragons down fastest in 'Old School RuneScape', I’d focus on sheer single-target DPS plus a way to chew through their defences. My go-to combo is a high-accuracy stab or crush weapon (depending on your gear) paired with heavy strength bonuses, Piety, and a Dragon Warhammer/Bandos Godsword for the defence drop. For me that usually looks like a 'Ghrazi rapier' for raw stab accuracy and fast consistent hits, or the 'Abyssal bludgeon' if I want heavy crush damage — either of those will outpace most other melee choices on a single target. I slot a 'Dragon warhammer' in the inventory to smash their defence whenever the special is up; that little defence nerf multiplies your DPS over the fight.
Armor-wise I favor a strength-focused setup: 'Bandos' chest and tassets (or the strongest hybrid chest you’ve got), 'Barrows gloves', 'Primordial boots' or 'Dragon boots', and an 'Amulet of torture' or 'Strength amulet'. Bring prayer gear (a switch to a prayer-boosting cape or using a 'Fire cape'/'Infernal cape' depending on what you own), and always run 'Piety'. Inventory should be super attack + super strength (or a single super combat potion), plenty of high-healing food like sharks/rocktails, a couple of restore potions for prayer, and an antidragonfire potion or an antifire shield — Brutal Blacks will spit dragonfire.
Playstyle: burst with the Warhammer/Godsword special early to lower Defence, then pound them with rapier or bludgeon while keeping prayers up. If you want absolute fastest, a maxed player with 'Ghrazi rapier' + 'Dragon warhammer' specials timed perfectly will usually net the quickest kills; the bludgeon shines if you prefer higher max hits against their defences. Personally, I love the rhythm of popping that special then watching the HP drop — feels super satisfying every time.
3 Answers2025-11-24 04:52:02
My brain lights up whenever someone asks about dark beasts — those shadowy, high-level slayer targets are some of my favorite late-game grind monsters in 'Old School RuneScape'. The go-to place most players head to is the Catacombs of Kourend: that underground dungeon has reliable dark beast spawns in a multi-combat area, so you can tag multiple at once if you’re efficient. Getting there is pretty straightforward — teleport to the Kourend & Kebos region (or use an Arceuus spell/teleport) and head into the catacombs, then follow the cavern paths toward the western/southern chambers where darkness dens tend to cluster. It’s common to see players using prayer, a high mage bonus, or a strong magic setup since dark beasts hit hard and the area is multi.
Besides the Catacombs, there are smaller dark beast pockets in other deep, slayer-oriented caves. Some folks also camp them in sections of the Taverley-esque slayer dungeons or other high-level subterranean zones that are marked for slayer tasks. If you’re going to farm them, bring strong defensive gear, plenty of food, and maybe a familiar or ranged/magic setup depending on your style. Personally I love the rhythm of tagging them and banking hides — it’s sweaty but satisfying grindy content that rewards patience, and those shadowy aesthetics never get old.
3 Answers2025-11-24 06:06:54
If you’re asking about dark beasts in 'Old School RuneScape', the short reality is that kill rates vary wildly depending on how you approach them, but I can give you a solid range based on setups I’ve used and seen. For someone newer or using a safer, more defensive method (safespotting, slower gear), you’ll often see something like 300–500 kills per hour. That’s comfortable and low-risk, but click-heavy if you’re not using semi-afk tactics.
If you’re running a standard efficient Slayer setup—good ranged or magic gear, decent supplies, and you’re not being overly cautious—most people sit around 600–900 kills per hour. That’s what I typically hit on a typical evening grind: not perfect, but steady. Push it with optimized rotations, special attacks, or faster gear and you can edge towards the top end.
At the very high end, experienced players with the absolute right setup, minimal downtime, and aggressive playstyles can push 1,000+ kills per hour in short bursts. Those runs are intense and require near-perfect clicking, minimal bank trips, and often instance or location-specific advantages. Personally I like the steady 700–850 range for long sessions because it balances loot, sanity, and the thrill of speedrunning a Slayer task without burning out.
3 Answers2025-11-24 13:05:33
Yep — you need level 90 Slayer to get assigned Dark beasts in 'Old School RuneScape'. I hit that milestone a while back and felt like a VIP unlocking one of the nastier high-level tasks. They’re a proper post-85 Slayer grind: high HP, nasty hits, and generally a great source of consistent loot if you’ve got the stats and patience.
If you’re planning to tackle them, bring decent offensive gear and the usual Slayer trimmings: food, potions, and a Slayer helmet if you can use one. Ranged is popular because you can kite and avoid some of their melee damage, but solid melee setups work too if you’ve got decent defence and prayer. They hit hard enough that you’ll appreciate range or strong defensive prayers to stay alive through long tasks.
A few practical tips from personal runs: do them on a Slayer task for best XP/loot ratio, use an antifire or relevant protection depending on location quirks, and consider a team or a cannon if you’re doing mass kills and the area permits it. They’re a grind but satisfying once you streamline the setup — I usually end a session feeling like I earned the drops and the Slayer XP.