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[1.1 Update] Complete List of Verified Perks (Working / Not Working / Partially Working) [WIP]
Update: All items and perks testing completed. Still updating based on feedback as it comes in. I'll update the text below soon. Update: Added a tab for bonuses per skill level and attribute level Update: Tested the non functioning (Partially or Not Working) perks/items for the 1.11 hotfix. Several changes noted in the change log. I think I'll reserve testing the whole list for more significant updates, but definitely looking out for people posting/messaging about things they found that are not working/working. Already got 1 perk not working that was before.
Up to date Perks and Items and Skill Levels Testing can be found here: Link to Spreadsheet
Hope you guys find this helpful! Reddit list last updated: 1/26/2021
Body - Athletics
Regeneration: "Health slowly regenerates during combat."
Working
With this perk alone, regen starts only below 60% and heals up to 60%.
Invincible: "Increases max health by 10%."
Working
Only applies to base HP. 10% of base HP at lvl 50 = 43 HP.
Pack Mule: "Increases carrying capacity by 60."
Working
Divided Attention: "Allows you to reload weapons while sprinting, sliding, and vaulting."
Working
Epimorphosis: "Health regenerates up to 70% of max Health outside of combat."
Working
True Grit: "Increases max stamina by 10%."
Working
Only applies to base stamina. 10% of base stamina at lvl 50 = 15 stamina.
Soft on your feet: "Reduces fall damage by 5%."
Working
Gladiator: "Reduces the amount of Stamina consumed when blocking melee attacks by 20%."
Not Working
Steel and Chrome: "Increases melee damage by 10%."
Working
Multitasker: "Allows you to shoot while sprinting, sliding, and vaulting."
Working
Aiming while vaulting doesn't use any sights, but works for firing.
Like a Butterfly: "Dodging does not drain Stamina."
Working
Stronger Together: "Increases damage you deal while carrying a body."
Working
Still requires Trasporter perk to fire shots, and the increase is about 2x
Cardio Cure: "Health regenerates 25% faster as you move."
Overworking
Regeneration bonus active at all times. Also confirmed moving/still is the same
Transporter: "Allows you to shoot with Pistols and Revolvers or sprint while carrying a body."
Working
Human Shield: "Increases armor by 20% when grappling an enemy."
Working
Marathoner: "Sprinting does not drain Stamina."
Working
Dog of War: "Increases Health regen in combat by 15%"
Working
Note: Saving all health regen tests for last. They're the most annoying
Wolverine: "Health regen activates 50% faster during combat."
Working
90% faster activation might not be right, but it's definitely faster. Hard to tell when this counter officially starts when in combat.
Steel Shell: "Increases armor by 10%."
Working
The Rock: "Enemies cannot knock you down."
Working
Tested using cars again. You really have to be just on the edge to avoid death.
Indestructible: "Reduces all damage by 10%."
Working
Hard Motherfucker: "When entering combat, Armor and Resistances increase by 10% for 10 sec. +1% per level."
Not Working
This perk only works the first save instance where you learn it. Reloading the save will disable the perk no matter how many points you put into it.
Body - Annihilation
Speed Demon: "You deal more damage the faster you're moving."
Working
Only applies to Shotguns and LMGs. Walking was around 1.5x, Running 2x, Speed glitches 4x+
Manic: "When entering combat, your movement speed increases by 20% for 10 sec."
Working
Only applies to Shotguns and LMGs.
Burn Baby Burn: "Doubles the duration of Burn"
Working
Works for Quickhacks (Overheat) and burn applied with other weapons than SG/LMG
Mongoose: "Increases Evasion by 25% while reloading."
Not Working
All evasion related stats not working.
Momentum Shift: "Defeating an enemy increases movement speed by 10% for 10 sec."
Working
Can only see difference on SG/LMG kills.
Massacre: "Increases Crit Damage with Shotguns and Light Machine Guns by 15%"
Working
Pump it, Louder!: "Reduces recoil of Shotguns and Light Machine Guns by 10%."
Not Working
Tested only using LMGs and the recoil pattern on fully automatic firing.
Hail of Bullets: "Shotguns and Light Machine Guns deal 3% more damage."
Working
Damage increase doesn't show on weapon, but shows in final damage numbers on enemies
In Your Face: "Reduces reload time of Shotguns and Light Machine Guns by 20%."
Working
Bloodbath: "Dismembering enemies reduces weapon recoil by 50% for 6 sec."
Not Working
May not be tested properly. I can only dismember consistently with a SG, and switched to LMG to see recoil. That could mess with the buff, not sure.
Bulldozer: "Increases Crit Chance with Shotguns and Light Machine Guns by 10%."
Working
Bloodrush: "Increases movement speed in combat by 5% while carrying a Shotgun or Light Machine Gun."
Working
Dead Center: "Increases damage to torsos by 10%."
Working
Only applies to Shotguns and LMGs
Heavy Lead: "Shotguns and Light Machine Guns knock back enemies with more force."
Partially Working
Retested in 1.1.. I'm actually not sure anymore. Hard to eyeball distance so marking as partially
Skeet Shooter: "Deal 15% more damage to moving targets."
Working
Only applies to Shotguns and LMGs
Unstoppable: "Dismembering an enemy increases fire rate by 10% for 8 sec. Stacks up to 3 times."
Working
Only applies to Shotguns and LMGs
Biathlete: "Weapon spread does not increase while moving."
Not Working
Several opinions saying spread does not change, with or without the perk.
Poppin' Off: "Shotguns have 25% higher chance of dismembering enemies."
Not Working
Used a carnage again, but I do have trouble dismembering consistently. The smart shotgun shreds too much to use for comparison, so if anyone has any ideas please message me on reddit with them.
Hit The Deck: "Increases damage to staggered and knocked-down enemies by 10%."
Not Working
Only tested on Knocked Down enemies. Staggering with Carnage barely leaves any time to fire again
Body - Street Brawler
Thrash: "Strong Attacks with Blunt Weapons reduce the target's Armor by 30% for 10 sec."
Working
Enemies don't have armor. What this does very accurately though is increase damage against these enmies by 30%
Frenzy: "Defeating an enemy increases damage with Blunt Weapons by 100% for 10 sec."
Working
Biding Time: "Blocking attacks with a Blunt Weapon restores 5% Health."
Working
Countering does not count as a block in this case.
Human Fortress: "Reduces the Stamina cost of blocking attacks by 50% while using a Blunt Weapon."
Working
Stun duration is short and can be seen with a teal icon above their head and a timer ticking down.
Opportune Strike: "Increases damage with Blunt Weapons against enemies affected by Stun by 50%."
Working
Payback: "Increases damage with Blunt Weapons by 1% for every 1% of missing Health"
Working
Working, but I don't know how low you can take this. It worked while I was around 40-50% HP
Juggernaut: "Increases Armor by 15% while blocking with a Blunt Weapon."
Not Working
Flurry: "Increases damage from combo attacks with Blunt Weapons by 30%."
Working
Crushing Blows: "Increases damage from Strong Attacks with Blunt Weapons by 30%."
Working
Rush: "Successful attacks with Blunt Weapons regenerate 3% Health over 2 Sec."
Working
Dazed: "All attacks with Blunt Weapons have a 15% chance to Stun."
Working
Efficient Blows: "Reduces the Stamina cost of all attacks with Blunt Weapons by 25%."
Working
Guerrilla: "Increases Crit Damage for 10 sec. after entering combat. +2% per level."
Not Working
This perk only works the first save instance where you learn it. Reloading the save will disable the perk no matter how many points you put into it.
Relentless: "Successful attacks with Blunt Weapons against enemies affected by Stun restore 20% Stamina."
Working
Reinvigorate: "Defeating an enemy by performing a Strong Attack with a Blunt Weapon restores 10% Stamina."
Not Working
Breathing Space: "Increases Stamina regen while blocking with Blunt Weapons by 50%"
Working
Unshakeable: "Successful attacks with Blunt Weapons against enemies affected by Stun restore 5% Health and 5% Stamina."
Working
Reflexes - Assault
Bulletjock: "Increases damage with rifles by 3%."
Working
Eagle Eye: "Reduces time to aim down sight with Rifles and Submachine Guns by 10%."
Working
Covering Killshot: "Increases Crit Chance with Rifles by 10% when firing from behind cover."
Working
Note: Behind cover without aiming down sights does not count. I had to aim for the crit chance to work.
Too Close For Comfort: "Quick melee attacks with Rifles deal 50% more damage."
Working
Bullseye: "Increases Rifle and Sumachine Gun damage while aiming by 10%"
Working
Executioner: "Deal 25% more damage with Rifles and Submachine Guns to enemies whose Health is above 50%."
Working
Duck Hunter: "Increases Rifle and Submachine Gun damage to moving enemies by 10%"
Working
Shoot, Reload, Repeat: "Defeating an enemy with a Rifle or Submachine Gun reduces reload time by 20% for 5 seconds."
Working
Nerves of Steel: "Increases headshot damage with Sniper Rifles and Rrecision Rifles by 20%."
Working
Tested again as working. Sniper rifles have high multipliers by default so it's hard to tell. Used the precision rifle and it was more noticeable
Feel the Flow: "Reduces reload time for Assault Rifles and Submachine Guns by 10%."
Working
Trench Warfare: "Increases Rifle and Submachine Gun damage by 5% when firing from behind cover."
Working
Hunter's Hands: "Reduces recoil with Rifles and Submachine Guns by 20% when firing from behind cover."
Partially Working
Tested with Copperhead. Vertical recoil is lower, but not by much... definitely not 40% at level 2
Named Bullets: "Increases Crit Damage with Rifles and Submachine Guns by 35%."
Working
Skull Skipper: "Each headshot reduces recoil with Rifles and Submachine Guns by 5% for 10 sec. Stacks up to 5 times."
Working
Retested and it seems to work.
Bunker: "Increases Armor and Resistances by 15% when shooting with Rifles and Submachine Guns from behind cover."
Not Working
Recoil Wrangler: "Reduces recoil with Rifles and Submachine Guns by 10%."
Not Working
In Perspective: "Bullets fired from Rifles and Submachine Guns ricochet an additional 2 time(s)."
Working
Long Shot: "Rifle and Submachine Gun damage increases the farther you are located from enemies."
Working
23.6 distance for 100% additional weapon damage. Distance can be measured with the Grandstead scope. It's shown on the top right corner of the rectangle in the sight
Savage Stoic: "Increases damage with Rifles and Submachine Guns by 35% when standing still."
Working
Punisher: "After defeating an enemy with a Rifle or Submachine Gun, weapon sway is nullified and weapon spread does not increase for 10 sec. +0.2 sec. per Perk level."
Not Working
Reflexes - Handguns
Gunslinger: "Reduces reload time for Pistols and Revolvers by 10%."
Working
High Noon: "Increases Crit Chance with Pistols and Revolvers by 4%."
Working
Rio Bravo: "Increases headshot damage multiplier with Pistols and Revolvers by 10%."
Working
Desperado: "Increases damage with Pistols and Revolvers by 3%."
Working
On the Fly: "Reduces draw/holster time for Pistols and Revolvers by 25%."
Working
Long Shot Drop Pop: "Increases damage with Pistols and Revolvers to enemies 5+ meters away by 15%."
Working
O.K. Corral: "Deal 50% more damage with Pistols and Revolvers to enemies whose Health is below 25%."
Working
Steady Hand: "Reduces Pistol and Revolver recoil by 30%."
Working
Previously not working. Used a Lexington and the recoil firing the whole clip did look lower.
Vanishing Point: "Evasion increases by 25% for 6 sec. after performing a dodge with a Pistol or Revolver equipped."
Not Working
From Head to Toe: "Increases damage to limbs with Pistols and Revolvers by 7%."
Working
A Fistful of Eurodollars: "Increases Crit Damage with Pistols and Revolvers by 10%."
