While this doesn’t help you identify which items to keep, it will at least reduce the amount of processing the ol’ noggin has to do. This can be repeated for Demon Hunter/Monk, Wizard/Witch Doctor, and Necromancer/Other. Row 5/6 can hold the common inter-class items, like: Focus/Restraint, Compass Rose/Travelers Pledge, The Witching Hour, Litany/Wailing, Aquila Cuirass, etc. Many non-set (and many time class specific) pieces like bracers/belts/weapons/shields can be placed in rows 1-4 (Barbarian items) or 7-10 (Crusader items). All the other tabs are class/primary stat oriented, here is the tab template I use:īracers/Belts/Speed Variant/Etc items (Class A)īracers/Belts/Speed Variant/Etc items (Class B)įor instance, Barbarian Tab | Strength Tab | Crusader Tab: My very first tab is Gems, Legendary Gems, Infernal Machines, Staff of Herding, and some misc items. I’ve got 13 stash tabs and adopted a nifty way of keeping all sets for every class and their misc pieces intuitively organized. One strategy I have been using is grouping Stash Tabs by primary stat. This will reduce cognitive drain of comparing/filter duplicate items and also help with combat downtime. Stash Tab OrganizationĪ way to effectively increase storage space is storage organization. This will at least get you started in recognizing useful items/stats until you become more familiar. There are many resources mentioned by others Icy Veins’ D3 “Salvage Guide” page is great, which gives a huge list of items and build guides they appear. Using extra character slots as item storage also helps. Extra storage space can be gleaned from Mercenaries, but managing these items can be cumbersome. Keep in mind there are three locations for gear: Character, Mercenary, and Stash.
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