**Mastery Loadouts**
Due to issues related to the release of Mastery Loadouts, the "free swap" period will be extended.
The new end date will be May 1st.
Due to issues related to the release of Mastery Loadouts, the "free swap" period will be extended.
The new end date will be May 1st.
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For the most part, this doesn't matter much. Power rating doesn't all by itself make a champ stronger or better in any way in terms of in-game combat. However, it directly impacts player prestige. Prestige is just the average of a player's top five champions in terms of power rating. I should say, it is the average of the player's top five champions in terms of power rating before masteries affect power rating. Some masteries can make champion's power rating higher. But it is the base "original" rating before masteries (but after rank up and level up) that affect player prestige.
Prestige itself does affect the player in some respects. For example, AQ rewards are in part determined by prestige. Your alliance has a prestige that is the average of all the players. The higher the alliance prestige, the more points you score (and the harder the AQ map is) and thus the more rewards you get from AQ.
Prestige can affect a player in other ways: occasionally in the past there have been rewards or compensation packages that were affected by player prestige. But for the most part, Alliance Quest is where it matters most. Silver Surfer has one of the highest prestige/power ratings in the game, so if you care about AQ enough to rank up champions to improve your prestige, Silver Surfer is someone you might rank up whether you actually use him or not. He's one of the top rank up choices in the game for this specific reason, but not for any other reason. If you're not in one of the top AQ alliances and not trying to become one, I think 99% of the time ranking up for prestige rather than roster strength is not a good idea.
Just search it, it's Ebony Maw