Working
Acrobat: "You can now perform dodges while aiming a Pistol or Revolver."
Working
Fixed. Note that most people are probably wearing Kerenzikov, which actually enables this anyways
Grand Finale: "The last round in a Pistol or Revolver clip deals double damage."
Working
Attritional Fire: "Firing consecutive shots with a Pistol or Revolver at the same target increases damage by 10%."
Not Working
Previously working, but I can't remember how solid the test in the past was on this one.
Wild West: "Removes the damage penalty from Pistols and Revolvers when shooting from a distance."
Working
Westworld: "Increases Crit Chance for Pistols and Revolvers by 10% if fully modded."
Working
Fully modded means every slot is filled, regardless of rarity or number of slots
Snowball Effect: "After defeating an enemy, fire rate for Pistols and Revolvers increases by 5% for 6 sec. Stacks up to 5 times."
Not Working
Tested again with Lexington, can't see any difference at max stacks
Lead Sponge: "Enables you to shoot with Pistols and Revolvers while dodging."
Working
You can already do this with Kerenzikov
Brainpower: "After a successful headshot with a Pistol or Revolver, Crit Chance increases by 25% for 5 sec."
Working
The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly: "After a successful Crit Hit with a Pistol or Revolver, damage and Armor increase by 30% for 5 seconds. +1% per Perk level."
Not Working
This perk only works the first save instance where you learn it. Reloading the save will disable the perk no matter how many points you put into it.
Reflexes - Blades
Sting Like a Bee: "Increases attack speed with Blades by 10%."
Working
Only works if weapon is not at attack speed cap. See appendix for more info.
Roaring Waters: "Strong Attacks with Blades deal 30% more damage."
Working
Crimson Dance: "Combos with Blades have a 15% chance to apply Bleeding."
Working
Slow and Steady: "Armor is increased by 15% while moving."
Working
Only applies when holding a blade. Also do not have to be moving.
Flight of the Sparrow: "Reduces the Stamina cost of all attack with Blades by 30%"
Working
Offensive Defense: "Defensive Attacks with Blades deal 200% more damage."
Working
Shifting Sands: "Dodging recovers 15% Stamina."
Partially Working
Hidden cooldown applied for stamina recovery. Dodging continuously, 1 in 3 recovered stamina.
Stuck Pig: "Increases Bleeding duration by 3 sec."
Working
Only extends Bleeds applied by Blades
Blessed Blade: "Increases Crit Chance with Blades by 20%."
Working
Unbroken Spirit: "Successful Counterattacks with Blades restore 25% Health and Stamina."
Working
Previously didn't work for me. Retested, working now
Bloodlust: "While wielding a Blade, recovers 7% Health when applying Bleeding to an enemy or hitting an enemy affected by Bleeding."
Partially Working
Only healed on first hit on a bleeding enemy. All other cases did not heal.
Float Like a Butterfly: "Dodging increases damage with Blades by 35% for 5 sec."
Working
Judge, Jury, and Executioner: "Increases damage with Blades by 50% against enemies with max Health."
Working
Fiery Blast: "Increases damage with Blades by 1% for every 1% of Health the enemy is missing."
Working
Not 100% sure, but it felt like there was a cap in bonus damage. My damage went up to double.
Crimson Tide: "Bleeding applied with Blades can stack 3 times."
Working
Stacking = applied at the same time, not extending the time.
Deathbolt: "While wielding a Blade, defeating an enemy restores 20% Health and increases movement speed by 30% for 5 sec."
Working
Dragon Strike: "Increases Crit Damage with Blades by 25%. +1% per Perk level."
Not Working
This perk only works the first save instance where you learn it. Reloading the save will disable the perk no matter how many points you put into it.
Intelligence - Breach Protocol
Big Sleep: "Unlocks the Big Sleep daemon, which disables all cameras in the network for 3 min."
Working
Mass Vulnerability: "Unlocks the Mass Vulnerability daemon, which reduces the Physical Resistance for all enemies in the network by 30% for 3 min."
Working
Retested for 1.1 and it is 100% working. Physical resistance doens't appear to show in the "Weaknesses" section when you scan enemies
Almost In!: "Increases the breach time for Breach Protocol by 20%."
Working
Advanced Datamine: "Upgrades the Datamine daemon, increasing the amount of eurodollars acquired from Access Points by 50%."
Working
Mass Vulnerability: Resistances: "Upgrades the Mass Vulnerability daemon, reducing all Resistances for enemies in the network by 30%."
Working
Note that this Daemon isn't an option without Mass Vulnerability.
Datamine Mastermind: "Upgrades the Datamine daemon, increasing the amount of components acquired from Access Points by 50%."
Working
The amount gained is different. Some more than 100%, and no extra legendary components
Turret Shutdown: "Unlocks the Turret Shutdown daemon, which disables security turrets in the network for 3 min."
Working
Total Recall: "The ICEpick daemon reduces all quickhack costs by an additional 1 RAM unit(s)."
Working
Turret Tamer: "Unlocks the Turret Tamer daemon, which sets the status of every turret in the network to friendly for 3 min."
Working
Datamine Virtuoso: "Upgrades the Datamine daemon, increasing the chance to acquire a quickhack from Access Points by 50%."
Working
Not really easy to test, but over time with this maxed I was almost always getting an upgraded quickhack from access points
Cloud Cache: "Completing a Breach Protocol reduces the RAM cost of your next quickhack by 1 time(s) the number of daemons uploaded."
Working
Efficiency: "Uploading 3 or more daemons in the same Breach Protocol increases cyberdeck RAM recovery rate by 3 unit(s) per 60 sec. Lasts 5 min."
Working
Mass Vulnerability: Quickhacks: "Upgrades the Mass Vulnerability daemon, causing enemies in the network to also take 30% more damage from quickhacks."
Working
Totaler Recall: "The ICEpick daemon reduces all quickhack costs by an additional 1 RAM unit(s)."
Working
Head Start: "Automatically uploads the first daemon in the list at the start of Breach Protocol."
Working
Hackathon: "Uploading 3 or more daemons in the same Breach Protocol shortens quickhack cooldowns by 33% for 5 min."
Working
Buffer Optimization: "Increases the duration of daemon effects by 100%."
Working
Compression: "Reduces the lengths of the sequences required to upload daemons by 1. Cannot be reduced below 2."
Working
Transmigration: "Increases the breach time of Breach Protocol by 50%. +5% per Perk level."
Not working
Intelligence - Quickhacking
Bloodware: "Quickhacks deal 10% more damage."
Working
Damage increase seems lower than described. Suspected lower base damage not visible to players for Quickhacks
Biosynergy: "Allows RAM to recover during combat. Recover 4 RAM unit(s) every 60 sec."
Working
Forget-me-not: "Eliminating a target affected by a quickhack instantly recovers 1 RAM unit(s)."
Working
Hacker's Manual: "Unlocks Crafting Specs for Uncommon quickhacks."
Working
I Spy: "Reveals an enemy netrunner when they're attempting to hack you."
Working
Weak Link: "Reduces the required cyberdeck RAM for quickhacks used on devices by 1 unit(s)."
Working
Can't go below 1 RAM Cost
Daisy Chain: "Eliminating a target affected by a quickhack reduces the existing cooldowns for all other active quickhacks by 10%."
Overworking
Still reduces CD to and not by the described percent
Signal Support: "Increases quickhack duration by 25%."
Working
Don't see a description change of duration on Ultimate quickhacks
Subliminal Message: "Quickhacks deal 50% more damage to unaware targets."
Working
50% and 100% at level 2 are not applied on the final damage number, it's applied on a smaller base damage.
Diffusion: "Quickhack spread distance is increased by 2 times."
Working
Can only confirm the distance is increased, but not that it's actually 2x
Mnemonic: "Reduces the cost of quickhacks used against an enemy already affected by a quickhack by 2 RAM units."
Working
School of Hard Hacks: "Unlocks Crafting Specs for Rare quickhacks."
Working
Plague: "Quickhacks that spread can jump to 1 additional targets."
Working
Hacker Overlord: "Unlocks Crafting Specs for Epic quickhacks."
Working
Critical Error: "Quickhacks can now deal Crit Hits based on your Crit Chance and Crit Damage stats."
Working
Anamnesis: "Available cyberdeck RAM cannot drop below 2 unit(s)."
Partially Working
This works in a very different way than described. The description should read "Resets your RAM to 2/3/4 when you reach 0 RAM and have not initiated ANY recovery of RAM at all." The last part meaning you have to actually 0 out and if any recovery happens along the way, it does not work. Recovery can be stalled with opening your menu or spamming lower level quickhacks with low cost, or doing what I did: Found a perfect combination of quickhack costs to execute on a group of enemies to 0 out immediately.
Bartmoss' Legacy: "Unlocks Crafting Specs for Legendary quickhacks."
Working
Optimization: "Reduces the cost of quickhacks by 1 RAM unit(s)."
Working
Master RAM Liberator: "Increase RAM recovery rate by 50%."
Partially Working
The 50% bonus is actually not working, but the 1% per level is working (I tested with 50 points into the perk which is what made it look like it was working)
Technical Abilities - Crafting
Mechanic: "Gain more components when disassembling."
Working
Scrapper: "Junk items are automatically disassembled."
Working
True Craftsman: "Allows you to craft Rare items."
Working
Workshop: "Disassembling items grants a 5% chance to gain a free component of the same quality as the disassembled item."
Working
Innovation: "Consumables are 25% more effective."
Working
Accurate translation: Consumables that provide timed buffs last 25% longer.
Sapper: "Grenades deal 10% more damage."
Not Working
Not retesting this. I've done this so many times and even if it does work the damage range on grenades is too wide to tell
200% Efficiency: "Crafted clothes gain 2.5% more armor."
Not Working
Still not working. Tested on hats that have consistent armor
Field Technician: "Crafted weapons deals 2.5% more damage."
Partially Working
Still not working on Melee wapons. The increase in damage I saw on Katana was more like 1% at max perk leve
Grease Monkey: "Allows you to craft Epic items."
Working
Efficient Upgrades: "Grants a 10% chance to upgrade an item for free."
Working
Ex Nihilo: "Grants a 20% chance to craft an item for free."
Working
Let there be light!: "Reduces the component cost of upgrading items by 10%"
Working
Cost Optimization: "Reduces the component cost of crafting items by 15%"
Working
Tune-up: "Allows you to upgrade lower quality components into higher quality ones."
Working
Waste not want not: "When disassembling an item, you get attached mods back."
Working
Edgerunner Artisan: "Allows you to craft Legendary items."
Working
Crazy Science: "Increases the sale price of crafted items by 10%. +1% per Perk level."
Partially Working
Only works until you reload your save, in which case it stops working.
Cutting Edge: "Improves damages and all damage-related stats of crafted weapons by 5%."
Partially Working
Still not working on Melee. Keep in mind for Ranged, a 5% increase in all the stats is actually a lot more than 5% increase in overall DPS in the end
Technical Abilities - Engineering
Blast Shielding: "Reduces damage taken from explosions by 10%."
Working
But even with the highest HP value possible, it is still impossible to survive an explosion. Tested with mods.
Mech Looter: "When looting drones, mechs and robots, there is a 25% chance of looting a weapon mod or attachment."
Not Working
Can't touch this: "Grants immunity to all effects from your own grenades."
Partially Working
NOTE: This works for every grenade type EXCEPT Flashbangs. So it's mostly working.
Grenadier: "The explosion radius of grenades is visible."
Working
Shrapnel: "All grenade types deal 20 damage in addition to their normal types."
Not Working
Tested and don't see any difference
Up to 11: "Allows you to charge Tech weapons up to 75% capacity."
Working
Note that Tech weapons do NOT charge to 100% by default. They charge up to 50%, which is relevant to other perks in the tree that mention full charge.
Lock and load: "Increases Smart weapons reload speed by 5%."
