Monster Never Cry – Quick Guide to Extreme Magic Devices

Extreme Magic Devices Guide

By Spits.

These are unique magic devices not only in the way they are generally far stronger than your usual mythic quality magic devices, but they hold a trait which allows them to “pair” with another specific magic device and take both their abilities into effect at once. (see specific details of devices under)

Genesis Stone: If you rely heavily on the more conventional style of team building where your teams’ goal is mostly to run through the enemy, Genesis is the natural first choice. It adds damage akin to a stacked Sword of Oath by default and also has innate survivability by virtue of adding leech to the user, making them heal anytime they deal damage which is incredible if they are well protected. You typically want to apply this device onto whichever unit you consider your “carry” on the team.

Pairing: Genesis Stone pairs with the “Just Scales” mythic device allowing you to equip something else for the unit who would normally wear it.

Cup of Feast: Cup adds a huge layer of survivability to the user and it’s definitely incredible, but it feels like it has sorta fallen into the “secondary” slot as you typically would use it to protect your frontliners which are usually quite tanky innately, or just generally fall into a more supportive role anyway. This device would normally go on a frontline unit to strengthen your ability to defend your more fragile units.

Pairing: Cup of Feast pairs with the “Deepsea Tome” magic device, ensuring further survival both during and/or after the skill invulnerability from Cup wears off.

Me personally, I went with Genesis to start cause it seems to have a lot more general application, but I definitely recommend going for both if at all possible.

Jan Bakowski
About Jan Bakowski 474 Articles
A lifelong gamer Jan Bakowski, also known as Lazy Dice, was always interested in gaming and writing. He lives in Poland (Wrocław). His passion for games began with The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time on the Nintendo 64 back in 1998. Proud owner of Steam Deck, which has become his primary gaming platform. He’s been making guides since 2012. Sharing his gaming experience with other players has become not only his hobby but also his job.

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