Showing posts with label Guide. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guide. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 3, 2014

Minecraft 1.8 - The Bountiful Update.

So, yesterday Minecraft V1.8 dropped. The longest and biggest patch/revision to date, having taken almost an entire year to develop after the release of 1.7 in October last year.

Having spent some time reviewing the changes, and a little time in game, as well as the fact me and my friend Evic will be kicking off our new cooperative lets play this evening, I can confidently say I am excited to get into the new version of the game, and some of the changes I have seen or read about are awesome!

My world preview video for the Coop Lets play world.


The major changes revolve around new blocks, new mobs, material changes, changes to villagers as well as a batch of fun and interesting miscellanious changes.

World Generation:
There is a new option on world creation to create a custom world. With this, you can use a selection of sliders and check boxes to decide what is in your world, and how much presence for certain things there will be. A fantastic way to create challenge maps, or just something that looks a little different.

In ocean biomes, there is also the chance of discovering an ocean monument - large underground structures containing rare materials and guarded by new mobs - the guardians. To say they sound challenging is an understatement. Physics changes mean that arrows wont work under water (beyond 2 blocks) so you need to get up close to them, and to do that likely means crafting lots of water breathing potions.

Mobs:
On the subject of mobs, there are a lot of mob changes and additions. There are passive mobs, such as bunnies, that can be killed for food and leather scraps that can be combined to make leather. Guardians, which guard the monuments, and Endermites, which spawn around nether activities, like Endermen teleporting, and are similar to Silverfish. Sheep now drop meat, bunnies drop meat and can be used with a large recipe to make Rabbit Stew that restores 10 food and 12 sustenance, making it the most potent food in the game. Additionally, the Wolf AI has changed, they now actively hunt skeletons, and scare them away. Give a dog a bone eh?

Villagers:
Villagers have had an overhaul. The trade system is more effective and there are more unlocked trades, and villagers also have a level of willingness that goes up as you trade with them, making them susceptible to breeding with other willing villagers if they get to a certain level. They also have professions, which will dictate their tradeable goods. Best keep them villagers alive ;-)


Enchanting:
Enchanting levels have been changed, and enchanting also uses Lapis Lazuli. Finally, a use beyond blue dye for this most useless of blocks.

Some other changes include making certain items stackable, like doors, and also making wood items like doors, fences and the likes actually have colour to match the base material. This makes for much better customisation. Other items include armour stands where you can hang up armour or mob heads - which themselves are gathered from blowing up mobs with a charged creeper. THere are also a load of new blocks ranging from new types of stone, to slime blocks (trampolines!) and sponge blocks (hold water).

On top of this there have been a butt load of tweaks and bug fixes. If you have not had the chance yet, get in there and enjoy!! :D

Monday, October 29, 2012

Xcom: Enemy Unknown Class Guide #1 - The Sniper


Welcome to the first of my Xcom: Enemy Unknown Tutorials! This tutorial will focus on the humble Sniper. Simultaneously one of the weakest and most powerful units in your Xcom arsenal.

My intention is to couple this with a YouTube video tutorial to show some of the points I am going to discuss here in a more cinematic and fun fashion. I will link it >Here< when it is completed.

First of all - lets discuss the available abilities! Unlike the original Xcom Defense/UFO Enemy Unknown  game that this is based on - the ranking system is not based on the soldier pool you have, it is experience based. This means that any soldier that survives long enough and does enough good work in the field can quickly earn promotion to the top rank. (Colonel)

Squaddie Abilities: Headshot
A pretty useful ability - it gives the agent an increased critical chance on the shot. Very useful against those armoured aliens that you need to take a chunk of health off of, or whom you would like to kill in one hit.It has a 2 turn cool down. Be careful when selecting when you will use this shot. Take note of the typical damage your rifle will do. If you think you will need more than this to take down the target, then go for it. It works well in conjunction with 'In the zone' and 'double tap' as for best effect the shots from those abilities will kill their chosen target so you can shoot at another straight after.