Working
Bladerunner: "Increase damage to drones, mech and robots by 20%."
Working
Bigger Booms: "Grenades deal 5% more damage."
Not Working
Can't see a difference. Like I noted above, the damage range is too wide to tell any difference
Lighting Bolt: "Increases Crit Chance with Tech weapons by 3%."
Working
Tesla: "Increase the charge multiplier for Tech weapons by 15%."
Working
Gun Whisperer: "Fully charged Tech weapons do not shoot automatically."
Working
Does not work for the DR12 Quasar and Kenshin Pistols
Ubercharge: "Fully charged Tech weapons deal 50% more damage."
Working
Needs "Up To 11" Perk to work. Tested originally with the Kenshin pistol and it did not work. Quasar worked, so please message me if you see that it doesn't work for certain tech guns.
Insulation: "Grants immunity to shock."
Working
Shock = electric damage. Electricity on ground = electric. Enemy attacks applying shock = electric. Enemy grenades = EMP (so not electric damage), meaning this will not prevent damage from grenades. I don't know what other sources of EMP there are, but this is consistent with the clothing mod as well.
Fuck all walls: "Reduces the charge amount needed for Tech weapons to penetrate walls by 30%."
Working
This is really hard to tell. Never had much issue having tech guns pierce walls, and the charge is pretty fast so I could be wrong.
Play the angles: "Ricochets deal an additional 50% damage."
Not Working
Lickety Split: "Tech weapons charge time is reduced by 10%."
Working
Superconductor: "Tech weapons ignore Armor."
Not Working
Revamp: "Increases damage Tech weapons by 25%, increases charges damage from all chargeable weapons and cyberware by 10%. +1% charge damage per Perk level."
Not Working
Only works after the first time learning the perk. Reloading save disables the perk.
Jackpot: "Enables grenades to deal Crit Hits."
Working
Cool - Stealth
Silent And Deadly: "Increases damage dealt by silenced weapons by 25% while sneaking."
Working
Crouching Tiger: "Increases movement speed while sneaking by 20%."
Working
Hidden Dragon: "Allows you to perform lethal or non-lethal aerial takedowns on unaware targets."
Working
Dagger Dealer: "Allows you to throw knives. Hold L2 to aim and press R2 to throw."
Working
Still doesn't return the knife, but you can definitely throw them lol
Leg Up: "Movement speed after a successful takedown is increased by 30% for 10 sec."
Working
Strike From The Shadows: "Increases your Crit Chance by 15% while sneaking."
Working
Assassin: "Deal 15% more damage to human enemies."
Working
Sniper: "Increases damage from headshots fired from outside combat by 30%."
Working
Cutthroat: "Thrown knives deal 30% more damage."
Working
Aggressive Antitoxins: "Grants immunity to Poison."
Working
Clean Work: "You can pick up an enemy's body immediately after performing a takedown by holding R3."
Working
Stunning Blows: "Quick Melee Attacks with ranged weapons stagger enemies, giving you an opportunity to grapple them."
Working
From The Shadows: "Upon entering combat, Crit Chance increases by 25% for 7 sec."
Working
Ghost: "Detection time is increased by 20%."
Working
Commando: "You cannot be detected under water."
No One Cares
Pretty sure in 1.1 this still holds true
Venomous Fangs: "All knives apply Poison."
Working
Rattlesnake: "Enemies affected by Poison are slowed."
Not Working
In combat they still move the same.
Silent Finisher: "Enemies with less than 15% Health are defeated instantly when attacked with a Knife. Does not work on enemies with a Very High threat level."
Working
Hasty Retreat: "Temporarily boosts movement speed by 50% for 5 sec. when detected by an enemy."
Working
Restorative Shadows: "While in stealth, increases Health regen by 25%."
Working
Neurotoxin: "Damage from Poison is doubled."
Working
Does not work with Contagion, but worked with all other sources of poison
Hasten The Inevitable: "Deal 20% more damage to enemies affected by Poison."
Overworking
Still works on every weapon with or without poison.
Cheat Death: "When your Health drops below 50%, reduce all incoming damage by 50% for 10 sec. Cannot occur more than once per minute."
Working
Ninjutsu: "Crouch Attacks from stealth with melee weapons deal 100% more damage."
Not Working
Only worked specifically with Baseball bats. Nothing else.
Toxicology: "Increases the duration of Poison applied to enemies by 5 seconds. +0.2 sec. per Perk level."
Not Working
This perk doesn't work even before reloading the save.
Cool - Cold Blood
Cold Blood: "After defeating an enemy, gain Cold Blood for 10 sec. and increase movement speed by 2%. Stacks up to 1 time."
Working
Will to Survive: "Increases all Resistances by 2.5% per stack of Cold Blood."
Working
Icy Veins: "Reduces weapon recoil by 2.5% per stack of Cold Blood."
Not Working
Retested using a Copperhead assault rifle. 5 stacks recoil pattern looked the same as no stacks
Frosty Synapses: "Reduces quickhack cooldowns by 3% per stack of Cold Blood."
Working
Previously not working, working now. Tested with Suicide
Critical Condition: "Increases duration of Cold Blood by 5 sec."
Working
Rapid Bloodflow: "Increase Health regen inside and outside combat by 50% per stack of Cold Blood."
Working
Defensive Clotting: "Increases Armor by 10% per stack of Cold Blood."
Working
Coldest Blood: "Increases max stack amount for Cold Blood by 1."
Working
Frozen Precision: "Increases headshot damage by 50%."
Working
Hard to tell even with a low headshot multiplier weapon. Shows on the weapon, with or without cold blood stacks.
Blood Brawl: "While Cold Blood is active, increases damage with melee weapons by 5%."
Working
Easy to mistake as this being a stacking perk. It's only a flat 10% increase with Cold Blood active, regardless of stacks
Predator: "Increases attack speed by 10% per stack of Cold Blood."
Working
Works up to your melee weapon's attack speed cap. See Appendix for details.
Quick Transfer: "Reduces quickhack upload time by 1% per stack of Cold Blood."
Working
Cold and Calculating: "Landing a Crit Hit has 25% chance of applying a stack of Cold Blood."
Working
Bloodswell: "When your Health reaches 45%, a max stack of Cold Blood is automatically activated."
Working
Does apply max stacks, but reminder that without Coolagulant all stacks will remove at once.
Coolagulant: "Stacks of Cold Blood are removed one by one, not all at once."
Working
Unbreakable: "Increases max stack amount for Cold Blood by 1."
Working
Pain Is An Illusion: "While Cold Blood is active, reduces damage taken by 5%."
Working
Immunity: "While Cold Blood is active, you are immune to Bleeding, Poison, Burn and Shock."
Working
NOTE: I don't see this working with Shock. If anyone can confirm please let me know
Merciless: "While Cold Blood is active, increases Crit Chance by 10% and Crit Damage by 25%. +1% Crit Chance and +3% Crit Damage per Perk level."
Not Working
This perk only works the first save instance where you learn it. Reloading the save will disable the perk no matter how many points you put into it.
https://steam.cryotank.net/wp-content/gallery/slaythespire/Slay-the-Spire-01-HD.png Slay the Spire (StS) has finally arrived to Android! For two years many of us dreamed for this legendary game to be accessible on their mobile devices, and finally the day has come. No need to talk about how awesome this game is, how it basically started a new genre of card-based dungeon crawlers (UPD: or roguelike deck-builders, if you prefer the term), and even about how well or poor it works on Android hardware in its current state (there will be lots of these posts during the days to come). What I wanted to talk about is the impact this game had on (specifically) mobile industry and how other developers were able to utilize this innovative formula in their own products. Personally, I am somewhat glad that StS release was delayed that much. This allowed a lot of "clones" to be spawned, many of which I enjoyed playing. Some of them appear to be straight rip-offs, but others introduced many fresh ideas of their own, some even surpassing the predecessor's greatness. What the heck am I talking about and how is this even possible will be revealed to you, should you decide to stay on a bit and read through the article below.
General info
First and foremost, let's clarify the important thing: card based dungeon crawlers are not Collectible Card Games (CCGs). Even though they share the same ideas, and some of them (StS included) even have a feature to permanently improve starting cards, or a mode to play with pre-constructed decks, this is not the case for the genre in general. There is no place for multiplayer and PvP battles here: a turn-down for the most, but an undeniable advantage for the rest - only though-out puzzle-like single-player experience which we can pause at any moment and continue when the time is appropriate. Thus, there will never be troubles with downtime, matchmaking, ratings, overpowered builds and other PvP stuff, as there will never be a satisfaction of crushing your opponents with the power of your mighty intellect... The fun of discovering interesting synergies between various card combinations is still present, though. With this being said, let's quickly look through the core features of the genre, which will be relevant for almost every game we review below: - we must explore a dungeon, which (usually, but not necessarily) consists of three floors with increasing difficulty; - we have limited control over the order in which to face the challenges; - there is a powerful boss in the end of each floor; - we battle using deck of cards, usually drawing new cards from deck to hand each turn; - there is a limitation on how many cards we can play during our turn; - we start with a weak basic deck, but get new cards as rewards for fighting enemies; - there is a possibility to permanently remove (weak) cards from the deck; - successful gameplay strategies revolve around utilizing the synergies between different cards; - there are several character classes, each with their own cards and tactics; - there are often additional items to acquire in the dungeon, providing bonuses and emphasizing specific types of play; Before Slay the Spire (StS) came out, there was another card-based dungeon crawler called Dream Quest (DQ), which considered by many to be the first game of the genre (at least the first one to make a significant impact). Not sure if the former drew inspiration from the latter, but certain parallels can easily be drawn: in fact, all of the features mentioned in the list above are valid for DQ the same way as it is for StS. The rich plethora of card based dungeon crawlers (both PC/Console and mobile) originated from some combination of the two. StS, however, can not be considered a clone of DQ, as it introduced a lot of original ideas and spawned its own line of descendants. It is always interesting to analyze each new title to see which of two games was the biggest inspiration, and to group them accordingly. For me the main criteria lies in the core difference in battle system: - in StS, enemies (usually multiple) show their intentions at the beginning of each turn, so we know what to expect and what to play against; - in DQ, the enemy (usually single) draws and plays cards the same way as we do, often using the same abilities and synergies we ourselves can use. Introductions aside, let's finally get to the interesting part - the games! (Note: Games are listed in alphabetical order to not give any privileges to one over another. For my personal preferences see the comment section).
