Sunday, April 3, 2022

Easy Mode Build for ELDEN RING

This is how to make the game super easy for anyone, playing offline.

Going for a quality melee build.


TL;DR get a ton of hp, get the mimic tear, get some bleed going (bloodhound's fang).

Overview

Start the game as Vagabond and pick the Golden Seed (extra flask early is the best option)

TURN OFF AUTO WALL RECOVERY (prevents the camera being out of control near walls)

And then unequip the halberd to be able to midroll.

Mid rolling is good enough for the whole game, being lighter would only benefit an experienced player (better dodge, less armor)


So I went quality for my first build and it was by far my easiest time in the game.

Going quality (STR+DEX) is a great way to experiment with nearly all weapons until you find your own style. Going melee is also easy to handle compared to magic builds, because you have simple and clear goals. All you really need is HP, stamina and basic scaling damage.

Magic build are broken for sure, however it requires to already have knowledge of the game, where are the good spells, what weakness to exploit etc. It also needs more stats to be effective as you want to increase FP and magic scaling, knowing that you still need some HP, stamina and basic stats to fight trash mobs with weapons. You don't want to add too much ressource management for a first time build so I suggest going melee and forget about FP and FP flasks for now.


In this guide I will explain basic principles on how to create a quality build and all the good stuff to get in order to make the game as easy as possible, playing offline.


Playing coop is the true easy mode for sure, however to experience the game at your own pace and actually learn how to play you should go offline and don't even bother until later. It will remove troll messages preventing you to open chests and climbing ladders, leaving you with only dev messages so you know what's up. It also lets you experience the game without having to worry about random invasions, although it's really not an issue in ER.

Stats

Being a melee build, you want to level Vigor ASAP.

Not having enough HP is the most common mistake all players make and is the only reason you die all the time against strong bossses and in PVP.

You want to get 20/25 Vigor before anything else. Only then you start increasing END, get your basic requirements for weapons before coming back to Vigor and focus heavily on it.

Having a ton of HP makes your experience much easier in PVE and is a necessity for PVP.


Leveling STR/DEX early is a big mistake. Most of your damage comes from weapon upgrades. Scaling only add damage once weapons are upgraded (improved scaling) and is only good once you reach high levels.


VIGOR:

Like I said, get 20/25 early. This is good for clearing Stormwind Castle. Get in the castle only after explored most of Limgrave, getting runes for leveling up as well as upgrade materials (at least a +3 weapon). Once you're at this level of HP, you can then focus on getting some END, some STR/DEX (20 for each is good).

Once you got all this, get back to leveling Vigor like crazy, until 40 at the very least. I would suggest going up to 50 or even 60 before anything else.

Some talismans increase your max hp but these are %based so they might not seem like much at first, once you get to 50 / 60 vig however this is another story.

Running around with about 2k hp makes the game infinitely easier to deal with and lets you afford to be somewhat careless even in NG+


ENDURANCE:

Get 20 and be done with it. you never need much more that this, unless you want to perform some crazy 10 hits combos which will just never happen.

The weak ennemies die in a few hits anyway and the big ones have infinite poise or hyper armor and they will never let you land so many hits in a row.

You might want to boost END somewhat for equip load, 25 or 30 seems good enough for endgame.


STR/DEX:

It works like in dark souls 1, two handing a weapon grants you +50% STR. Therefore if you are primarily two handing a weapon you should get proper stats to reflect this.

In practice, rather than having a 1 to 1 ratio, you can safely get 20 STR / 20 DEX to unlock most weapons. Then, after getting a high hp pool, slowly increase it towards 27 STR / 40 DEX.

Reaching late game you should be 34 STR / 50 DEX.


I even tried 40 STR / 60 DEX and it still works fine. It seems that you can keep leveling them to crazy levels and it would still benefits you somewhat. Not sure yet about the stats hard caps.

However this is like NG+ consideration and probably unnecessary to get much higher (try to not level up too much for the sake of online play)


Following these guidelines you should be about lvl 140 in the endgame.


Leveling other stats is boring and unnecessary for that kind of build. You might consider getting 10 faith just to be able to cast cure poison, but even that is easily dealt with using items instead.

Equipment

ARMOR:

Anything that has good Physical DEF and poise is good to go.

Poise and armor will never make you unstoppable, but every bit helps. Lowering the damage taken and not getting stunlocked all the time is super helpful, coupled with high HP it makes everything much easier.