Corporal Abilities: SnapShot/Squadsight
Both abilities seem to be very good, but in actual fact - if you have a well balanced team, it is rare that Snap Shot will be more useful than Squad sight. Squad sight allows your snipers to sit in safety and pick off targets that your team mates uncover. This ability is particularly good when in overwatch when you expect your team mates to uncover aliens on the move as quite often, a reaction shot will kill an alien in the open before it can get hunkered down in cover. If you need to move your snipers - their pistols dont work with squad sight normally, but they do in Overwatch and depending on the pistol, your foundry upgrades, and wether or not your sniper has 'Gunslinger' (below) - the pistol can pack enough of a punch to kill weaker or weakened enemies, and the 'overwatch' area is seen as more of a dead zone from the AI (Notice how the enemy is less likely to advance when you have troops covering an area with their overwatch.... sometimes its useful to abuse this, even if you know you cant do anything if you were to trigger overwatch - its similar to suppression fire - the alien can waste their tmie doing nothing just to save from being wounded which can be a very important move if you have a weak or exposed trooper in their line of sight.)

There are of course advantages to Snapshot; your agent can move and fire their sniper rifle. This means they can relocate to get better shots at groups of hostiles giving In The Zone the potential to be a little more effective, but in order to do all this - you put your trooper on the front line. If you can see them, they can see you. Your sniper tends to be quite weak at point blank range which many aliens will be in, and they tend to have less health and weaker armour compared to other front line troops, e.g Assault. The best time to have Snapshot would probably be if your kill-team was quite weak and the support cannot be provided from other classes, e.g your sniper is your only surviving veteran, in which case getting in with the powerful gun and taking some names is a good thing. Of course, I still prefer to cower on the back lines and pick the enemy off one at a time.

Sergeant Abilities: Gunslinger/Damn Good Ground
This can be a bit of a tough choice. Gunslinger removes the weakness of close combat from your sniper. A good pistol with foundry upgrades means your pistols will be hitting about as hard as most of your other weapons. Damn good ground gives a little bit more of an edge to your sniping abilities. Especially with Archangel armour. The defensive side will rarely come into play unless your grappling up in the front lines, or your having a bout of last man standing with your sniper against remaining alien forces, in which event - your probably in more trouble than an ability will help with.

Lieutenant Abilities:Disabling Shot/Battle Scanner
Utilitarian abilities. Depending on what your other ability selections are, you may favour one over the other. Disabling shot diarms your opponent for a round - or until they reload. This is a very effective variant of suppressing fire, though it only affects one target it can be used to prevent a vulnerable soldier from taking a fatal hit from a nearbye enemy that is not likely to die this round. The Battle Scanner lets you throw a small object - akin to an electro-flare from days of yore, that will give you a display of the immediate area as if an agent were present. It does not trigger enemy 'spawns', and it can be thrown through doors. On many occasion, this can be very valuable. Both are pretty situational, but in the right situations can be a great utility. Choose wisely. Or do as I do - pack two snipers.

Captain Abilities: Executioner/Opportunist
I always lean towards Opportunist here. I use reaction fire a lot in the early turns or when I am expecting to trigger enemy 'spawns' so that I can get a couple of potential kills in before they break for cover. It becomes less valuable as you get the end-tier abilities of Double Tap or In The Zone but one shot in the open can be worth more than the others in some situations.

Major Abilities: Low Profile
Not really a choice - but if you have a sniper that needs to make use of cover, having any cover provide the full bonus is a nice advantage.


