Thứ Hai, 23 tháng 4, 2018

Tips and Tricks - Hunt: Showdown Wiki Guide - IGN

This page is filled with the greatest Tips and Tricks to help you become the very best at Hunt: Showdown.

Still being an Early Access game means that Hunt: Showdown lacks a lot of the tutorials and help information commonly found in other games. Below, we explain some of the more elusive features, while also giving you tips to make sure your hunt is a successful one.

This is a PvEvP Game
The first thing you need to do when playing Hunt: Showdown is realize you aren't playing PUBG. This game is about Hunters versus Monsters first and foremost.


If you want to level up quickly, earn lots of cash and unlock new items, you want to focus on killing zombies and the many other creatures found on the map. While they don't amount to much experience individually, the total sum will be worth thousands of experience by the end of the game. Even if you lose, you walk away with far more exp than someone who only focuses on killing players.

This doesn't mean you should ignore fighting other players, but it's important to keep in mind your priorities. A single player kill is worth the same as a few zombie kills, making it far more valuable to just kill the zombies.

Always Bring a Knife
This may seem simple, but when you are selecting a Hunter, either pick one that has a knife, or buy one and equip it. They only cost a few dollars and go a long way to making your life an easy one.

In the early game, you have limited melee attack options. The knife is a cheap choice, that offers you fast kills (3 hits for most normal zombies), and is whisper silent. So long as you have a trusty knife, normal zombies will virtually never be a threat.

Keep An Eye Out for Wagons
On the map, you will notice wagon icons scattered around. At first glance they may not seem important but that is very incorrect.

Wagons are actually resupply stations. Each one will contain boxes of ammo and several health kits. They are invaluable when hunting bigger monsters, or if you're caught up in a deadly firefight with other players. Anytime you've taken serious damage, or if you want to stock up before the final contract fight, check your map for a wagon to get a full resupply.

Choose Your Hunts Wisely
It can be easy to grab a hunter, pick a contract and start slaying some zombies, but this can lead to near impossible to win scenarios. Why's that?

Certain contract monsters have different strengths and weaknesses. For instance, the Butcher is weaker to shotguns than other types, while the Spider will take damage from any gun but is incredibly fast. This means that if you don't have shotguns, but you're trying to take down the Butcher, you'll be in for a much tougher fight. Before selecting which contract you want to kill, consider your items and how easy it will be for you to beat them!

Sound is a Key Part of the Game
More so than most games, Hunt: Showdown relies on sound for your survival. There are all kinds of traps that make noise and can draw the attention of both other players, and creatures. Gun fire, running through water and even walking along wooden planks can also create noise.

Thứ Hai, 16 tháng 4, 2018

How to live the longest in Reigns

If you've never heard of the game Reigns before, allow us to introduce you to one of the most popular games of the year. Available for $2.99 in the Google Play Store, Reigns is a game that will likely have you playing for not only for hours on end, but over years and generations — more on that in a bit.

The game is formatted sort of like those Choose Your Own Adventure books you probably remember from your childhood. Load up the game and you're instantly thrown in. You start out as a young king taking control of his kingdom in the first year of his reign. Advisors, citizens and animals appear as cards, coming to you with issues and questions that require a ruling — swipe right for yes, swipe left for no.

But choose wisely, because your decisions will affect one of four aspects of your kingdom: the church, the people, the army or the treasury. They are tracked with meters at the top of the screen, and your goal as king is to ensure no meter becomes entirely empty or full — allow that to happen and your fate is sealed.

It may sound complicated, but it's really not. Your goal is simply to keep things balanced and reign over your land for as long as possible. If — or rather when — you die, the game doesn't end.


Instead, you simply take on the role of your successor and take over where the last king left things. But remember, everything is occurring on a linear timeline. Every decision you make is logged by the game, and may well come back affect your fate down the line, so choose wisely.

If we've convinced you already to check out the game, great! Hit up the Google Play Store and get your hands on this game while avoiding any of the spoilers to follow. If you still need some convincing before dropping money on the game, or have some questions regarding the gameplay mechanics, we've broken out this handy guide to maximize the length of your reign.

A guided tour through your first reign as King
How to duel
Completing objectives
Effect cards
Mistakes will be made

A guided tour through your first reign as King
To explain Reigns' gameplay mechanics, which is sort of a meshing between Choose Your Own Adventure storytelling and Tinder-style controls, there's no better way than to simply showing a progression through the very first reign, as King Edward the Young. I'll be including commentary along the way to explain my rationale.

Spoilers ahead: No matter how early the content I'm showing you is in the overall arc of the game, if you want the full, going-in-blind experience (highly recommended), stop reading now and just buy this game from the Play Store. It's absolutely worth it.

The game opens with you speaking to the "Spirit of the Fallen" who accuses you of usurping his throne. He gives you a heads up about keeping the four powers (marked with the cross, stick figure, sword and dollar sign) balanced to survive. Again, you simply swipe to the right or left to move on to the next card.