I am a survival game specialist for players who want THINK their way through out, not just run and gun. If you like to game like grownup, I happily provide weekly tips and tricks to help you.
Current Tite Focuses are: The Long Dark Green Hell Arid Stardew Valley Ark Minecraft
I am active on other platforms (below) and welcome viewer msgs.
Some of hte considerations listed here I think support my outpost method of base stocking. I dislike centralizing all loot, unless a region has been exhausted of all resources and I've determined it's not going to be a useful, fun, or worth the danger. I tend to scatter small batches of matches, water, fuel, and a can or two of calories around the map, in case I get lost in a blizzard, barely survive a mauling, or other event, far from my central outposts. A lot of tools though you can usually leave in a base though, where you know you'll be returning, where you know where it is. Like the pryba isn't as useful once you've cracked open every single locker and trunk from the Lighthouse to the Far Territory. But is it an item you'll want to move to fishing huts, as it can serve out it's remaining durability chipping open the ice hole for your cabin fever burn off. Etc.
I was sat here cooking a potato listening to you on the long dark got really confused on what game I was playing I felt I was playing Fallout 3 listening to Wasteland radio with free dog😂 love it man keep up
Great video..thanks but could you make one that's REALLY beginner level...I have no earthly idea how I'd even get down to 30 in the mines! I thought I rocked it out getting to 5, lol!
Thanks a Lot dude. Im currently on my 61 day in my 4th run on Stalker difficulty and spawned in Hushed River Valley, i managed to escape to Milton but i didn't wanted to move on without mapping and looting everything from Hushed River Valley so i prepared myself to go back there. I was missing just one location and this helped me a lot and it will help me in the future.
In Misery/Interloper trunks of cars and locked lockers are likely to have nothing except for the safe. You don't need the prybar for the safe anyway so long as you have the hacksaw you don't need the prybar. The hacksaw being used to take burdock. Only real use for the prybar in Interloper/Misery is to pop open the entrance to the Orca gas station in Mountain Town.
Something you didn't mention which is very important and even more so in Misery/Interloper. Leave stuff behind in safehouses you know you will backtrack to. Lot of the game is about planning ahead. If you know you will come back this way leave stuff behind there to lessen the load. In fact preparing safehouses should be part of the fun. I would use the Camp Office as a main hub to leave things behind while I went to explore Forlorn, Railrload and Mountain Town.
Only use the bear bedroll if you know you can repair it. If you downed a bear and curing the hide and you don't need ot make a coat then go with the bear bedroll. Also only go with the bear roll if you're going on a long trip while you wait for the hide to cure back at home. There's also the improvised feather bedroll which is better thant he regular one and lighter than the bear roll. I would use that for shorter trips.
Only reason to carry a pot and skillet is if you're going to make the pie/stew/porridge recipes. I do have the recipes but I'm usually saving those special recipes for the limited flour, acorn, potatoes I have so most of the time I roam around with only two recycleable cans and leave the kitchenware in a safehouse that I will return to later where I also have the flour and other materials.
I remember way back when stacyplays was playing tld, she really loved dogs. I think she tried to leave out dog food for the wolves at least a couple times.
I'd say it's time for an update on this, with the new content adding new recipes to consider in deciding when to cook your meat. Also, if you really want to max out the lifespan of your meat, if you let it decay while raw to about 50%, then cook it, it'll restore 50% of it's cnd, back up to 100%. So you can store it however long it takes to decay from what it was when you harvested it to 50%, cook it and it's right back to 100% and will keep at the cooked meat rate of decay for however long that lasts. You also don't need to just slap the slab of meat on a cooking spot, but can choose what to cook it into, provided you have the right ingredients, such as making a stew which, like herbal tea, gives you the improved rest benefit, as well as increasing the amount of calories you get from your meat. You can also cook up meat pies, if you have raw meat, flour and a frying pan, which gives you a temporary +3kg boost to carry weight, which can be huge if you're a couple of kilos over capacity and need to clime a rope to carry on. Cooking these recipes can even restore meat from ruined to edible. EG you have a ruined raw venison steak of at least a half a kilo. You combine it with flour and broth in a large pot, and cook it up into venison stew. It recovers its condition back to full, (you're boiling the venison for over an hour after all), and get a restorative stew to help speed up your own cnd recovery. Keep in mind these meat containing recipes are still smelly, so be aware of then when you decide if you want to carry them around with you or leave them at your base.
Thank you so much! I couldn't ever get up to the lake overlook w/o using the rope climbs. I knew it was possible but no one explained it as good as you did. That lone birch tree is an excellent marker and assures I'll always know how to get up. You've earned my sub and like good sir.
I was having an absolute struggle with fishing, did not realise i wasnt supposed to be spamming my mouse button, caught a fish wthin 2 minutes of watching this. <3