Colonel Abilities: In The Zone/Double Tap
Both of these abilities are AWESOME. I cannot emphasise just how good they are, and neither are a bad choice. Here is the breakdown. Double Tap allows you to take two shots. That's it, end of. If you run out of targets or ammo the second shot is wasted. In The Zone requires a specific set of circumstances to be met, firstly the target must not be in cover (yellow shield = Bingo. Get killing) And secondly the target must be killed with the shot in order to be able to move onto the next. Given the right circumstances it is possible to knock out 4 or 5 kills in a round with this ability. The chances of getting multiple kills are slim though, unless you strategise. I find that the ITZ sniper works best when paired with a Double Tap sniper. If the targets would take more than one shot to kill, two can feasibly be weakened into the ITZ snipers kill zone. Chances are by the time you get this ability your accuracy is going to be near or over 100%, especially if you throw in a scope and high ground/Archangel armour and Damn Good Ground from before. The front-line troops can also help the ITZ sniper out by using explosives to weaken opponents and deny them the cover that would block the shot.

Whichever you choose it is not a bad choice, but bear in mind that ITZ is much more strategic. If you are going to have a solo sniper - Double Tap is probably a better ability because 75% of the time you wont be able to get more than one shot from an ITZ sniper unless you set up the kill zone or get lucky - but that 25% of the time, your talking 3-5 easy kills if the targets are weak or softened. I think on average, I get more kills with my 'In The Zone' soldier, but this is purely due to the way I like to stack and domino the enemies with my snipers. In 27 missions, 68 kills compared to my more experienced 'Double Tap' sniper who has seen 49 missions for 109 kills.

Other important points:
Ghost Armour: Don't give this to your snipers - give it to fast-moving support units, and send them to scout ahead before the rest of your forces move. They can spot many groups of enemies without triggering their 'spawn' reaction (taking cover) meaning that your snipers can make short work of them before they become a threat. They also help your team prioritise targets, e.g that Sectopod just behind that squad of harmless Sectoids that MUST GO DOWN. (plasma pistols v chest-plasma cannon, plasma rifle AND a multi-missile launch pack? Gimmie a break :p )

In conclusion - Snipers are awesome support for your front line troops. The ability to shoot anything they see that they can draw a line of fire to, to Overwatch and shoot the enemy before they can dive for cover, or the ability to pick off weak or weakened enemies - or even fire enough damage into tougher ones so they go down is invaluable. They can be weak if poorly equipped or supported, but given the right abilities and thought they can be 'Angels of Death' - much like the achievement denotes. Snipers work great in teams with cross-over abilities to help them cover each other as well as maximise the kill potential from them. I have had missions where there have been close to 20 aliens, and the snipers have mowed the majority of them down in two turns with the rest of the team only getting as far as spotting them and taking cover. Rare, but a beautiful sight ^.^

Check out my 'Sniper Reel' Video >Here< To see my Let's Play sniper team in action.

-V

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Walkthrough / guides: Making a YouTube video


Since I have been doing a lot of video recording/editing/uploading lately for my Let's play videos I thought that a step by step guide might be useful. It does not take long to properly prep and upload a video to YouTube once you know what is required, and hopefully this guide will help clarify things for you. Disclaimer: I do not claim to be an expert and there may be better guides, but I aim to keep this simple and with as small amount of 'additional software' being recommended as possible.

Primary steps:
1. Record the video
2. Edit the video 
3. Upload the video
4. Annotations & info
5. Publish video

1 – Recording the video.
There are many methods of video recording, what one you use is up to yourself, and the medium you are recording.

1.1   Recording real life events: A webcam, mobile phone, camera or video camera should suit your needs. The videos from these can simply be uploaded to your PC for viewing and editing.
1.2   Recording activity on a PC: The easiest method for this would be to use recording software. Software I have played around with most is FRAPS and Bandicam. I find myself having performance issues with Fraps – but bandicam (as long as you are not setting an FPS lock) seems to run very smoothly. Additionally, it’s about 50mb a minute (with voice recordings) as opposed to 1gb+ per minute with Fraps. Note: An unconfirmed YouTube account has a maximum clip length of 15 minutes, so make sure you cut the video off with time to add in any opening / closing clips/credits. Video length timers can usually be set in the recording settings. If you don't have openings/closings for each video and it is a series you are doing then you can use the video editor to  dissect the the video into up loadable chunks.
1.3   Recording from games console: Some opt to use the same methods as recording real life events, but the quality on these tends to be so poor, people (or at least in my case) leave quite quickly rather than watch. There is software however designed to cap data from consoles. I will edit in information later if I can, but I have no experience in this area. Some say you need a capture card, some say it’s possible without. Heres some YouTube videos that might help.