Dream Quest clones
Call of Lophis takes us on a grim journey through infested lands full of deadly monsters, dangerous traps, and one of the most ridiculous card art I have ever seen. It's surprising to see how dark fantasy elements combine with the humor and gags this game presents. From the gameplay point of view, there is enough card variety and interesting synergies, but it will take a long time to reach the interesting parts. Really: this game just does not know when to end, forcing new and new dungeon locations onto us with basically the same monsters and same approaches to dealing with them over and over. Its the boss battles which crank the difficulty up to over 9000, and if we don't have the right deck by the time we reach them, there is nothing we can do to pull it off. Plus there is some shady business going on with monetization schemes, where even paid version of the game makes us spend money to unlock additional classes and grind a lot to buy permanent improvements. Only truly dedicated players will be interested in dealing with all this nonsense. [...] UPD: Haven't checked on it for a long time - maybe the situation improved somehow. Crimson Deep is still in early alpha and was not updated for a long time. But the development hasn't stopped, and there is a new major release approaching in the nearest future. It makes no sense to talk about the game till then: the version in the store is too raw to provide any significant gameplay experience, but it would be interesting to see where it goes in the end. Dimension of Dream is probably the only game that has the same grid-based dungeon layout as DQ itself. This time with full 3D and a possibility to fight only limited set of enemies before facing the final boss (which allows to moderate difficulty as we go, either defeating tougher enemies with better rewards, or to save HP and fight only the easy ones). This game has one of the most interesting battle systems and 6 truly unique classes with deep complex strategies unlike anything we have ever seen (not only the cards themselves, but the order in which we play them greatly affects the outcome). Unfortunately, the English version was pulled from Google Play, leaving only Chinese version for Asian people to enjoy. UPD: Apparently, the game was re-released under different publisher with the title Dreaming Dimension, so there you have it. [...] Meteorfall: Journeys offers the streamlined approach to dungeon crawling, where all our decisions boil down to Reigns-like "swipe left / swipe right" operation: picking the path, encounter resolutions, and even battles are simplified to utilize this binary choice mechanic. But don't worry: these specifics do not affect the gameplay, still providing enough strategic depth to appeal even to hardcore players. Add here a neat visual style, lots of character classes and their variations, cool card combos, and you get a true masterpiece, which is Meteorfall. [...] Night of the Full Moon offers a fresh take on a fairy tale of Red Riding Hood, but adding darker elements to it (including werewolves, zombies, mad scientists and cursed cultists). It demonstrates an amazing production quality with top-tier art, beautiful audio support, and intriguing storytelling. Gameplay wise, we have the closest thing to DQ, safe for the grid-based dungeon maps, which were changed to just picking the encounter out of available three. Some people may argue that the game does not offer enough strategic variety, only suggesting a single best build for each class, but you will still get different runs due to the randomness of card and power-up drops. Another argument of it being too easy is completely nullified on higher difficulty levels. Wish the story would develop in a different direction, though. [...] Spellsword Cards: Origins provides the gameplay similar to the Night of the Full moon, but focuses more on role-playing character development part. Aside from choosing a class, we also get to pick race with unique traits, and a school of magic, greatly affecting which cards will be available to us during the run. The problem here, though, is that monster encounters do not demonstrate a lot of variety, forcing us to fight the same enemies over and over, and the difficulty is rather high, with starting cards doing almost nothing and enemies quickly run out of hand with their devastating attacks, whereas good cards are hard to come by, and even then you will still be devastated on later stages. [...] UPD: Or maybe I am just bad at this game (welcome to comment section for valid strategy suggestions).
Slay the Spire clones
Blood Card offers a unique possibility to construct the dungeon ourselves, providing a pool of encounters of different types: regular monsters, elite monsters, events and shops. We pick a desired encounter from the pool, deal with it and then move on to the next one. Another interesting feature is that our health is defined by the number of cards in draw pile, which limits our tactical possibilities, but is compensated by the fact that we get multiple copies of cards as rewards for fighting enemies. There are a lot of interesting mechanics related to moving cards between various piles, as well as other neat features (like: the Death inevitably arrives in three turns and starts whacking everyone on the field with increasing persistence), but I'll leave them for you to discover on your own. Card Crusade seemed like a cool idea of mixing classic "roguelike" dungeon crawling with its "deck-based" counterpart, where we explore the dungeon the same way as we do it in Hack, Angband, Pixel Dungeon and other similar games, but use cards to fight actual enemies. In reality though, this implementation just adds a useless abstraction, as the adventuring does not provide any tactical benefits and is only there to inter-connect battle sequences (heck, even breaking pots and chests does not give us any coin, of which developers themselves warn us at the very beginning!). The cards are not very interesting, with next to none cool synergies, and new classes (which should be unlocked by performing specific actions on previous runs) do not provide any major difference. [...] Card Quest takes us on an epic journey through fantasy lands, where we will perform great deeds as one of the classic RPG hero classes (fighter, wizard, rogue, ranger), each with their own equipment and fighting disciplines. The interesting part is that the cards we use during runs are defined by said equipment, and if we find some new pieces during our adventure, we get to keep them for further runs. Also worth noting that defense cards are played not during our turn, but during enemy turn, which requires us to plan ahead a bit. This being said, the game is extremely hard - it will take a lot of unsuccessful tries to finally reach the end. But the variety of dungeons and possible builds will keep us occupied for long. Dungeon Tales for a long time was the closest, yet simplified copy of StS mechanics (up to similar cards and gaming strategies), but without certain elaborate features, like upgrading cards or using potions. The basics are left intact though: we still build our deck along the way and face the powerful boss in the end. There are only two characters available yet, but each has a couple of viable builds, so it can keep us invested for quite some time. [...] Endless Abyss is a close StS clone with very similar character classes (only two so far) and a lot of cards with exactly the same effects. Graphically the game looks very good, but angry monetization, lots of grinding, and forced ads make it almost impossible to fully enjoy. [...] Heroes of Abyss is a predecessor to Endless Abyss with basically the same core gameplay, but very simplified dungeon crawling part. There is no floor map with choosing our path, nor there are elaborate adventure events: just a series of battles with the boss in the end. The spoils we get after each battle go into improving our starting deck and unlocking new difficulty modes with higher rewards. What makes the game unusual, is that we chose the preferred build right from the beginning with appropriate set of starting cards, without the need to rely on the randomness of card drops. It may be interesting to unlock and compare all the 6 available builds, but once the task is done, there is almost no reason to play the game further. Heroes Journey provides a different setting for a change: this time we will play as space explorers, who crash landed on an alien planet. Thus, instead of familiar swords and bows, we will be wielding blasters and energy shields: the rest remains the same, up to the majority of cards straight up copied from StS. Unfortunately, this innovative idea was completely ruined by repetitive grinding and angry monetization, forcing player to make dozens of identical runs with the same small card pool, until something adequate is unlocked. Oh, and the game is long abandoned by the developers. Pirates Outlaws is an amazing rework of original StS ideas in a pirate setting with some changes to gameplay mechanics, such as introducing persistent charges needed to play certain cards, and different buff/debuff statuses that replace each other. There are also some questionable features, such as ship stamina that deteriorates over the course of the journey and leads to game over if not repaired in time, or a quest system, where quests can not be completed in parallel, but instead picking the new quest resets your progress in the current one. Some may also argue that new classes take long to grind for, or expensive to pay for, but with permanent booster pack this should not be a problem. Anyway, the game is highly recommended for any StS fan. [...] Rogue Adventure offers a twist to usual mechanic: our hand is limited by 4 cards, but each time we use one of them, a new card is immediately drawn to its place, thus we never run out of cards to play. Non-starting cards are common for all classes, but are grouped by type (or race), giving huge synergies depending on how many similar cards we have. Aside from this, the game offers diverse gameplay by providing a lot of different classes, each with its own unique strategies and dynamics, and some interesting items to work around. The developers constantly provide updates with bug fixes and new content, but be warned that new mechanics may break what you are already accustomed for. Royal Booty Quest started as a straight rip-off from StS with the same classes and abilities, and even cards having the same names. And absolutely atrocious pixelated visuals, which were not possible to look at without eyes bleeding out. Over time, though, it developed its own unique mechanics and interesting card combinations, but the art style did not get any better. However, if this is not a problem, the game is enjoyable to an extent, but since it was not updated for a long time, I doubt it will keeps anyone's interest for long. [...] Tavern Rumble adds an unusual strategic element - a 3x3 grid, on each units and enemies are placed. The core gameplay remains the same (we still see what opponents are planning to do each turn and adjust our own strategy accordingly), but the addition of the grid introduces another tactical layer: not only we should maximize the damage output, but also plan the layout for our troops to provide the effective delivery of said output, while at the same time establish enough defense to minimize the damage to ourselves. There are a lot of cards and classes to play around, different play modes and a lot of features that are still being constantly added to the game. Some may argue about simplistic pixel graphics or long repetitive grinding, but it is easy to unlock everything within reasonable amount of time, even without paying. [...]
Other Games
Of course, my criteria does not work 100% of the time, as some games are way too different from anything else to confidently enroll them into one of the categories. They either demonstrate traits of both, or implement entirely unique mechanics of their own (which I like the most), while still maintaining the basic dungeon crawling ideas (so a lot of the games you might think of will not end up in the list). What I have in mind is the following: Dungeon Reels removes the cards from card-based dungeon crawler - why bother, right? Instead, it provides some kind of a slot machine, where each turn three rows spin independently to pick available actions based on what slots we have in our reel. Winning battles awards us with new, better slots to add, each with their own specifics and synergies. Enemies also randomize their moves with slots of their own, but the most satisfying mechanic is the possibility to spin a jackpot with three identical slots for some powerful effect. It is interesting to see this concept developed further, but the game has not been updated for a long time. Iris and the Giant takes us on journey through imaginary world, inspired by Ancient Greek mythology. Each battle takes place on a grid, where various enemies advance in huge numbers. We play a card from our hand, usually dealing damage to nearest enemy, and then everyone who is still standing and can reach us deals damage in return. There are cards that target multiple enemies at once, as well as ways to play more than one card during our turn, so most of the time we will be deciding which card to play at which moment. The deck has limited size, and if it becomes empty we lose, so new cards should be constantly acquired. There are a lot of interesting mechanics to discover, but the game is very hard and luck based, requiring a lot of trial-and-error to finally reach the end. [...] Phantom Rose Scarlet has the same basic core, but with completely innovative battle system, not seen in any other game. On each turn there are four positions for cards to be played in strict order, where two of them are randomly filled with opponent's cards, and the remaining two are left for us to fill. Instead of drawing the hand, we have our entire deck available right away, but playing cards puts them on a cooldown, which does not reset between battles, so we constantly face the strategic choice of playing our best cards right away or keep them for later. The game is in active development, providing new mechanics and further developing the story, which is quite captivating here. [...] Void Tyrant is a bit of a stretch, but still a "card based dungeon crawler", in which we basically play BlackJack against our enemies by dealing card with numbers from 1 to 6 one-by-one from our deck until we stand or bust. Whoever has the highest value wins and deals damage to the loser. There are various supporting cards on top of this mechanic, allowing us to either jinx the outcome in our favor, or to perform various other metagame manipulations. The only downside of the game is the lack of content, as it quickly runs out of interesting things, and since it was not updated for a long time, it is unlikely that anything new will be added in the future. [...]
Conclusion
As you see, there is a lot to play besides StS, so even if you are not hyped by its long-awaited Android release, but appreciate a good intellectual dungeon crawler, you will find something to suit your needs. I hope, even with StS release, new games of the genre will continue appearing on mobile phones, and I will gladly review them and add to the list. If you know any hidden gems (or even trash) that was not highlighted in this article, please share the names and/or links in the comments. I am also open to any discussions on the topic, as I am obviously able to talk a lot about my favorite genre. Good luck to everyone in all your endeavors. P.S. I am well aware of games like Dungeon Cards, Card Adventure, Dungeon Faster, Meteorfall: Krumitz Tale, Card Thief, Maze Machina, Cube Card, Card Hog, Fisherman, Relics of the Fallen and other "grid-based puzzles", but do not consider them to be a part of the "family".
Dear CDPR: turning cyberpunk 2077 into a total masterpiece is VERY within your grasp.
Despite all of the kickback you are receiving for the games bugs, optimization, and lack of features... You have created an astonishingly beautiful world with a level of visual detail that is pretty much unmatched. The actual gameplay? It's fine, honestly. Plenty of RPG customization options for your character, decent weapon variety. Barring the big bugs, you can play the game how you want. hacking is fun enough, melee is fun enough, stealth is fun enough. You truly do feel free to approach things how you want to the same degree as any other game that tries to offer you these options. Sure, there isn't much in the way of open world police pursuits, killing sprees or any of the other 'sandbox' elements that players are accustomed to with games like GTA. Quite frankly, there doesn't have to be, in my opinion. The game will get optimized. Bugs will get fixed. The foundation of a totally unforgettable gaming experience has been laid. You've DONE all the heavy lifting, CDPR. Now pepper in a huge amount of novelties. That's what have to do. Make the arcade machines playable. Let us go and get a haircut. Let us actually sit down at a bar and drink, even if it doesn't do anything. Let us purchase items at the sex shops. Give us cosmetic slots. Let us dance on dancefloors. Let us gamble. Add fluff, and then add some more None of these things require a large amount of resources at all to accomplish, comparatively to some of the other things you have managed to pull off. But, these are the things that make the world feel alive. We aren't talking huge features. Just 10-15 tiny things that really add up to making the world feel like there are things to do that aren't just the next mission.
