Oracle dota 1
Now, what kind of useful information this homemade gradient classification can give us?įirst, there aren’t a lot of Cyan/Green Characters, and a lot of Blue & Red ones. Note: We have a lot of ideas and this article will change very soon, send us your feedback!Ĭlick to fullview – Cliquez pour agrandirĭOTA 2 Heroes are designed by Valve with specific color palettes and settings.įor more information on Valve’s take on character design in DOTA 2, here’s the Official Character Guide, with explanations on the palettes, settings, silhouettes, and much more! What kind of stats would be interesting, what conclusion do you make of them combined? So to herald the coming (back) of the age of people creating their own Heroes (and we’re probably going to be among them, teasing teasing teasing) we went on to compile a heap of informations about all these characters. Nowadays, Dota 2 belongs to Valve and although modding is being added as we speak, there will still always be an official DOTA 2 on one side (with millions of dollars in the balance) and community created maps, mods, and Heroes on the other. People would ping the designers or just add new heroes themselves (because DOTA was a map made in the Warcraft 3 editor so anyone could edit it). In fact, we play it so much that given our jobs as game makers, we couldn’t but notice that no new hero has been added to DOTA 1 since May 2013 (Nerif the Oracle and Kaolin the Earth Spirit were then ported to Dota 2 and modified but no new design has surfaced in the last 2 years).īut if you caught the DOTA train after the DOTA 2 stop, you might not know that Heroes used to be designed by the community. We play an unreasonable amount of DOTA 2 here at Them Games.