2 – Edit the video
Again, there are multiple methods for doing this step. Personally I use Windows Movie Maker as it is free and comes with Windows. I hear it is easier to perform such actions using a Mac as they tend to have better software for such things, but I don’t have access to one to test.
In Windows movie maker you can add backing tracks, or voice overs, intro credits / outro credits or clips, edit the movie to cut any bits you don’t want out (often in a let’s play type video it’s not a bad idea to cut out monotonous/repetitive steps. An example of this could be my minecraft let’s play videos… Theres a lot of times I have a video that is 10 minutes of mining… nothing too exciting, this can be cut down so that the user doesn’t feel their time is being wasted.

3 - Upload the video
This step is simple enough. Simply go to YouTube, login and click the 'Upload' button. Make sure you give it a good title and description. Tags are useful, but the YouTube search uses the words in the Title, then Description first - so if the title is relatively unrelated, your video might never get found amongst the stream of other videos.

4 - Annotations
In video manager - once a video has been uploaded - you can click 'Edit' on the video and select 'Annotations'
From here you can add a selection of tags on the screen. You can set these up to be links according to the type from the drop down, e.g link to video, link to your channel, etc etc. Make sure you dont litter the screen in annotations, lest people are just liable to disable them. Discrete links to other videos in your series, or of interest can help users find them without specifically searching for them (this is especially useful if you have a series of videos, but they are not numbered... but you wont be silly enough to do that now will you... Will you? *Stern look*

5 - Publish
And finally, once the annotations are in place - click publish to update the video and you are done.

I hope this has been of use. If you have any questions, or your own additions you would like to see, fire it into the comments and Ill check it out.

-V

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Warhammer 40k 6th edition resources / recommended sites.


With the arrival of 6th edition - many many people are out hunting for information to try to keep up with their A-game. You aint going to find a whole lot of useful information directly from me... I will post what I can when it comes to me, or I find it - but what I would like to do is provide a little list of links to sources and other blogs that I think are really on the Ball and useful :-) I'm fairly sure that most people that happen to stumble upon this page already know of most - but in case you don't. check them out!

The Bolter and Chainsword - A forum that many avid gamers use to air their problems and seek advice. Primarily aimed towards Marine players, but it has info useful for all :-)

Warseer - Another forum packed with useful information.

DakkaDakka - Yet another forum! (Hey, your best resource is the rest of the gaming community...)

The Beasts of War - YouTube channel that covers quite a lot on 40k and other Tabletop gaming.

Way of saim hann
Fritz was always a good resource for me, providing strategies and tactics, battle reports and fun information for various armies. The information I followed most was the Space Marine and Eldar stuff, but he also is a big player of Necrons, Tyranids and Grey Knights. At this point in time he has YouTube videos up on Necrons, Eldar and Tyranids - and how the game changes effect them, and how units can be adapted to work in 6th ed, or if they should just be dropped. Check it out!
Necrons: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=bNqm0AcmnsY
Tyranids: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=BLqLWaaK9bw
Eldar: http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=BLqLWaaK9bw
Fritz's YouTube channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/WayOfSaimHann

I have a few more that I may add in later, they dont seem to be active at the minute...

I hope this helps, if you know of any other good resources, fire them into the comments - Ill be happy to check them out and add them in.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Crysis 2: Useful links


During my run throughs of Crysis 2 (3 completions), I found an array of useful links for various bits of information.