Your starting gear is more than enough for the first half of the game as far as armors go. Once you beat radhan, you can get his armor : not only does it look cool it also has great stats.

You could also do the volcano quests and get the scaled armor. Both are great choices. heavy but not too much, good stats, good poise.


WEAPON:

I would highly recommend the bloodhound's fang. It was my weapon of choice on my first playthough, being the first strong weapon i found. I thought I would use it until I get something better, but i never felt the need to switch to anything else. It's not that fancy but gets the job done everytime (even in NG+ i'm just R1 spamming everything).


Being a curved greatsword (murakumo type), it might feel a bit slow and awkward to use at first, but it has high damage, good range, good for catching npcs rolling away, strong art (L2 into R2), tends to stunlock most things (unless they have infinite poise of course) and also has built in bleed effect, which you can still improve with a bleed resin even though it's a "special" weapon.


This is great stuff. You get this weapon in the gaol just left of the bridge leading to the weeping peninsula. If you struggle you can even befriend blaidd (get to hear the wolf in the mistwood, then get the emote from kale in church of elleh and then come back to the wolf) and get him to fight the boss for you. Easy stuff.


You should eventually invest in a bow (any bow, composite is good, black is good, even a basic shortbow is fine) just to have a ranged option. This is always helpful, if anything it lets you desactivate the fire towers in the catacombs from a safe distance.


If you really hate the bloodhound's fang moveset, just settle for an ultra greatsword. Being able to stunlock ennemies is easymode, which is much harder to do if you're going for a regular straight sword or any other light weapon. Go big.


Talismans to consider: increasing HP, Stamina, Equip Load, Poise, Physical DEF (most common damage type)

General Tips

>> try to play unlocked as often as possible.

it lets you have 100% control over your camera and movements and will just make you a better player in both pve and pvp once you get used to. Absolutely necessary to master this.

Playing with lock on isn't wrong though, you just need to see it as a tool rather than a necessity. Playing unlocked helps staying in control against fast moving targets (randomly rolling in pits never feels good), makes boss fights less chaotic but more importantly it lets you be less predictable in pvp : harder to get back stabbed, being able to perform deadangle attacks etc.

Google claw grip to see how the pros do it. Feels wierd at first and then a whole new world gets available to you, being able to turn the camera around while running / rolling. Just don't hurt yourself !


>> dodge forward

anytime you're in a bad spot during a fight you might tend to roll backwards to attempt healing and this is generally something you want to avoid doing, even though it's only natural to try. Most ennemies have good tracking and leap forwards during their attacks, so most of the time you roll back and get rekt because of it. The safe place is quite often being as close as possible to your ennemies (in between their legs, hugging their side/back). In that sence dodging towards the attack is 90% of the time the best thing to do, being safer (able to heal) and more aggressive in the process. The 10% left is when you want to run away instead, to avoid boss charged aoe (plenty of those)


>> explore and take what you can, avoid obvious danger.

you will often get rekt by some random big ennemy on the way.

graveyards are full of heroes : don't be silly and avoid the scary dudes.

they will often drop next to nothing and are more of a hassle than a challenge. if you get stuck anywhere just go do something else instead and come back later when you're stronger. don't be lazy and clear most dungeons. you always get some runes and loot (including upgrade materials for your weapons and ashes)


>> spend all runes to suicide run

some areas are much harder/annoying/not worth clearing than the actual boss of said area. so just spend your runes and suicide run to grab the items/unlock bonfires (for instance in siofra river to activate the blue moose boss). You could then try to clear the area in reverse to make it easier on you (snipers not looking your way etc).

Don't worry if you die and lose some runes it doesn't matter in the long run.


>> be friendly with the crab cook

once you get to liurnia you can meet a dude with a metal mask selling crab dishes. make sure you buy 1. (also buy the medallion to initiate the volcano quest)

buying one there will make him eventually move near the capital (where you fight the dung eater).

There, he will sell you an upgraded version of his prawn dish. At this point, kill him or let the dung eater do his thing. either way get him dead so you get to buy his stuff from the roundtable.

it's a consumable that boost physical def. get a ton of this. It's simple, cheap and helpful.


>> maybe kill the merchants lol

there's no way you'll ever remember who sells what and where, so these friendly nomadic merchants just need to be exterminated. that way you get access to all of them at once in the hub.


