Thanks, I'll look into catalog actions in the future. So I"m stuck right now on using the switch effect. I think that I have it set up correctly to determine which healing effect to use, but I encounter an error when trying to use the ability. It doesn't allow me to target anything with the ability, it just gives me an error.
I'm currently trying to recreate League of Legends characters starting Taric and his Imbue ability.
Imbue is a healing spell that, when targeting an ally, heals both the ally and Taric himself for an amount. If Taric targets himself with Imbue, he heals himself for 40% more.
I am wondering if there is a way for me to create a single Modify Unit effect as the heal, and re-use it to both:
Heal both a target ally and caster (Effect targets both units)
or
Heal caster for 40% of the standard heal amount.
I can imagine how to do it using three separate Modify Unit effects, but I know that doing it his way will probably cause problems in the future when trying to do more complicated things.
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Thanks, I'll look into catalog actions in the future. So I"m stuck right now on using the switch effect. I think that I have it set up correctly to determine which healing effect to use, but I encounter an error when trying to use the ability. It doesn't allow me to target anything with the ability, it just gives me an error.
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@ImperialGood: Go
For abilities that can be modified and involve scaling/math, do you have to use triggers?
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I'm currently trying to recreate League of Legends characters starting Taric and his Imbue ability.
Imbue is a healing spell that, when targeting an ally, heals both the ally and Taric himself for an amount. If Taric targets himself with Imbue, he heals himself for 40% more.
I am wondering if there is a way for me to create a single Modify Unit effect as the heal, and re-use it to both:
Heal both a target ally and caster (Effect targets both units)
or
Heal caster for 40% of the standard heal amount.
I can imagine how to do it using three separate Modify Unit effects, but I know that doing it his way will probably cause problems in the future when trying to do more complicated things.