Thoughts/review on Cyberpunk 2077 after 400 hours gameplay.
Firstly, just wanted to say that the 400 hours is me restarting the game...four times over? I've also not been following this game, I knew it was coming out but I put at the back of my mind, never gave into the hype and only bought the game when a guy from work was talking about it. Gameplay TL;DR: Game is broken. By level 50, enemies either did 1 damage or buffed me to do more damage. Some of the guns are insanely fun but break the game. It's fun, but if you want a challenging experience wait till some good addons come out. Story TL;DR Main story is quite short, it's not effected by any side quests you just get different endings that you can choose, one ending feels more finalised but open to a sequel/DLC the others either just end (which is intented) or just end on a "To be continued." Romance quests are very good but the romance is just do quest, sleep with them, end of romance, apart from one character. Some of the side quests are VERY VERY good however and the overall theme of Cyberpunk is in my opinion, excellent, it's just let down by the main plot. Bugs/Glitches TL;DR: No crash to desktop, main problems were only for those strange people like myself who play non lethal but some of the endings are bugged, one of the end cut-scenes is bugged. Overall TL;DR: I think if you really really want to play this game, play it. I had a lot of fun and got my moneys worth, though I would be lying if I didn't say that I'm not dissapointed with the end product. If you're on the fence and you're reading this to see if it's worth £40-50 then I would say don't get the game, wait till next year when the modding scene has expanded more and all the DLC has come out, get it on a sale. When the ending cutscene is bugged and after what...3-4 patches and the lead dev has said how proud he is of the PC version, I would say that it's best to hold off. Gameplay: I played purely on Very Hard and tried a no kill playthrough which...I couldn't do all the way due to certain sections of the game but for majority of the game I didn't kill anyone. What I liked about the game is that it didn't say "Oh well, you best get used to the taser weapon or the stun gun, because that's all you get!" like so many other FPS RPGs that offer that, I was using shotguns, sniperrifles, assault rifles, SMGs...anything, really. That's good! My build: https://nukesdragons.com/cyberpunk-2077/character?v=1&a=if4ig&s=iiifff44iigg&p=h42h83hd1hg2hh1u11u41ua3uh1b13b32b42b72b83b93bc1bd2be2bf2a01a41a62a81a91ab3ah1ai2aj1ak1al2w01w11w31w63w72wa3wb2wc2n01n21n43n73n82na1nc2nf1nh2s51sc1sk1c01c11c42c61c72c82c93ca2cb1cc1cf2r32e62eb2eh2ei1 If/When I replay, it will either be: https://nukesdragons.com/cyberpunk-2077/character?v=1&a=a9kck&s=111999kkcckk&p=p02p11p21p32p42p51p61p72p81p91pj1pa1pb1pc2pd2pe2pf2pg2ph1pi1q01q12q23q41q51q63q71q81q93qa3qb3qd2qe1qf3qi1aa1ab3af3s31sa1sb1se2sf1si2sj1c01c11c32c51c61c82c93cb1cc1cf2cg2ch1ci1eh2 I did make my gear and I put all epic armour increasing mods into the slots, then with my weapons all epic crit chance or if they had 100% crit by default, Crit damage. I used Qiant Sandevistan which would slow down time and lowered the CD on it so I could use it every 19 seconds. To put this into perspective of how this was at level 50, the most damage done to me was the end boss and it was about...20-30 damage, other than that, everything was 1 damage. With Katana and Cold Blood I had about 14-15k armour, with just the Katana it was about 6k and with any other gun it was 5k armour. I got this by upgrading everything to as far as the game would allow which when you hit 50 is just one extra upgrade. My health thanks to the consumable perk and health perk was about 850 to 1k with all consumables. My Cyberware made me immune to bleeding, my perk made me immune to poision, if I took shock damage my armour would increase by 10% and I would take no damage and fire would increase my damage by 10%. So...I took 1 damage with a 800+ health pool, I could kill everything very easily dealing about 24k damage on some enemies and I could slow down time and kill everything before they could even react. This is on VERY HARD. "Why complain about it being broken if you broke it?" Because I was told that the secret ending was very difficult and I was also told, by the game, that in very hard, you have to use EVERYTHING to survive. The problem is the game devs...for some reason...lets you out level all the mobs in the game, at level 50 the only "yellow" enemies were two mechs on the secret ending and the end boss, all of which died super quick anyway because the damage is broken. The other problems I had and the other reason I hit 50 was I was told "Do the sidequests, they effect the ending." and with the Cyberpsycho being all about keeping them alive, I thought "There's gotta be a moment where she comes in and helps me or someone out." But...nope, you don't get anything other than money. Nothing happened when I did all the police side quests, nothing happened when I did all the races, the only quests that did matter were two side quest chains, Panam and Johnny...maybe the boxing ones. "But you get tons of cash!" If you go down the hacker route, it's kinda pointless because you get all your hacks via crafting or random drops from terminals. "Ah! But you went guns blazing, all guns, must've cost a ton to get all your armour up, weapons and ammo!" Afraid not. Once you get the epic grenade blueprints you can make your set for a lot of your upgrades, you just buy cans of soda from vending machines and take them apart which doesn't cost that much anyway. The legendaries are a bit difficult, granted and that's why I said the boxing quest chain is actually very useful if you want to play a non hacker route. Outside of upgrades once you get any weapon mod and the perk that grants a 20% chance to get an extra item when you make gear, you're set as they all use the materials you get from soda cans or random junk items. General view I suppose when it's all said and done, I can't say I didn't enjoy the gameplay. I played 400 hours of it. It is to easy and if I wanted to do a "All guns blazing" build again, maybe just stick to epic gear. If we get a new game plus or some difficulty mods that would be perfect, something like enemies using tech weapons more to shoot through walls, more smart weapons hitting you behind cover, more netrunners hacking you all the time and having them stun/blind you or something, just anything other than setting you on fire...a cyberware mod makes them buff you for crying out loud. One of the main reasons I went the gunner route was because I saw so many great guns I thought, at the time, I couldn't use so...I will say that with my build, all the guns I had, it was a lot of fun, I really really enjoyed it...it's just far far to easy, I wanted something to say "Ok, you think you got this, let's put it to the test!" Story: I didn't really know all that much about Cyberpunk coming in, I love Bladerunner and Ghost in the shell, distopian stories where it has a message and hopefully a nice ending. Cyberpunks story was good, there are some side quests that I will remember, I won't say which ones but I will say that if you like story, it's good to pick them up. There aren't that many of them, a lot of side quest will be just "Kill the dude. Steal the thing. Hack the thing." with a text being sent to you on why you should care, most of the time I didn't really care all that much but those that did offer something a bit more, did make me pause and think about it, even think about them as I walked away from the game on what was the "best" option. The romances are...ok. There is certainly more effort in Panam than the others, who, do have their own quest lines and they're the best quest lines in the game but Panam, as a romance story line does seem more fleshed out. The others are sadly very much a "Do my quests, then do me, ok see you at the end of the game!" Panam fights alongside you, you both go on a big character journey together and the fact she joins you in one of the best endings says a lot. A bit dissapointing for me, as I liked Judy and one of her endings was very nice but when I saw what Panam got...argh, was frustrating. The main plot itself is unfinished. If you can be bothered (like I was) do all the side quests, everything, then do the main plot. Not only will you find that during your time the main plot is very short only about...10-15 quests? Of which none of the side quests you can do effect them, at all, no dialogue options that I could see, none of them alter the story a bit...nothing. The endings aren't effected by sidequests either, you get extra endings, two if you do two side quests but that's it. I won't spoil what the endings contain, but I will say, for the sake of saving your time if you're reading this before doing them, that the secret ending is pointless and lazy. It's basically one of the endings but they removed the NPC's from the ending and just spawn some mechs, then after that you get the same boss fight you would get regardless of the ending and then you get a rehashed ending of another ending and an epilogue from another ending. Basically they just took apart the endings and stuck them together to get the "Secret" ending, you get about...a few bits of dialogue from a character but...it's not that great honestly. The biggest problem is this is a "The ending will be in the DLC!" kinda game, where, even the main character points out how pointless the whole thing was. I HATE these kind of endings, the only saving grace is that...I HOPE, this is going to be in the free DLC they're doing this year. Glitches and Bugs: At this point in time, I came across TONS of bugs. Nothing that crashed me to desktop par once (which is a deal breaker for me if it happens to many times) the only issue I did come across was playing non lethal, where, if you grab a enemy and drop them during stealth...for some reason, they are more prone to glitching and exploding in a bloody mess. If you stand and drop them, make sure the ground is as flat as it can be, you might, MIGHT be ok. The other thing to do is enemies would show the death animation (no breathing) BUT if you pick them up, drop them, turn around, sometimes the animation will change to show they're still alive. If you hit them whilst they're on the ground, even if it's a stungrenade touching them, yes, touching, not exploding, you throw a grenade at them and it bounces off of them, they die. Cars would smash into concrete, textures would take ages to load, sound would be to loud from time to time, some dialogue had the tech distorted effect some didn't, Tech guns randomly not charging up to shoot...all of which I could ignore as they either didn't effect me to much, I could fix by saving the game and reloading or were just funny. When the endings are bugged, that to me is very different and that's what made me go from "This is one of the best games I've played!" to "They just stop caring." So during the "Bad" ending, dialogue wouldn't play I just saw text, I had to reload a save to make it work. On the "Good" ending, during a quest I was told to drive a vehicle and then park it in a tent, the only problem is I couldn't do it because an invisible wall was blocking it and I would just flip over, I couldn't get out to continue the quest or fail it, but luckily you can skip it. Then on the "Good" ending, on the very last cutscene I drove into the sunset...literally into the sunset as the Vehicle was driving on the skybox. When you haven't even tested the ending, worse, you say "We're proud of our PC version!" it's such a slap in the face, yes, I'm sure these will be fixed...I hope, but I don't want games in the future to be like this, I want a finished game, certainly if you're asking £40 for it. The free DLC better be something decent and not "Paint your car!" but either way, the damage has been done and it's a real real shame. This game deserved to be polished, it has so much potential and there's so much to like here it's just sad to see it be this...messy and uncared for. Overall: 400 hours of gameplay, do I regret it? ...No? I mean, I've come away disappointed because of how bad some of the flaws are, more so with the lead dev saying how proud he is of the PC version but...I would be lying if I didn't say that if they brought out new game plus, there was some mods that made the game a lot harder...I wouldn't go back. I will play Male V romancing Panam as I have a very strong feeling that's the "intended" storyline and though my choices won't matter in the end, there would be some things I would do differently. I did enjoy my playthrough, I like Judy as a character I just wished I could do more, like...something as simple as hang out on her couch and watch TV with her would've been fine, doesn't have to be grand and epic, just simple character interactions...which you get through quests with Panam. Could I recommend this game to others though? Not really...If the glitches and bugs was just the odd here and there, ok, fine, it's an open world game with amazing graphics, sure, you will get some problems..but when your endings are bugged? Nah, it's not acceptable. Maybe some people can look past it, I would like to but I just feel...like a chump. Here's hoping it gets better, they did say they were working on it more and didn't find it acceptable but...not sure if that's just console, we'll see.
Hey guys. So as we are slowly edging closer to release and the demo, in my boredom I've decided to create a simple FAQ as I find myself answering a lot of the same questions. Some of these answers are lifted directly from PCF, some are just info I'm aware of myself. I will try to keep it updated with any questions asked in the comments. Included are General questions, Demo info, Gameplay info, QOL info, and Crossplay/Multiplayer info. EDIT: All updated now, if I have missed anything obvious I'll update this when I'm made aware.. thearcan feel free to do with this thread as you see fit
GENERAL
- When will Outriders be released?