>> get strong ashes

wolves are fine early on, but once you feel strong enough you should get to siofra river via the mistwood elevator and kill the blue moose boss to get the ancestral dude ash.

you have just enough FP to summon this dude with base mind value (as a vagabond). this guy gets the job done, he can snipe and tank just fine until you get the mimic tear.

at which point, well just switch to the mimic tear and gg.


>> craft some bleed resin

bleed is insanely effective against everything and is your go to easy strat in most cases. when they are immune to bleed however you can try the dragon resin (very few available ingame do not waste). Other good stuff to craft are poison cure, scarlet rot cure and basic arrows. Don't forget rainbow stones to map invisible paths (at least 2 path found so far)


>> get interested in ranni's quest

not only are these guys the most friendly ones imo, they also lead you to the underground ruins where you'll find great loot and materials. progressing in this quest also gives you key items needed to explore 100%. Get to the carian manor north of Liurnia.

Last words

At this point the build is pretty much done and you have all you need to destroy the whole game. Going in with a ton of hp/armor, a heavy damage stunlocking bleed weapon + a clone of you (with improved hp) is enough to break all bosses, including the hardest ones (malenia getting stunlocked+bleed, fire giant, maliketh, nialls etc. all of them get rekt) The only boss requiring some thought would be the very last one, but even then with all these tools it's not that hard.


How to make it work better? unequip all unecessary stuff (bow/shield etc) to prevent the mimic tear from derping too much.

Keep the main consumables on hand (bleed resin, crab dish boost). as long as you have at least one, the mimic gets multiple copies it can use for free.


About the great runes:

I was confused about it until I realized it only works if you burn a rune arc (kinda like an ember from dark3).

However I would suggest you do not rely on it too much, I only found about 40 throughout the entire game and farming those is boring af. Keep it for the very last boss, for which I equipped radhan's great rune because why not having even more hp.


Extra stuff :

Don't worry about ashes of war (weapon skills) and armor tweaking. I'm sure you can achieve great stuff with these tools however I never used it and it did not matter. The best skills are usually the simple ones (from a pvp pov). Fancy skills are generally a great way to get killed by good players.


Don't waste the star shards (FP regen), seluvis will trade for them eventually.


At least 2 weapons are impossible to get once you beat maliketh so make sure you get them before for the achievement (if you care). If you messed up that's fine, just get all you can from the game and procceed to NG+.


Maybe once you beat the game consider not going in NG+ just yet, respec at the great library and try wierd, more interesting builds for your next playthroughs. Hopefully you won't even need ashes or bleed anymore.

by Draculol

How to disable EAC in ELDEN RING

For people that don't want to deal with Epic's trash.

READ THIS FIRST

IF YOU DISABLE EAC YOU CAN'T GO ONLINE, IF YOU WANT TO DO SHENANIGANS WITH YOUR SAVE DON'T GO ONLINE WITH IT AFTERWARDS. IF YOU GOT YOURSELF BANNED BECAUSE YOU TRIED TO BRING YOUR LEVEL 999 CHEAT ENGINED CHAR ONLINE ITS YOUR OWN FAULT.

Guide

  1. Create a .txt file and name it steam_appid.txt and it needs to go into the same folder that eldenring.exe is in.
  2. Open it and add the string of numbers "1245620" (without quotes) to the file.
  3. Launch the game by clicking on the exe file, DO NOT launch it through steam, it won't work if you do.

if you see this screen when you reach the main menu then it worked.

However this screen will only show up if you set it to go online automatically in settings.

If you set it to start offline just try to go online and that message will appear.


To go online again launch it through steam so EAC is enabled.


Elden Ring: No Spoiler Beginner Tips for New Players


Here is a selection of Elden Ring tips designed for newcomers to the games and those having trouble getting started! This guide is designed to give you a bunch of quick tips to browse - but there is much more info out there once you've gotten started!

Elden Ring Tips for New Players

My friends have a lot of questions about Elden Ring, with some saying it's a lot harder than other Souls games, so I keep writing out tips.


They ended up getting pretty comprehensive, so I'm sharing our list here too in case it's useful for anyone to send to their new pals! Hope they're helpful!


Please share any other good tips you have, but try not to drop any spoilers in the comments so I can safely link this post to my friends!

General Tips

Do the “optional” tutorial: There is an optional tutorial dungeon at the start if you jump into the hole, very recommended to unlock it and you can use it to test new weapons. This tutorial dungeon is where you will be shown how to do basic combat like blocking and back stabbing.

