Disruptor

Disruptor, the Stormcrafter, is a ranged intelligence hero who requires good positioning to use his abilities effectively. His signature ability is Kinetic Field, a pseudo-disable that traps enemies within a small area for a long duration. Combined with his Static Storm, Disruptor can act as the initiator for a teamfight, or supplement his teammates' initiation very well. Glimpse is another powerful spell that forces enemies to watch their movements, as Disruptor can easily drag them back to a previous location to be focused down. Thunder Strike provides Disruptor with some reliable single-target damage, but more importantly grants vision on the target to prevent jukes and escapes.

Talents

 * Respawn reductions cannot reduce respawn time below 1 second.
 * Upgrading health increases maximum health capacity and keeps the current health percentage.
 * Cooldown reduction affects abilities and items. Stacks multiplicatively with and additively with.
 * The magic resistance stacks multiplicatively with other sources of magic resistance.
 * The talent increases the number of strikes by increasing its duration by  seconds.

Gameplay
 Strategy & Tips Counters & Matchups

Audio
 Responses Sounds

History
 Lore Old Abilities Changelogs

Trivia

 * When first released in DotA his hero title was actually "Far Seer" which is a hero title belonging to the Orc faction in Warcraft III. His title was changed to Disruptor, since the Far Seer title did not fit him.
 * In DotA, his name and title is Thrall, the Disruptor. Thrall is best known as the former warchief of the Orcish Horde in the Warcraft universe. His name and title got changed to Disruptor, the Stormcrafter for copyright reasons.
 * Disruptor's lore reveals that his race is called the Oglodi, while his voicelines confirm that and  are of the same race as he is.
 * His kill response Dis kill 10.mp3 "You've been disrupted." is a reference to the famous AC-DC song "Thunderstruck".
 * His last hitting response Dis lasthit 07.mp3 "So it goes." is a reference to a famous quote by Kurt Vonnegut in his book Slaughterhouse-Five, and is meant as a response for when death occurs.