Forgehammer Set Calculator
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Why use this Forgehammer set calculator?
Many players can budget one gear piece but fail when they try to estimate a full set milestone. That is where scattered planning turns into wasted hammers.
This set calculator is built for milestone thinking: total hammer cost across all slots, uniform-level progress, and whether your target actually reaches the next set breakpoint.
How the set planner works
- Collects current level, target level, and hammer cost for each relevant slot.
- Finds the lowest current and target slot levels to judge set-wide milestone progress.
- Shows total hammer cost and whether the next uniform milestone is realistically reached.
Tested planning scenarios
- Partial set upgrades that look good piece by piece but miss the next uniform threshold.
- Officer Project planning where the set milestone matters more than one flashy slot.
- Hammer allocation choices between broad set progress and one focused carry piece.
Enter each slot level
Use the slots that actually matter to your set plan and keep the current and target levels realistic.
Add the hammer cost per slot
This lets the planner total the real spend instead of just showing the target level dream.
Review uniform-level progress
The key output is the lowest slot level, because that is what controls set milestones.
Decide between set push and piece push
If the milestone is still out of reach, you may be better off delaying the full set plan.
Uniform set push
- Best when you are close to the next milestone.
- Prioritizes even progression.
- Usually better for milestone efficiency.
Carry-piece detour
- Useful when one slot gives immediate tactical value.
- Accept that it delays the next set breakpoint.
- Better as a deliberate choice than an accident.
Deferred milestone plan
- Use when the next set threshold is still too expensive.
- Farm toward the milestone first.
- Avoid forcing an incomplete set just to feel active.
Q: Why does the lowest slot matter so much?
A: Because set milestones are controlled by the weakest slot, not the strongest one.
Q: Should I always keep every slot even?
A: Not always, but if your goal is the next set milestone, even progression usually matters more.
Q: Can this replace the single Forgehammer calculator?
A: No. It complements it. One is for total stock planning, the other is for set-structure planning.
Q: What is the biggest mistake with set planning?
A: Thinking several high slots automatically mean you are close to the next uniform milestone.