Unlearn habits: You may be in the habit of jamming buttons or relying on waypoints and narration in games - but this game is a little different and it’s often for a game design reason. It wants you to be more present, but there’s usually some direction or indication on screen of what is happening or what you could do.

Reconceptualize the game: If you are thinking you are playing Assassins' Creed or Dragon Age because it looks similar (third person, fantasy), you will have trouble. Try thinking of it as a horror game or a survival game - every step forward and every moment you are not currently dead is progress.

Don’t get sad: Remember, this game doesn’t play into lazy game design with obvious victory conditions - that also means the real reward is getting to explore and learn things and see weird stuff. You are totally still “winning” if you are just exploring in random directions and avoiding scary bosses.

Mix up playstyles: This game offers many options. Don’t feel you need to beat enemies - almost every enemy in the game is technically optional. Go do something else if you are stuck. You can level, change weapons, summon help, use your mount, try stealth, try ranged attacks. Don’t get stuck thinking something is impossible, it wouldn't be there if it was. Often there is a "trick" that makes an enemy easier once you get it.

Info in inventory: There is an "info" section in your inventory that holds tutorials and "tips" you can buy from vendors. You can also find out more about items and moves and spells by examining them in your inventory.

Play with item slot configurations: You can equip flasks to your quick item menu. I personally put the horse on “up” to make it easier to use in combat and my flasks on "left" (HP), "right" (Mystik) and "down" (FP) so I never accidentally heal while trying to use combat items anymore.

Items required for slots: In this game you need items to unlock more spell slots and to unlock more equip slots for the special items (that replace rings in previous games). Throwing items (the equivalent of firebombs in Souls games) may require items like "cracked pots" which are essentially slots for crafting and holding.

Get NPC or multiplayer help: If you are having trouble solo remember you can summon to help! This actually makes this game MUCH easier than many linear single player games. Co-op is much easier to get into than prior souls games, just craft the item to summon.

Co-op to learn: Joining someone else’s game is a great way to learn a new area with NO risk. Watch what your new friends do and when you summon into your game to get help use emotes to "say" you are confused or lost they will usually lead you around!

Look things up: These games are designed to reward exploration and make you feel the mystery, but also they reward learning and cooperation outside the game. It’s ok to check the wiki to look up where to get an item or get build ideas still have to trek across the map and brave challenges to get it. When I find something amazing, I let my partner know and they mark it on their map.

Run back runes: When you die and know you will die again, you can get your runes and run back towards the save point, and keep running them back while dying until you are safe. Tense but effective! You don’t need to beat what killed you to get them back.

Don’t forget your mount: The mount is like parrying in Sekiro, it completely changes this game from previous Souls games including combat. The open world, including enemy placement, is designed around it. Don’t forget it. You really won't be handling giant groups of enemies easily without it.

Target to find danger: The game designers don’t want you getting out of the immersion with item outlines (like you see in Dragon Age, Horizon or Cyberpunk), but you can still use your right stick click to find enemies by targeting them. In a new area and scared? Not sure where someone is hiding? Try targeting and see if it picks up an enemy with the white dot.

Enemies drop what they have: See a weapon or armor that you like? Chances are the enemy holding it drops it. This is random, so you may have to kill them many times. Most really great weapons, though, are found somewhere as an item on the ground or in the chest, but you can really get through the entire game with amazing gear dropped by enemies in the first area.

Movement / Exploration

♥♥♥♥ em: You can run past almost anything, get to new save points or open shortcuts, and keep items you pick up. Progression doesn’t always require combat.

Run a lot: Stamina doesn’t drain out of combat in this one so you can run everywhere until you start a fight.

Explore vertically and behind things: Remember to jump up and down to find things, go into every corner to find items. This game rewards peeking in every corner.

Sneak: Sneaking is very useful, you can use it to get in place for backstabs, explore or get past enemies when going back to pick up your dropped runes. It’s a good idea to sneak everywhere while exploring a dangerous new area.

Use light: Use a torch or your belt light to see in areas where it's pitch black or you're unsure of your footing. The torch can also be useful in combat in a pinch or against a slow fire-weak enemy near the start of the game.