01 April 2021
- What Platforms will Outriders release on?
Outriders will be available on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X, PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC (Steam & Epic). Outriders will be released on Stadia at a later date.
- What kind of game is Outriders?
Outriders is a 1 to 3 player, drop-in-drop-out co-op, third-person-perspective shooter set in an original dark and desperate sci-fi universe.
- Where can I watch the Outriders reveal trailer?
Right here. This is also on their official channel with plenty more in depth info on the game.
No. Outriders will only require a one-off purchase of the game.
- Is Outriders a Games-As-A-Service?
No - Outriders will be a complete experience out of the box.
- Will Outriders feature Micro-transactions?
No. However the pre order bonus will be able to be purchased separately afaik.
- Will Outriders support Smart Delivery on Xbox? Will we get a free upgrade to PlayStation 5?
Yes. Anyone who purchases the game for Xbox One or PlayStation 4, will get a free upgrade to Xbox One X, Xbox Series S and PlayStation 5 respectively.
- Will Outriders support Cross-Play?
Yes. Outriders will Fully support cross-play, meaning you will be able to explore Enoch with any of your friends on any other platform. You can play Outriders from start to finish with your friends regardless of what system they own.
- Will there be DLC?
At this time we don't know, if the game does well, hopefully we will see more of Enoch.
Final details have not been announced yet. But we know it will be the first few hours of the game.
- Will my demo progress carry over to the full game?
Yes - but there will be progress caps in place. At this moment in time we know there will be a level cap, world tier cap and story progress will be capped.
- Will the demo feature crossplay?
Yes
GAMEPLAY
- Can I play all classes?
Yes, you should have 6 character slots available.
- Will I have to replay the story for each class?
Yes, as far as we know.
- Does each class have multiple skills/powers?
Yes each class has 8 skills total. Only 3 can be equipped at one time.
- Why can we only play in groups of 3?
PCF found that groups of 3 hit the sweet spot for balancing, optimisation and visibility, especially with some much going on in battle.
- How does difficulty scaling work?
The game utilises a world tier system. There are a total of 15 World tiers. In essence the more you kill, the longer you survive, the higher the world tier you unlock. Each world tier increases difficulty, but also your rewards. This can be adjusted up (to the max you have unlocked) and down at any point.
- How does endgame work?
Endgame consists of 14 expeditions, all fresh content. In essence, get to the end as fast as you can on the highest difficulty you can for the most rewards. See more here
- What if I miss a loot drop?
There is an auto loot feature in game.
- Why don't enemies drop loot in expeditions?
They do. It all just goes to the chest at the end. See clarification here
- Does that mean if I fail an expedition I don't get any loot?
No, as per the previous linked comment, you still get this loot even if you fail.
The game will feature accolade system which is something in between achievements and battle pass. It will reward you for doing actions you would normally do in gameplay with small cosmetic rewards so if you need extra motivation to repeat few side quests and spend more time in the game here it is. The system will give only cosmetic rewards and there is no way to buy your progress, it is also completely optional but completionists can have nice fun with it.
From what we have seen you have Pistol side arms, and equip 2 primary weapons. So far we have seen Assault rifles, LMG's, Shotguns, Sub Machine guns and a variety of rifles including Snipers.
- Can I play the whole game solo?
Yes, the number of enemies etc scale depending on how many people are in your party. Expeditions are designed for 3 players, but should still be doable solo. See clarification here
- Is there PVP?
No.
QUALITY OF LIFE
- Will there be in game comms?
No - at this time there is no in built chat or ping system. See further explanation as to why this is here
- Will there be loadouts?
No, not at this time.
- Will there be a transmog system?
No, not at this time.
- Are there colourblind settings?
Yes, I believe so.
- What are the next gen upgrades for Xbox Series X and PS5?
Nothing has been confirmed yet, but we can expect some optimisation benefits etc. Suggestions that we should know for certain by the release of the demo.
- Do I have to be online to play?
Unless something has changed recently, I believe you have to be online to play.
- Is there a mass dismantle system in game?
Yes
- Is there an item protection system in game, such as item locking?
No.
- Will players be able to mod/hack their saves etc?
Alls saves are server side, so this shouldn't be theoretically possible.
CROSSPLAY/MULTIPLAYER
- Can I turn crossplay off?
Yes
- Is there a social hub?
There are hubs in game. However they will only be accessed by yourself and those within your matchmaking party.
-How does joining a friend work?
The game operates on a host based system. You join and play in the hosts world. Host migration systems should be in place if the host dc's. You can join any friend at any point once the prologue is complete.
- How does scaling work when I join a friend?
As you are in the hosts game, you play at the level and world tier setting they are at. So you will either feel OP or under geared if you join low/high level friends retrospectively. See more here
- How does loot work in a friends game?
Loot is instance based for each player. Loot drops depending on enemy level, which is in turn based on world tier. So if you are joining friends playing on substantially lower or higher world tiers. Loot drops in essence won't be much use to you.
- How will I invite cross play friends?
They have said they will utilise a friend code system.
- Is there a cross save system?
Only between similar systems - eg Xbox one to Xbox series x, or PS4 to PS5. You will not be able to cross save between platforms, eg from Xbox to PC, or Xbox to PS.
Hello again lovelies! As promised, I’m back with some stories from my other campaign, run by the Fighter in my original story. Let’s jump in. And again, apologies that I am long-winded. Our cast of characters for this campaign:
Tiefling Artificer, played by me.
Shifter Wizard, played by our previous DM.
Cat Girl Paladin, played by our previous Druid (this was a homebrew race specific to the campaign).
So, let’s start with some context. Once again this was a homebrewed campaign. Our DM for this campaign created an entire world that was very rich and full of lore. The reason for this is that she was writing a book set in this universe. I thought wow, that’s really cool. Making your own world is hard, I’m excited to play! Ah to be young (this happened a few months ago), dumb (still true), and naïve (also probably still true). The world consisted of a few different nations that had the D&D races as well as some homebrew ones. For now, we’ll discuss two races: the Anime Animal people and the Technology Aliens (which both had real names but this is more fun). The Anime Animal people were basically cat girls, bunny girls, cow girls (yeehaw), etc. Our Paladin was a member of this race. The Technology Aliens were descendants of aliens who couldn’t do magic but instead made really awesome tech that did magic-similar effects. That last point is important, as it’s the basis of my character. My Tiefling Artificer was neglected for most of her life. She found a book about the Technology Aliens and started making inventions like theirs (hence she became an Artificer). Now, I’m going to emphasize that she didn’t do magic, she built machines. I discussed this with the DM prior to our session 0 to be sure we were on the same page. The DM agreed. All of my Artificer’s “spells” were actually just gadgets she uses to achieve the same effect. Like throwing a grenade instead of casting fireball or something. But again, SHE DOESN’T DO MAGIC (also just a quick note: idk if this is how everyone runs artificers, but this is what we agreed on for the campaign, as it fit with the lore of the world. There were already characters that could not use magic and instead made tech to imitate magic). So Session 0 went great, I had a blast. I was playing a character drastically different from my first (my Artificer was basically young, impulsive, could be rather selfish, but just wanted to make friends with everyone). Also she swore a lot and flipped everyone off which was just a fun time for me. And, whenever I cast a spell I would explain how I imagined the tech would work. The DM was all for it. We end Session 0 with everyone in the same big city. Then we get to Session 1. Typically we had our sessions the same day and time every week, but the day of Session 1 I had a family thing and asked if we could delay an hour. The other two PCs agreed, the DM vetoed that decision and just said I could arrive late. Alright, no big deal. I told them to just have my character chill at the base or something until I joined. I sign on, about an hour late as expected, and everything is chaotic. For reference, this is me. My party is running all over the city while the DM is posting an ominous countdown in the chat. They try to catch me up to speed while still being productive (bc the countdown didn’t pause to let me get context for what the fuck was happening, that would be too easy). Basically here’s what happened: Wizard and Paladin met up and Paladin informed Wizard that there was a prince in the city who was trying to assassinate his mother (the queen) who was ALSO visiting the city. Paladin knew the prince had some sort of plan, but wasn’t sure what. So they investigated and found out the prince was building a giant mech to destroy the city? I think? Anyway they warned the queen and that’s when the doomsday counter started. No explanation for why, just a doomsday counter. The two were trying to find the location of the mech when I joined. Now you must be wondering: but Buddy, what about your character? Did she just chill at the base? HAHA, no. Apparently the DM had my character go on her own adventure. With neither of the party members, just by herself. And on that adventure she fought some cultists and met a “small-breasted cow girl” (yes this was her constant description) who fell in love with my character on sight. Uh, okay?
Just a fun little side note here, but after this event, almost every NPC knew that the cow girl liked my character and not-so-subtly implied that if my character refused to date her, my character would probably be killed! Because this girl was the daughter of an assassin mafia or something. Did my other two party members get a forced romance? Of course not, I’m special.
And if you asked yourself “Hey Buddy, didn’t your last campaign have an attempted forced romance with the same player?” Yes it did. Probably just a coincidence.
ANYWAY. Finally find the location of the mech robot, try to sneak into the warehouse. We’re mostly successful? Fight a few baddies, things are going well, still got like 5 hours on the doomsday clock. But then we hear the sound of something powering up and there’s a giant boom of energy. Everyone made a Wisdom save! I fail (Artificer had comically low Wisdom), Wizard fails, Paladin succeeds. The DM gleefully informs Wizard and I that we lost all of our spell slots. Confused, I interject.
Me: So wait, you mean magic spell slots? Because I don’t cast spells, I use tools. DM: You lost your spell slots, you can’t use any magic. Me: Okay right. But I’m saying I don’t use magic? I use tools. So if it’s an anti-magic thing, then I should still be okay? DM: No you failed the save so you lose your spell slots.
At this point I don’t want to keep arguing because we are getting nowhere so I just agree. Sure! My tech got scared by the big boom and doesn’t want to work anymore. I’ll just roll with it. (EDIT: I've made a comment addressing this point but I'll put it here too: yes I know RAW has Artificers as magic-users. My confusion came from the fact that in this homebrew world, the "Technology Aliens" did not use magic and instead made pure technology to imitate magic. If we used Detect Magic on their technology, it did not register as magic. Since my Artificer learned her craft from them, I assumed her tech would be the same. If the DM had clarified that I used magic cores or something OR that the magic-wipe was also some sort of EMP, I wouldn't have been confused). The giant mech thing bursts from the basement and is being piloted by the prince!! Oh snap. What drama, what danger, what-- Hey wait. Aren’t we just level one? It quickly dawns on all of the players that we are WOEFULLY under leveled to handle this sort of encounter. But we don’t really have options - the warehouse is located outside of the city, all of our allies are IN the city and are far enough away that we couldn’t reach them in time, we have no means to contact anyone, and this giant mech thing wants to destroy the city anyway. Guess we are going out in the blaze of glory. Oh and the doomsday clock? Still counting down. The Wizard is slinging cantrips but the mech keeps absorbing magic (great), our Paladin is working to cut off its gun arm (it had one grabby arm and one gun arm), while my Artificer is trying to smash her way into the cockpit with a hammer. The Paladin manages to break off the arm and we all cheer, hoorah!
DM: As the arm falls, you see the gun turn to train on you and begin to power up. Paladin: Wait, how does it still have power? I detached it. DM: No, you detached the other arm. Entire Party: wut.