Here is a links list to the more useful ones I found :-)


Guide Site Note
Weapons Guidegamershell.comAn interesting read about the power and uses of various weapons. This particular guide also discusses tactics and enemies you will encounter
Collectables Guidemsxbox-world.comI only found 2 dogtags and a statue by myself... checking the guide on entering a new area helped me know where things were hidden to find them. Collected on 3rd walkthrough - Im not that much of a kleptomaniac to search every area for these things ;-)
Walkthroughgamefront.comI recommend flying blind, but if you just cant see the exit to an area, it can help

I hope they prove as useful to everyone out there as they did to me :)

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Journals! (Of the diary variety, amongst others.)

This topic might be a bit controvertial for geek-value, but Im in the mood to write about it and its my blog so... deal with it. Read it or skip it :p

So... since I was little, I have kept some sort of diary/journal... I feel kinda silly each time I actually think about it, but at the same time it is kinda fun. People keep journals of all sorts of things. Work journals, project journals, etc etc, to keep track of what they are doing and the goals they are seeking to achieve in such things which is all very valid. But what about every day life?

I keep work journals when working, project ones when working on projects (such as my honours project), and I have kept a couple of holiday journals (More specifically me and Kat's honeymoon journal (nothing dodgy!) which is kept on display in the living room and that we occasionally flick through to reminisce)

From about 1991 I have kept a written journal of sorts. Admittedly, every time I take a look at one of these diaries from my childhood - it is embarassing... The crap I would waffle about beggars belief, but it helped my writing skills immensely and gives me something to look back on and reminisce. I was inspired by the likes of Sue Townsends Adrian Mole diaries (at least, the earlier ones. The later ones were too depressing to read.) and some other comical diaries like Mr Beans diary and "The Log" from Red Dwarf.

From about 2002 onward I decided to keep an electronic diary. I don't put entries in it often, I would guesstimate I put an entry in, on average, once per week. Sometimes it can be a month before I put in an entry, other times I can have a straight week where I update it daily.

So, lets be analytical. What are the advantages of keeping a diary?

Well, firstly - its a scrapbook of your life. I find that when I have partaken in an event, be it family, holiday, or just a random day - that by writing about it, I remember it better - and when I look over old diaries I can remember the day clearly. This goes back as far as the diary I was writing in when I was 9 - so almost 20 years ago.

Secondly - if you need to vent somewhere, or get your thoughts down, then it is a good outlet. I find when I look back at half my entries, if they are not a "log" of activities on a day or from an event, they irritate me... but I have them down and it helps me analyse things that have happened, or why I feel a certain why, or am affected by something in a certain way. It irritates the shit out of me when people "Emo-book" - basically putting a status up on a social site like Facebook to get attention then hiding from the responses whilst most likely keeping an eye on them to judge your self-worth/pity. That's what I use one of these for! I don't need the attention, I need the outlet or Ill go putting my fist through walls, head through windows.

There are some other advantages that I wont go into detail with, such as helping remember things if your short term memory is shot by updating it as things happen, etc etc.

Disadvantages?

People will read it. No shit sherlock - its human nature - if you have one of these and someone gets their mits on it, they WILL read it. Get used to it. If you want something that is truly private, keep an electronic copy, and password it up tight. But moreso, get used to the rule of self-censorship. There are some things that shouldn't go down, because Im sure there are certain circumstances where you would have to provide it as evidence or something in court by law, or you may leave the document open.

I remember when I was younger, my sister would keep sneaking my diary away to read it, and tease me occasionally on its contents, and more recently I found out my mother read it aswell. A bit embarassing, but also a giggle since I would never keep anything so serious in there that I would get in trouble for it...

Another disadvantage could be the time constraints and the "whats the point" factor. How often are you going to read it? Are you EVER going to go back and read it? Why put in the time?

Well, time commitment is minimal, you can sum up a day in a 30 second paragraph if needs be, or you can go into as much detail as you like (memory is cheap! Same cant be said for the paper diaries I used to keep!). You may find you appreciate the effort later on, moreso for being a log of important or special events that happen in your life, but it is also nice to just read back over a normal day and contrast yourself to then and see how much you have changed. (Its usually a good thing in my experience!)