Explore when broke: When you have just lost your runes permanently by dying twice, you now are in a perfect position to fearlessly explore anywhere. Run past enemies, get into trouble, die confidently - you have nothing to lose. I often use this moment to run past literally everyone I just fought to get the next save point. You actually can progress because now you know the area which is the real progression. It's also a good time to practice a boss or learn a hard optional enemy without stress.

Die with purpose: A suicide run into an impossible area to get a weapon or other item is a time honored souls tradition.

Jump into pillars of light and wind: You know those pillars of wind you can use to jump up with? You can jump down into them as well (while on your horse).

Less fall damage, but be careful: It’s still a huge risk, but you can handle larger falls (especially on the horse) than you can in previous games, so don’t rule out exploration option. Make sure you are healed, though, you often will take some damage. There are also ways to reduce fall damage further.

Let a co-op partner test falls: Souls games love to hide items behind drops off edges - but you may want to let a co-op partner try out risky ledges deep into dungeons. You can always resummon them!

Rainbow Stones: Alternatively, you can use Rainbow Stones - they'll break if you're going to get killed from a fall. Stones can be a little hard to direct and don't have the added benefit of letting you know if an enemy is lurking, but they don't require sacrificing a summon (and your time.)

Mark and view your map: Mark hard enemies, places of interest, or future places to explore (suggested by your friends) on the map so you can head to them. The map also shows a kind of direction from the save points which is also often a useful tip on where to try exploring.

Pick up on the go: Unlike previous games, you don’t stop to pick items up, so you can run up and over them on your horse and then run away. It also makes gathering crafting ingredients very quick.

Ingredients respawn: Ingredients, from plants to crystals, respawn and always in the same place. You can just go back to get them any time. Animals and enemies are always in the same place too!

Your Mount

Stop on a dime: The horse doesn’t keep moving if you stop holding forward, unlike transportation in many other games. You can use it for precision movement and jumping or to stop instantly while swinging in combat (but moving past while swinging is often safer).

Use the dodge: The horse “dodge” mostly goes faster but is still a dodge you can work into combat. Without stamina drain outside of combat, you can hit it over and over to keep up speed.

Mow down groups of enemies: Horseback combat is incredibly overpowered against groups or single enemies once you learn it, especially with larger weapons. You may want to find the biggest weapon you can that also is quick enough to have a "Back and forth" movement, since getting the "forth" upswing is very useful.

Hit and run: You can really hit something and then go far away and come back, don’t feel you need to dodge or risk any sort of counter attack if you can avoid it.

Some enemies are harder: Some enemies are harder on the horse though, getting in close may be best.

It’s a tank: Your equip load doesn’t impact your horse gameplay, so you can load yourself up to heavy with your biggest armor if you want to use it to clear an area. It's a medieval tank! Just remember to wear a reasonable amount when you're back on foot.

But the horse can get hurt: Don’t get too cocky, you can get knocked off or have the horse unavailable until you revive it. Still, it's generally better to let your horse take a hit than have you take a hit and you can usually resummon it quickly after getting knocked off.

Use the left side too: Mounted combat can use both sides, use left triggers to hit the left. You can practice on animals, it’s very useful to learn this to take out large groups quick and level up

Sweep up groups: Holding the strong attack often gives a sweep style move that can be used for large groups. Some weapons can do quick attacks back and forth, large ones are very slow.

Jump off: You can also do a jump attack while jumping off your horse (left stick). Helpful when getting into trouble with enemies you know will be easier off the horse. This attack does a fair amount of damage!

No poison hoofs: The horse won’t get damaged by poison on the ground so use it to get through those swamps.

Combat Tips

Don’t panic: Panic is your worst enemy. Anything can kill you if you run out of stamina by panic attacking or dodging, almost everything can be indefinitely avoided by a patient player. Obviously this is the point of the whole game, so don't feel bad though - it's designed to scare you and make you freak out and then eventually become confident.

Dying is fine: Souls games have a reputation for being very hard, but you probably actually die more times per hour playing Mario or Halo. It's just aesthetics that make it feel dark! Dying is a normal part of most gameplay loops, you're doing fine if you are dying a lot.

Be patient: Combat rewards patience more than anything else, you can usually circle around and avoid all the attacks to learn a new enemies movements. There's almost always a way to use ranged or other less fun but "easier" tactics. I've got EDS, hand pain, am terrible at games, but I can get through these with practice and grinding!