Despite the Paladin specifically saying she was hacking away at the gun arm (you know, the biggest threat), the DM thought she was hacking away at the other arm. When we explained that we ALL thought she was focusing on the gun arm, the DM just told us nope. Alrighty then. So I’m trying to smash my way into the cockpit (which has a glass windshield) with my hammer but I’m barely making any progress. Even when I roll a crit, the thing hardly cracks. Oh and I’m rolling strength checks, not attack rolls. My spaghetti-armed tiefling child shockingly doesn’t have high strength. Eventually the mech does another big blast and catapults all of us into the water surrounding the city. The mech charges up to shoot a laser at the city, we try to intervene but the DM says we are all stunned (without rolling to save). The mech shoots the laser, we’re all thinking well shit, UNTIL. A giant forcefield covers the city, ABSORBS the laser, and shoots it back at the mech. The mech is destroyed, the city is safe! So the session ends, and I realize that we were entirely unnecessary for this whole scenario. The mech was planning on shooting a laser at the city this whole time, and the city always had this defense. We could have done nothing and everything would be fine. Aren’t we supposed to be heroes or something? The DM informs us that the countdown was for the Technology Aliens. Apparently they were planning on just destroying the whole neighborhood the mech was in to neutralize the threat. The DM also spent several minutes berating us for fighting the mech.
DM: You weren’t supposed to fight it! I wasn’t prepared for you guys to fight it. Why would you do that? You should have run away. Wizard: But you said it was going to destroy the city? Paladin: Yeah and you told me my characters mission was to stop the Prince. DM: Yes but it wasn’t supposed to happen yet!!! Me: But wait, didn’t you just tell us the Technology Aliens would have destroyed the neighborhood if we did nothing? A ton of people would have still died. DM: They wouldn’t have done that if you hadn’t warned the queen about the assassination attempt.
I’m confused, Wizard is confused, Paladin is the most confused because the DM primed her with this mission. So we were supposed to run away from danger, not tell the queen that her son wants to off her, and do what, spend the session window shopping? I thought it was odd, especially since most players WANT to play heroes. But little did I know this was an omen for things to come. TLDR; Party is told that a mech is trying to destroy the city and assassinate the queen. Warns the queen about the assassination, tries to fight the mech, in the end the party is useless because the city has a magic forcefield to defend itself. Then the DM yells at the party for trying to save the city. And thus ends our first tale from my second campaign. Trust me, there are more stories to follow.
I have read dozens of these threads for dozens of games over the years but never bothered to write one myself. Nothing especially exciting is coming up on Google for Cyberpunk yet, so I figured I might as well give back to the community, so to speak. So, here are a list of tips and tricks for new players. Many of these may not stay true as CDPR patches the game but they're up to date as of 1.06. If you have stuff I missed, throw it in the comments and I'll try to edit it in. And if I'm wrong, correct me! I'm not an expert, just a fan. Some of this stuff is a matter of opinion, playing "optimally" is a bias of mine that not everyone may share. You may want to beat the whole game hacking everything in sight with 5 intelligence (good luck lol). This is just as valid a playstyle as being a min-maxing degenerate like me, the point is to have fun :) Attributes: - The game files tell you that you get an attribute point every three levels. This is a damn lie. You get one every level. By level 50, which you can attain well before beating the game, you can raise three stats to 20 with 4 points left over. - You can have an attribute up to 20 by level 15. Game's level cap is 50. -Body and Technical Ability both let you open doors. DIFFERENT doors. It's rare that they'll both work on the same door. If you wanna open every door, you should max 'em both out. That said, this is mostly just for bonus loot, so it's not mandatory. - Every attribute has perks enough for a viable build, though technical ability can be rough going. You should consider leveling one skill to 20 before you start leveling another because the high level perks in many of these trees are bonkers. The two exceptions to this are "Breach Protocol" under intelligence and "Crafting" under technical ability. Good, but not necessarily your best first priority. For example, at the end of the blades tree is a perk that makes you do double damage to enemies with full health (at rank 3) and another perk that increases the damage you do by 3% per 1% health the enemy is missing. So assuming it works as described (big if, lol) if you take 50% of an enemy's health off with your opening strike, you'll do 150% bonus damage. Throw in the bleeding effects and you'll be ginsu knifing your way to victory in no time. - Attribute pairings: Some attributes have a bunch of synergies. For example, Cool synergizes well with Reflex for blades, sniper or silent pistol builds. Cool also synergizes relatively well with Quickhacking. Technical Ability pairs well with Reflex because the engineering tree buffs smart weapons and tech weapons - though there are some tech shotguns, which pair with Body, most guns are buffed by the Reflex trees. Comparatively, Technical Ability has less to offer a melee build - stealth melee should be Reflex and Cool, while 'charge TF in' melee benefits from Body and Reflex. - If you want to craft, you need to raise technical ability to 18 for best effect. If you want to use tech weapons, take it to 20. Quickhacks are crafted in their own tree, and are not a part of normal crafting. - Not much advice here overall because it's mostly a matter of playstyle. You wanna have a dude with 13 in every attribute? They'll be a great all-rounder. Wanna specialize? You'll get some outrageous power perks. Skills + Perks: - Skills level as you use them although Athletics is currently really hard to level apart from some buggy stuff. The other slightly counter-intuitive skill to level is engineering which levels when you deactivate cameras manually, need to be standing very close to them. You can also level it by firing tech weapons through walls and by using grenades. - Perks level as you put points into them. You get one perk point whenever you level up. You get perk points as you level skills (7 per skill tree, if you get it high enough). edit: Crafting, Breach & Quickhacking have 6 for some reason. There are also a number of 'perk shards' that give you free perks. - To buy a perk, you need to have a high enough level in the associated attribute. All skill trees have at least one perk that requires 20 in the associated attribute (Body, Reflex, etc). Sometimes that perk is just ok, but sometimes it's bonkers powerful. Take the time to read the trees. Basically all builds are viable right now so I don't have any "best" build tips, just level one attribute to 20 and then figure out which one you wanna do next. - Skills cannot level past their associated attribute. For example, Blades is in the Reflex tree. If you have Reflex 4, it doesn't matter if you vivisect every enemy in the game, you will level to blades 4 and stop there until you raise Reflex to 5. This is one of the reasons it makes sense to level an attribute to 20 ASAP. Keep an eye on the skills you wanna use all game - if they stop gaining experience, you need to bump the attribute. -Leveling skills will reward you with bonuses. Sometimes the bonus makes you better at the skill (for example, reducing recoil on a kind of gun). But each skill tree has (afaik) 7 "bonus" perks in it. This means that there are more total perks available to characters who level Body and Reflex (which each have three associated skills) as opposed to other attributes (which only have 2). - Every tree has some ridiculous skills that are must-have, and some that are useless. One or two are even actively harmful, like the one that automatically disassembles junk. Some junk sells for 750 ED, so scrapping it automatically robs you. Avoid that perk (it's in Crafting). edit: Matter of opinion. There's a lot of junk in this game and if you're speccing into crafting, you can easily make money, so taking the 'scrap all junk' perk can save some time. Ultimately the only junk you need to scrap is the cans you buy from vending machines, which (with the current UI) is the fastest way apart from using the perk. Your mileage may vary. -If you read through the skills it's pretty obvious which ones are awesome; usually it's a huge buff to damage or crit chance. They give out crit chance like candy in this game. - It's worth making sure that your primary combat skill (pistols, blades, etc) is always capped - so if you have 10 reflex, you should have 10 in blades. This way you'll get the most from the perk system, but also have 'best' fighting style at your disposal. The game gives you all these great playstyles but in my experience, if you don't level them, they become progressively less useful. - You can respec perks for 100,000 ED. This will not reset your attributes. 100,000 ED will always be a stupid amount of money. You're better off just farming up some more perk points and spending them. - There is always an ultimate perk unlocked when you reach 20 in the skill (need 20 in the attribute first). These are enigmatic and poorly worded. To be clear, they give you an up front buff of varying quality. Then you can keep putting points in them generally for a 1% buff. I haven't doubled checked all of them, but after that first rank, it's highly unlikely you'd ever want to put another point into them. - Cold blood makes you good at everything, a little bit. It's in Cool, so it's most efficient to pair it with pistol sneak or blade sneak, but really you can go hog wild. It has some preposterous bonuses. - You will never need to swim underwater AFAIK so ignore that perk. Weapons - All builds are viable and so are all weapons. Still, I think they put shotguns and lmgs in the same tree because the range on shotguns isn't optimal and they are not sneaky weapons. I'd carry one of both, and I also carried a pistol, a sniper rifle and an assault rifle on my Reflex build, though this spread me a little thin. - Weapons come in a tiered system: common (grey) uncommon (green), rare (blue), epic (purple) and legendary (orange.) Wonder if they'll pay Blizzard royalties. If anyone will, really. - There are also iconic weapons. They can usually be upgraded to legendary, but not always (RIP Lizzie pistol). This costs a lot of mats. But not as much as upgrading a level 40 gun to a level 41 gun. - Using crafting to upgrade weapons is so expensive / tedious that you should just craft new weapons instead. You should also keep your Iconic weapons at the rarity you find them, and upgrade them to level 50 at the lowest possible rarity, to save on mats. - You can have three weapons (plus unarmed / gorilla arms) equipped at once. - Power weapons can ricochet and are most common. Tech weapons can charge and shoot through walls. They discharge automatically at full charge until you get an engineering perk to fix that. This makes them WAY more useful. - Smart weapons paint dots on a target and then they'll hit the target. The dots (little and red) need to appear before you start firing. If they do, the bullets may even hit around corners or cover. If you don't, the bullets are wasted. - You can craft ammo. The carry limit is high, 400 pistol, 700 rifle, 100 snipeshotgun on PS4 according to u/Eggtastic_Taco, I thought I'd had 500 pistol ammo on PC before but IDK. - Weapons can be modded. Replacing a mod destroys it. Scrapping a weapon destroys the mod unless you have a perk (from crafting.) The perk is worth it. Modding weapons is generally worth it. I wouldn't bother putting a silencer on a pistol. edit: As withoutapaddle points out, silencers are awesome if you are speccing into them, generally with a Reflex / Cool build focused around pistols. You can easily overcome the damage debuff, especially with the rare silencer, where the debuff is only 15%. Armor - There's no transmog so you're gonna look ridiculous until endgame, and maybe then too. - Armor seemed to me like it made little difference til I passed 4000 armor, at which point I became an unkillable tank. Main appeal of crafting, IMO. - But mods can make a big difference by buffing critical damage, critical chance, etc. Also plenty of useless mods (breathe underwater longer). - You can pick up resistance to damage types, and even immunity, from item mods - but also from certain perks and cyberware. - Armor can be iconic too, though far less often. Same advice from iconic weapons applies. Hacking - Not much to say here - use breach protocol to debuff enemies and make quickhacks cheaper. Many quickhacks are non lethal. - Quickhacking costs RAM. It recharges out of combat, and in combat with the right perk. - The game teaches you this in an optional tutorial but it is VERY important: you can quickhack people while seeing them through cameras. And when you do, they can't do a damn thing about it. They can't detect you unless they see you IRL. So hack a camera from across the street, cycle through their camera network killin' em all. Easy peasy lemon squeezy. Crafting - When you craft an item, it randomly has mods (or maybe none) and randomly has mod slots. Far as I can tell, 4 is the maximum number of mod slots. Mods are fairly easy to come by, and some of them are ludicrously OP (Can find 6 15% crit chance mods and have 100% effective crit, I think). - But they're random! So you may need to craft and recraft those legendary pants until you get one with 4 mod slots. edit: max 4 for torso slots, max 3 for everything else - Crafting in general is broken in good ways and bad. The main tip is that you can scrap drinks, but not food, for some reason. So go to every drink machine you see and buy them out of drinks (10 ED a drink). Then scrap all the drinks for common and uncommon components. Craft a bunch of uncommon sniper rifles, sell them to a merchant, repeat til you're at 20 crafting. Good way to make money too. - As mentioned above, upgrading things is expensive as hell, though at higher levels it also gives you huge chunks of crafting XP all at once. edit: When you upgrade an iconic item, it seems to reset the cost of components to upgrade it again, and as a bonus, raises it to one level below yours. So if you don't want to farm mats forever, consider waiting til you're level 50 before raising your Iconic gear to Legendary status. Then you'll only need to upgrade it once. - Items can only be crafted one at a time but you can edit a config file to make that happen instantly. This'll get patched, I hope. - There are crafting specs scattered through the world. The best ones are usually free from drops but you might buy one for a niche build. Here's a mod table, h/t to u/theherrhuml
