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Where to Find Training Ground in ROOC

Watch - Blog reference Apr 10, 2026 Source: ROOC Blog
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Summary

A blog reference explaining where to access ROOC Training Ground and why it matters for testing damage, elements, and skill rotations.

Best for

Players who want a safe place to compare builds before spending materials or changing skill setups.

Our take

Good non-YouTube utility article. Use it as a testing workflow reference, not as a class build recommendation.

Use Training Ground before committing resources

Training Ground is the ROOC testing room you should visit before treating a build change as proven. The source page shows it under the in-game Build menu, with the Training Ground option visible from that screen. That matters because it keeps testing close to the systems players are already adjusting: skills, gear, cards, elements, and rotation habits.

The point is not to create one impressive damage screenshot. Use Training Ground to compare like with like. Test the same target, similar buffs, and the same rotation length before and after a change. If a card swap, weapon refine, skill route, or element choice really helps, it should show up across repeated attempts rather than only in one lucky pull.

What the source confirms you can test

The blog page confirms several useful controls: elemental damage checks, a timer for Damage Per Minute, custom target selection that includes Bosses and MVPs, plus monster behavior toggles for stationary and attack-style testing. That gives players more than a basic target dummy. You can look at raw output, then add pressure to see whether the setup still works when the target is not passive.

For damage classes, this is a clean way to compare skill rotations and element choices. For tanks and supports, the attack behavior is useful because survival and trigger-based gear do not mean much against a target that never fights back. Keep the test narrow: change one thing, record the result, then move to the next variable.

How to read the result

Training Ground results are evidence, not the whole truth. Real dungeons, party buffs, boss movement, PvP pressure, and server-stage gear gaps can all change how a build performs. A setup that wins a controlled DPM test may still feel awkward if it requires perfect uptime or ignores survival.

Use this article as a testing workflow reference for all classes. Open the source when you need the in-client navigation screenshots, then use the room to answer practical questions before spending scarce materials.

ProgressionGuideAll ClassesTraining GroundDPM TestMVP TestDamage Testing

Original guide by ROOC Blog. We link to the source and add our own summary and verdict; we do not reproduce the creator's content. Open the source ↗