Weapons hit what they hit: Unlike in many melee combat games, the hitboxes really matter. You can narrowly avoid a hit above your head, and your weapon won't hit them unless it actually hits them. Just keep that in mind. Many enemies do have area-of-effect attacks you'll have to work to avoid, though.

Invincible dodge: Dodging gives “i-frames” meaning you are invincible for a portion of the dodge. You can dodge right into most attacks or through them if timed right.

Don’t hold block: Blocking is incredibly useful, but you don’t regain stamina while holding it. Learn to block, let the shield drop when they are prepping the second attack, and then block again. You'll be able to block many more attacks in a row.

Try hugging enemies: Enemies don’t damage you by touch like in Mario. You can get right up into them. Push into their back at the same time as an attack to backstab. Hug them to get under large sweep attacks or circle round.

Dodge can interrupt some attacks: If an enemy seems skinny, even if they have powerful attacks, you may be able to interrupt it for a second by rolling /into/ it. This can be very helpful when managing mages or mobs of slow but grabby undead.

Stagger em: Almost anything can stagger somehow via being hit a bunch, parry, block, etc. Use that moment to do a huge attack by moving forward on their weak spot like you were going to backstab. However, sometimes you'll be able to do more damage by just wailing on them while they are down for a moment, so keep an eye on how it worked for next time you encounter them.

Hit weakspots: Enemy weakspots are often orange. Some, like the land octopus, don’t show up until they are staggered and take very little damage until the weakspot is exposed.

Get under attacks: Many giant enemies like trolls and dragons have trouble hitting you when you are closer and have insane ranged attacks - losing your fear and getting in close makes things easier. Some huge enemies are actually trivial once you get into the pattern of hitting one leg from behind, rolling, hitting again.

Don't Neglect Jump Attack: Jumping gives you an expanded move set, but also more damage and higher chances of applying effects (like Bleed). A certain talisman can increase that damage further. Jumping can also sometimes give you a quicker attack with a heavy weapon. There's another benefit too: Sometimes enemy attacks will go under you while you jump up, allowing you to dodge a hit while getting in a big one. Depending on your moveset, you may even get a second leaned over at the end and sometime enemy attacks go over that (Caestus is a good example). Some spells can even be cast while jumping. Jump isn't just for exploration!

Parry with practice: Parrying is easier if you’re not moving. Try not to panic and you’ll be able to parry incredibly strong enemies eventually. Try thinking of it as if you are slowly baiting them, waiting for them to attack into your trap. It takes a lot of practice! Start on lower level enemies and don’t rely on it until you know a move set. When you are starting out, I highly recommend just doing it in the tutorial tunnel until you've got those enemies consistently. But parrying is totally optional and high skill level play, unlike learning how to dodge. If you're good at fighting games, though, you can get good at parrying.

Pull enemies: You can pull enemies back with a dart or arrow to get them to come at you one at a time. Or, often, you can simply pull one by sneaking close and standing up for a second, trying to get just one facing you to follow you out. Most enemies won't alert their friends, though some will with horns or other calls out to them.

Cheese em: “Cheesing” is valid and even encouraged. Use corners, doors, get height and use ranged attacks. Craft items, poison enemies, resummon help over and over. Don't be ashamed that you used tactics to destroy a dragon, that's a victory!

Most enemies don’t heal: Most enemies don’t heal even after they stop aggroing, so you can pull back and try and get them in waves of attacks.

Practice on animals: You can practice with weapons or mounted combat on animals! They don't give much souls, but you need the crafting items and it's very useful when first learning, especially learning the timing for mounted combat

Throwing weapons are better than ever: You can craft throwing weapons from findable ingredients. Freeing up the slot just for combat (by putting your flasks in the other quick item slots) makes it more reliable than ever to use in the middle of combos or to manage crowds. I always keep at least some bone darts in my slot for getting animals before they run or a quick tiny extra bit of damage to bosses. You can throw from horseback too.

Magic is an option for beginners! Ranged magic is very useful for beginners, though you may be more easily killed than someone in heavy armor with a strength build, the best way to avoid getting killed is to stay out of range entirely. You can usually get some kind of entry level ranged spell for any build without too much investment and only set your flasks to FP when you need to get out of a pinch with it.

Weapons / Equipment

Test every weapon: Test out weapon move sets of anything you pick up, remember to try holding it two handed.

Try the whole move set: Jump and crouch offer more weapon moves, make sure to actually learn and use them in combat. You also do different moves from a dash or back step, sometimes unique very useful ones for clearing a crowd. Test them all!