So what about other aspects of keeping a log/journal/diary?

Co-authoring: Not a good idea for a "diary" - but it can work quite well as a log of activities in, for example, a holiday journal. Co-authoring could work in the instance of short term memory loss. I think it would be a fantastic day for family members visiting a relative with dementia/alzheimer's to make a little journal entry of their visit for the relative they are visiting to go over once they have left, perhaps updating it with images etc remotely.

Remembering loved ones? Pictures, remembering activities you done? Everybody's gotta go someday... it may make you sad to read about activities past, and see pictures, but I would rather that than have no way to remember them.

But yeah, I think I have waffled on. What can I say? I keep a diary! I have done for 20 years! No you cant read it. So:
fuck you! ;-)
Anyway - the majority of what I would say in a diary nowadays goes on facebook for friends and family to see, nothing really special is kept in it - its simply a log, where I can keep some scrapbook-esque pictures, notes and occasionally bitch to myself about whats pissing me off with life. The venting helps!

I recommend you try it ^.^
-V

Friday, October 21, 2011

Crysis 2: Stealth tactics


This post is more than likely going to be poorly constructed waffle, but I am currently going through the game as previously mentioned on the hardest setting. Tactics are vital, and using all the tools in your arsenal as designed is critical. I am going to discuss in the following post, a number of Stealth tactics that I have found to be useful:

Disclaimer: Some of the tactics below are not for everyone and some of the strategies may be arguable, but this is just my take on the game and tactics I find work for me ;)

Suit Mechanics:
Firstly, lets talk about the stealth mode. In stealth mode, you are invisible, and your footsteps are muffled. Opponents will still detect you if you move a lot near them, especially if your directly in front of them. I would recommend one of the first Suit Upgrades you get be the Stealth Enhancer, as the duration of Stealth mode is extended significantly.

A few tips for stealth mode:
1) DONT USE ALL YOUR ENERGY. If you run out of energy, you are visible. If your visible, you dont have energy to enhance your armour. On diffcult modes, without quick reflexes and a good aim - this usually means a reload screen is imminent.
2) Locate cover. Situational Awareness is key - if you have played through on an easier setting before hand, this is all the easier. Try to identify where your enemies are, (Battlescape view and tagging enemies makes this a little easier, but dont rely on tagging all the enemies, most arrive on the battlefield after you have commenced battle and the corpses pile up.) and make sure you can find some cover to try to pick them off with silenced attacks, or "pop-up attacks".
3) Relocate. If you reveal yourself and are spotted, or a body lies near your cover, the enemy will come investigate or commence fire on the general area. Unless your baiting the enemy to come to you for melee or point blank take downs, you might want to pop out of cover and relocate.

Silencers:
Silencers are extremely useful for a stealth run, though not essential depending on the approach you wish to take, especially if your using a gun that is powerful enough to perform an effective "Pop-Up Attack" as discussed later. With a silencer, you can fire off single rounds from most guns whilst maintaining stealth. This is great for peeling health off Ceph by shooting them in the Jelly, or for headshotting human opponents.

The best weapon for this is the Nova as you can get off a half a dozen shots and move back into cover to regenerate your energy. Later on, the Hammer or a silenced Scarab in single-shot mode prove good substitutes. I would bypass the hammer in favour of the Scarab since the Reflex scope or Ranged scope make for very easy targeting of opponents that are further afield. If you screw up - you can tap full auto mode and try to finish the target off.

Pop-Up Attack
To perform a pop up attack you simply uncloak and fire of the shot or burst, then re-cloak. You momentarily give your position away to anyone looking in your direction, so it is likely you will need to relocate after performing this attack a few times. If you have a silencer, you will have more time and can effectively kill a majority of the targets in the field like this. Without a silencer, I find the most effective way to use this is  something more powerful, in single fire mode (or in burst if you feel the need to ensure that target is dead.). Uncloak - head shot/burst - recloak. if your quick and have the stealth upgrade, your visible for such a short period of time your often un-noticed, save the sound of un-silenced weapons giving you away.

