Alfa Pages
A forum for help with the Alfasud And Alfa 33
Welcome
Forums
∇
Main Forum
∇
Alfa Pages Forum Index
FAQ
Search
Memberlist
Usergroups
Register
Profile
Log in to check your private messages
Log in
Old discussion list
Alfa 33 Info
∇
Alfa 33 History
Unleaded Fuel
Gearbox Ratios
Fuel Injection
Tuning
Wheel Offsets
ML4.1 Injection
Manuals
Seat Modification
Speakers
Suspension Tuning
Rear Spring Rates
Suspension Overview
Special Tools
Links
∇
Links
Gallery
∇
Events
∇
Science Museum Alfa Show
Auto Italia at Castle Donington
My Hydrauliced Engine
Spring Alfa Day, 2009
Houten 2005
Spring Alfa Day, 2007
Series 1
∇
Three pictures of P4, with a very highly polished
The series 1 Giardinetta of Anthony Stoner.
The series 1 Green Cloverleaf Ian Kanik.
The series 1 33 of from Aus.
The series 1 33 Green Cloverleaf Alex Pape from Me
The Alfa 33 of Steven McNaught of Brisbane, Austra
The Alfa 33 of Andrew Mabbott of New South Wales,
Series 2
∇
A pair of Alfa 33's owned by Tony Corps
The series 2 33 of Jorge Vazquez
The series 2 TD of Llewellyn Oliver in South Afric
The series 2 Sportwagon with the Veloce kit of Hug
The Alfa 33 of Kris.
The Alfa 33 of Michael Petersen of Denmark.
Series 3
∇
A P4 emulating a P2 for the amusement of David Mac
The series 3 16V 33 of Roland Westerberg
A Alfa 33 16V owned by Lars Hoygaard Michaelsen.
The Alfa 33 owned by Emiliano˙Curia.
The Alfa 33 of Paul Devrieze.
Gritsops 1.4IE
Sprint
∇
The Alfa Sprint of Ken McCarthy.
The Alfa Sprint of Keren.
Alfa Pages Forum Index
->
General
Post a reply
Username
Subject
Message body
Emoticons
View more Emoticons
Font colour:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Indigo
Violet
White
Black
Font size:
Tiny
Small
Normal
Large
Huge
Close Tags
Options
HTML is
OFF
BBCode
is
ON
Smilies are
ON
Disable BBCode in this post
Disable Smilies in this post
Security Question
What country are most Alfas made in
France
Germany
Italy
Britain
All times are GMT + 1 Hour
Jump to:
Select a forum
Global 33 Forums
----------------
General
Car Chat
Motorsport, Racing & Trackdays
Boxer Workshop
Boxer Restoration
For Sale & Wanted
Spotted A boxer Alfa
Gallery
General Forums
----------------
Introduce Yourself
Jokes & Funnies
Local Forums
----------------
UK
Mainland Europe
Australia & New Zealand
South America
Topic review
Author
Message
EmberSorcerer
Posted: Tue Jan 20, 2026 7:47 am
Post subject: u4gm Diablo 4 Season 11 Boss Loot Tips for Fast TargetedLoot
Season 11 has me doing that familiar routine: open the stash, sigh, and pretend I'm not one drop away from fixing my build. You can brute-force it, sure, but targeted farming is still the only thing that feels remotely sane once you hit Torment. I started tracking what I was getting per rotation and where my mats actually paid off, and it changed how I spend my time. If you're missing a key slot and don't want to stall out, slipping in a quick stop for
Diablo 4 Items
between farming sessions can also be a practical way to keep the build moving without turning the game into a second job.
Varshan And Grigoire Runs
For most players, the cleanest entry point is still Echo of Varshan. Malignant Hearts stack up naturally from Whispers, so you can bank them and do a proper batch instead of one awkward summon at a time. Rogues know the drill—Condemnation is the reason you keep coming back—and Sorcs chasing Tal Rasha's Loop are in the same boat. If your goal is simply "fill the gaps with Ancestral uniques," Varshan is steady and predictable. When you want armor-focused drops, Grigoire is the better use of your time. Living Steel is basically a Helltide tax, and if you're already looping Blood Maiden events, you'll end up with enough to chain pulls. Penitent Greaves showing up from him so often is almost a running joke, but it's also why people farm him when they need solid Ancestral rolls fast.
Zir And Beast Specific Hunts
Once you're past the starter circuit, Lord Zir and The Beast in the Ice are where target farming starts to feel picky. Beast is the annoying one because Distilled Fear pushes you back into Nightmare Dungeons, and those can drag when you're not in the mood. Still, if you're after Fists of Fate or Paingorger's Gauntlets, you'll find out pretty quickly there isn't a real substitute. Zir is easier to keep fed since Exquisite Blood comes along with regular play, and his pool is worth it if your build hinges on something narrow. A lot of players doing Thorns end up living in Zir's arena for Razorplate, and yeah, it can take ages—then it drops when you're half paying attention.
Duriel, Andariel, And Belial Rotations
Duriel and Andariel remain the classic "serious business" bosses when you're hunting high-end chase pieces, and people still run them on repeat for the stuff that refuses to show up anywhere else. But the boss that's been warping routes this season is Belial. The fight asks more of you—mechanics matter, positioning matters, and you can't fully sleepwalk it—but the payoff has felt real in long rotations. If you're chasing Mythic Uniques like Harlequin Crest or Tyrael's Might, Belial has been the one that makes groups say, "Run it again," instead of, "Let's take a break."
Keeping Your Sanity
RNG will humble you, even when you're doing everything "right." You'll get streaks where nothing lands, then a night where the game suddenly acts generous. What helped me was setting a simple loop: Whispers for Hearts, Helltides for Steel, NMDs only when I'm specifically feeding Beast, then a boss rotation with friends so mats don't vanish for nothing. And if you hit that point where you just want to play the build you planned—push Pit tiers, test setups, stop staring at empty slots—there's no shame in using
u4gm
for buying items or currency to patch the one missing piece while you keep farming the rest the normal way.