Work and Stack
Armadillo, Backpacker, Osmosis, Plume
Work but Don't Stack
Fortuna, Bully
Work
Coolit, Antivenom, Superinsulator - not for EMP, Panacea
Don't Work
Deadeye, Predator, Resist, Zero Drag
Cyberware - It'll make you a beast. It's the main use for 'street cred', too, a system that barely needs explaining. Kill dudes, get street cred, unlock new Cyberware. Other stuff too but mostly pretty pointless by comparison. The best cyberware requires 49 street cred; the cap is 50. - The wrist mounted missile launcher is sick but it also seems to disable the use of grenades (mapped to the same hotkey on my controller anyway). The missiles, however, are bottomless. edit: Probably my biggest error here. I thought my grenade option had disappeared, but you can switch grenades into the slot if you want. If I'm understanding u/theherrhuml correctly, this means you can't use both at once? IDK. - Slowing time is very handy. The synaptic accelerator does it when you are spotted by an enemy. A must for sneak builds. Sandevistan slows time when activated. Mostly useful for combat but you can also rush right past enemies (but be aware that slow time means doors open slow too). There's also Kereznikov, which slows time when you dodge, slide or do some other stuff idk man, I forget. Obvious combat applications. - Your initial cyberware lets you hack. The cyberware in the OS slot, to be specific. If you replace it with a Sandevistan model, or a Berserk, you will lose the ability to hack. The game does a very poor job of warning you of this. It SUCKS to suddenly not be able to turn off cameras by hacking them. - Cyberware has mod slots. Maybe this explain this at one point but it's easy to forget. You'll find lots of cyberware mods in any case. - If you're using quickhacking, most quickhacks have to be equipped in your deck, which goes in the OS slot. They have their own parallel crafting system which is under Intelligence. They'll make you a cybergod among men. - Overall cyberware is meant to compliment your build. Wanna do blades? Mantis blades go in the arm slot. Wanna hack? Buy the best OS. Don't care about hacking? Stick a Sandevistan or Berserk in there and shoot / chop your enemies to bits. The monowire, counter-intuitively, is a 'blunt' weapon and benefits from the associated perks, as well as being buffed by cool. - Double jump, or charge jump, are mandatory. Why wouldn't you want the high ground, as Ben Kenobi taught us? - Like I said, it compliments your playstyle, so it also gates the best cyberware behind attribute requirements. 20 body nets you an implant that gives +60% health, which is huge. You'll never be able to equip all the "best" cyberware, but you'll have what's best for your build. - Every ripperdoc has a specialty, but they don't always have their legendary quality item. This is kinda annoying because it's one of a number of easter egg hunts they implement for buying stuff, real MMO tier game design. I have the money, gimme the damn thing. Anyway, check the internet for guides on where to buy legendary cyberware. Questing + Side Content - Personally I'd recommend finishing all the side content in Watson (the first area, in which you are trapped) before proceeding to Konpecki (you'll know when you know.) This gives you a lot of tools in your toolbox for a pretty challenging series of missions, and give you lots of practice playing the game .- Alternatively, there's little punishment for burning through all the story content up to the final mission, and in fact, no real punishment for beating the final mission as soon as it's available. The game just drops you right back before the final mission, so that you can unlock the other endings. Up to you. edit: A certain Hollywood actor shows up to make commentary on your quests once you finish Act 1, including quests in Watson. So depending on how thirsty for Keanu you are, consider holding off on doing sidequests in Watson until after Act 1. - Like the Witcher, the story quests are worth way more experience, so if you're in a hurry to level then get after it. - If you bought this game because of the political dimensions of Cyberpunk then READ THE SHARDS. All of them. Great stuff in there. If you bought it for pew pew lasers, then only read the shards with smutty titles, they're funny. - The level design's pretty good. Often I'll finish a dungeon only to notice that there was a sneaky back way in that I never even noticed because I didn't bother looking. Of course, with double jump, you can usually make your OWN way in. - Overall, the level design combined with the shards made even clearing reported crimes fun for me all the way through to endgame. I highly recommend doing most of the sidequests ( hear racing sucks which checks out because driving sucks ). Also clear all the organized crime bosses because they drop awesome loot. Cars - You can get a free Caliburn, one of the game's fastest cars, in the Badlands, hard to explain so just google the video.- Fixers will text you about cars they have for sale. This sucks. The cars then show up as quest markers. This also sucks. You do not need to buy all the cars (could be fun to do so), any one car will suffice. - Motorcycles are great. They can ride in the gutters or down the center line of roads, totally ignoring traffic. - If you park your car in the road it creates a traffic jam. - Look both ways before you cross the street. - You can steal cars but there's not much reason to since you can call your own car to your location. Misc - Some missions require you not kill anyone. You can easily get an implant mod that makes all your weapon damage non-lethal. This allows you to never worry about this again. You very rarely get in trouble for bringing someone in alive; apart from some flavor commentary IDK if it's ever happened to me. Alternatively, you can use blunt weapons or certain quickhacks. - Pay Vic back. Partially to upgrade your eyeballs but mostly because it's the right thing to do for a friend. - In general, dialogue checks relating to your attributes are there for flavor so you can use them with impunity, but without material reward. - Street cred: literally just kill criminals and do quests and it'll level faster than your character level. I hit 50 SC around level 30, as I recall. That unlocks the best cyberware and the highest level gigs, then there's no reason to think about it ever again. - If you possibly can, wait 2 years for the finished version of this game with all the DLCs. I love it, but I think it'd be more fun to experience the finished product fresh. I only played Witcher 3 last year and it was amazing. - There are free legendary mantis blades and a free legendary monowire kicking around in the game world. - Don't let Cyberpsychos or other bosses hit you in melee, obvs. - Those little icons over people's heads at the beginning of the game are telling you that you can fight them but also how difficult they are. I spent an hour trying to figure this out when I bought the game, lol. - Cops will aggro if you get too close for too long. Gangs will aggro if you get too close usually. That's it for now! Let me know what I missed. Thanks for updates from: u/theherrhuml, Eggtastic_Taco, withoutapaddle
Fallout 76: Inside the Vault – S.P.E.C.I.A.L. Loadouts, C.A.M.P. Slots, & More Coming to the PTS
From FC Mods
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Welcome back! This week, we’re sharing an inside look at our next update for Fallout 76, including the new features and improvements that are on their way to the Public Test Server (PTS) at the end of next week. We’ve also included details on our first Scrip Surplus event, which begins today.
New Features Coming to the PTS
Image We just released our Inventory Update a few days ago, but we’re already looking to bring our next game update to the Public Test Server as early as next Friday, February 5. We’re excited to share an overview of the new features and improvements we’re planning to include in that update, and we hope as many of you as possible will join us for some playtesting and feedback in the PTS.
S.P.E.C.I.A.L. Loadouts
Image One of the most common requests we’ve seen from the community is for a way to completely reset a character’s S.P.E.C.I.A.L. attributes so that it’s quicker and easier to overhaul your build. We hear you, and starting at level 25, your characters will gain access to S.P.E.C.I.A.L. Loadouts, which offer the brand-new ability to reboot all of your S.P.E.C.I.A.L. points, for free, whenever you’re in your C.A.M.P. This will allow you to create and save custom S.P.E.C.I.A.L. point allocations and Perk Card assignments, and then switch between them. Image To swap your Loadouts, edit your Perk Cards, or S.P.E.C.I.A.L. points, simply visit a Punch Card Machine. You’ll be able to build a Punch Card Machine in your C.A.M.P., and find them at Train Stations around Appalachia so that you can make changes when you’re on the go. Initially, players will gain access to two S.P.E.C.I.A.L. Loadouts per character, and we’re exploring additional ways to unlock more Loadouts in the future, such as through the Atomic Shop.
C.A.M.P. Slots
Image It can be tough to decide between building a brand-new home or sticking with your current C.A.M.P. creation, because you can only have one at a time. Going forward, you won’t have to choose whether to open a Wasteland B&B, fortify a Free States outpost, or run your own Red Rocket Station—Instead, C.A.M.P. Slots will help you do it all. Your characters will be able to build multiple different C.A.M.P.s, each with its own location, build budget, custom name, and even a unique map icon. While you will only be able to have one active C.A.M.P. at a time, you can easily switch among them using a new C.A.M.P. Builds widget or your C.A.M.P. icons on the map. Further, managing the items you want to sell has never been easier, because your Vending Machines will now feature a large pool of item slots that are shared for every instance, across all your C.A.M.P.s. Display Cases will be separate per C.A.M.P., allowing you to showcase different items at each one. Along with these changes, we’re also working to enable Displays in Shelters, so that you have even more opportunities to show off your loot. We’re still implementing some of this Vending and Display functionality, so these changes may arrive after the PTS has already begun.
Daily Ops Expansion
Our first expansion for Daily Ops brings a major update to the feature that nearly doubles the amount of randomized content that’s currently available. To begin, you will be able to dive into the all-new “Decryption” game mode, in which you and your teammates will hunt down enemy “Code Carriers” in order to disable radio interceptors for Vernon Dodge. Enemies in Decryption have extra deadly attacks that will bypass your armor resistances, so you may want to employ stealthier tactics to take them down rather than a brute force approach. In addition to Decryption mode, you’ll brave a variety of new Daily Ops locations, including Vault 96 and the Watoga Raider Arena. You’ll battle new enemies, such as the Scorched, and Mothman Cultists, and even face down new Mutations, like enemy groups that can heal each other, enemies that create toxic hazards on death, and more. We’ll add the new mode, locations, enemies, and mutations to the existing randomized pool so that you always have a fresh challenge to conquer. Of course, there will also be new rewards for your efforts, like new weapon plans and loot, so be sure to keep some room in your inventory.
Aim Assist
We’re adding a new Aim Assist setting to help players who use controllers more easily snap their crosshairs to enemies and stay on target when aiming down the sights with ranged weapons. We introduced Aim Assist in a previous PTS, but we’ve made some tweaks since then and would love to hear what you think!
Batch Crafting
If you’ve ever needed to grill up a bunch of Radstag Meat, you know it can take some time (and lots of button presses) to get through your stockpile. In our next update, we’re adding crafting sliders to all Workbench menus so that you can assemble, forge, cook, or manufacture an entire stack of an item all at once. All you will need to do is move the slider to the number that you want to craft before you hit confirm.
World Activity Menu Updates
We’re expanding on the World Activity Menu to include much more than Daily Ops. Going forward, you’ll find it includes active Nuke Zones, nearby player Vending Machines, and events, giving you an easy way to find and Fast Travel to these activities.
Melee Attack Improvements
We’ve read some feedback from the Fallout 76 community that melee attacks could use a tune up. We agree, and so we’ve made some tweaks and squashed a few bugs. Going forward, your hacks, slashes, smashes, and chops should feel a little more fluid and hit more reliably. We hope you’ve enjoyed this overview of what’s next for Fallout 76! If you own a PC copy of the game through Bethesda.net, we would love to have you join us in the PTS next week to try out everything mentioned above, post feedback, and report bugs. Stay tuned for additional PTS details in our next Inside the Vault.
Scrip Surplus This Weekend
Image Calling all legendary hunters! A little later today, we’re kicking off our first Scrip Surplus weekend, which doubles the total amount of Legendary Scrip that’s available from Legendary Exchange Machines per day. Gather up all your unwanted legendary items and be sure to exchange them for up to 300 Legendary Scrip each day until the Scrip Surplus concludes on February 1.
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