Sniping
With a silencer and willingness to relocate - the G1 sniper rifle can be put to awesome effect. Its best to perform a pop-up attack, or you are left with your nuts swinging in the breeze when half the map turn and start blasting at you. A silencer will buy you some time before the enemy can locate you. Plan your targets, and enjoy! One of my favourite past times is finding a good spot to empty my ammo supply from. Without a silencer it is still possible, but expect to have to relocate often.

Relocation
Fairly simple and self explanatory: When your position is compromised, move to another location! Ideally with some cover and your line of site blocked to recharge your energy when you get there.

Advanced Relocation
Revealing your positon to the enemy (preferrably by de-cloaking and taking out an enemy of two with some pop-up shots) can be a good strategy, and is one of my most oft-used tactics. The enemy will start firing on your position, and in the case of the Ceph, will converge on that position. You will be under spray-and-pray fire when you get up to move, but dont worry as unless the enemy strip your energy, they cant see you - just keep moving. By relocating at this point it is possible to find some isolated targets, or flank the enemy forces and with good use of Silenced stealth kills or pop up attacks, you can eliminate most/all of the enemy forces. I particularly like placing some C4 in the baited area or lobbing some grenades from my new spot once the enemy have gotten to my last known position. Blissful giblets flying through the air is a sign of success! :-)

Run & Hide
If your caught out in the open - or don't have enough energy to get to cover - don't be afraid to drop cloak in favour of shields or a momentary recharge and gun and run. If you can take out some targets in the few seconds whilst waiting get some energy back - you will want to use the regenrated energy to activate your enchanced armour and sprint to some cover... (that is unless you get enough to cloak relocate) then quickly regenerate your energy and attempt to relocate. This is very similar to advanced relocation in that your going to be under fire, so be quick!

Silent Kill
If you can find a target on its own, or flank a group and none have you in their field of view, you can perform a silent kill. As an alternative, you can do the grab&jab mentioned below. A silent kill works on any target without a shield, or that is not massive. (Heavies, Pingers and shielded commanders I think are the only ones immune to this.)


Grab and jab
This is actually my preferred version of a silent kill. You grab the target whilst cloaked. This works wonders if the target is advancing on your position, or knows you are there and is running at you. (Im looking at You Ceph assault troops!) You simply grab the target, and can then perform a silent Kill. This method drops you out of cloak like a silent kill, but only for the moment you perform the grab. The time exposed is less than that of a stealth kill, and you can move as soon as you have grabbed the target, just in case someone DOES see you exposed. If behind cover, you can grab the target from the cover your hiding behind as it comes to investigate, and execute it out of sight of its comrades.

I found this tactic to great effect on one section of the game - a large area quite early on after meeting the Ceph - and there are some dozen or so targets. On the first run through I shot them all, and made it through with 8 scarab bullets left... This time round I used a single clip. I shot from the balcony and the target would then come over to investigate where the shot came from. I stood by the side of the doorway and grabbed the target as it moved through the door. In some cases 2 or 3 came to investigate and I managed to pluck and stab them as they came through the doorway. By the end of it all I had a bloody pile of rotten Carcasses by the side of the door and did not take a single hit.


A few donts:
1) As mentioned before - DONT run out of energy. When the crap hits the fan you will need to quickly hide and relocate, or will need to activate your enhanced armour lest you become goo on someones boot.
2) Dont be afraid of melee... I find a majority of my killing blows come from close combat, or stealth kills.
3) Dont fire an unsilenced weapon stealthed. It strips all your energy and your life expectancy is greatly reduced...
4) Dont fight from the Open - unless there is somewhere to hide behind, sheer weight of fire will kill you fast on the higher difficulties, or will force you into enhanced armour mode, which on a stealth run is a last resort. You dont want to be caught in a gunfight, you want to know where the enemy are, and for them to NOT know where you are.


If you have anything to add, dont hesitate to comment below and the "guide" can be amended.