Dual Hand: Try weapons in different slots, use Y and the weapon bumper to two hand them, vary your playstyle by combining weapons and shields and magic.

Power Stance is back: Power stancing two weapons (from DS2) is back, meaning you can hold a similar weapons in each hand and access a special moveset where L1 will do a combination move. It's an advanced move and requires upgrading both weapons to get best damage so don't worry too much about it as a starting player.

Try on the horse: You may like one weapon for mounted combat, one for on foot. Some, like the Lance, are really designed for mounted combat.

The right situation: Some weapons will be more useful in a hallway (vertical moves), some have large sweeps for groups. The “best” have a varied move set you can mix up, though sometimes require switching one to two handing as needed for the moves.

Use what you like: Every weapon is workable though, people beat these games with anything.

Get a 100% shield: Not every shield blocks 100% of damage. The ones that do will be way more helpful for new players. Some shields are more resilient to getting hit, others will be staggered quicker.

“Turtle” behind shields: Some weapons, like spears, can be used behind a shield, but watch that you don’t run out of stamina while blocking and attacking at the same time.

Watch your equip load: Equipment load is very important. You will suffer huge penalties by wearing too much armor. Held weapons contribute to weight even if they are not currently in your hand. Make sure to stay under medium load.

UPGRADE IT: Remember to upgrade your weapons, this will often boost your attack more than leveling. ALSO REMEMBER TO UPGRADE YOUR FLASK.

Make weapons scale: Also make sure to equip ashes and change your scaling on weapons (heavy, keen, etc) to make sure they “scale” with your stats. Changing the weapon special ability offers a lot more customization than dark souls. You can make almost any weapon fit any build with the scaling changes, so pick a weapon by the move set that you like.

Armor gives Poise: An armor will have specific stats for resistance against various damage types (most commonly you'll be concerned with "physical" damage) but another important stat is "Poise". Basically, this helps determine how easily you will be stunned, interrupted, and so on. Poise is a complicated stat, but for most players you simply want to get it as high as you can. If you see someone saying they "poise through it", what they mean is they were hit and damaged but their attack continued and hit the enemy (often for a lot more damage, if you're using a slow strength weapon.) Some weapons and moves effectively increase your poise, which may be something you may want to research for late game PVP.

Fashion souls: For armor, stats can matter, but you can also really just use whatever you think looks cool. Same goes for weapons, sometimes it’s worth making things “harder” for yourself with a cool weapon you like - once you learn it well anyway.

Stats / Leveling

Get weapon stats first: When leveling, get your weapon stats first so you can hold the one you like. Those stats are Strength, Dexterity, Intelligence, Faith and (less common) Arcane. Without the required stats, you'll do almost no damage with it though you can hold it to try out the move set.

General stats help every build: The Health (Vigor) and FP (Mind) and Stamina (Endurance) improving stats help with every build, with vigor and endurance being incredibly important. The others are mainly for damage scaling. Arcane improves item drop rate - but also can be a damage stat with a specialized build.

You can respec: Go for stat requirements of a weapon you like based on move set, but you can respec later so don’t stress too much. "Respec" means re-assigning all your earned levels from the start of the game - you can try a totally different build. Without spoiling anything, if you really need to do it, just look up "how to respec in Elden Ring" online.

Over level: You can “over level” and any amount of leveling increases your defense, so this is a very valid way towards making an area ‘easier’ without getting more skilled. No enemy scales to your level, they always get easier as you level.

Ground runes: You can get runes from skulls on the ground, save the rune items for when you find a random vender or need some extra to hit a level.

Gold Eyes Means Increased Rewards: If you see an enemy with glowing eyes, they'll likely drop extra runes if you take them out - so maybe worth stopping to challenge them as you're on your way elsewhere!

Grind big guys: If you want to level, find an enemy you can beat that drops a lot of runes, and practice on it instead of wasting time with a lot of low level ones. Trolls drop 1000 runes and are not quite as hard as they look once you realize you can just hit-dodge-hit their right leg over and over.

Win big in other people's games: Alternatively, grind bosses! You'll get really really good at the game eventually - or if you just find one boss you think is easy for some reason you can beat it over and over in other people's game. And they'll love you for it!! You can be summoned almost anywhere so use this technique when you are close to a level, need to learn an area or just want to play with a little less stress!

by xoxomonstergirl