As a turn-based game, Wildermyth is a complete experience, full of adventures, brilliant storytelling, and mysteries worth solving. Not to forget, as the game progresses, you face more dangerous enemies, where tactical strategies keep you alive and thriving. Our beginner's guide to Wildermyth might help you out.
Initially, the game can feel overwhelming, especially the various explorations and strategies. Thankfully, the story keeps the player afloat with countless mystical adventures and lore. The story begins with the tale of various heroes and how they conquered their trials and tribulations in their journey. Now, their legacy guides new adventurers on their expeditions.
So, if you're ready for an unforgettable adventure through Wildermyth's picturesque settings and exciting quests, here's a starter guide to help.
Beginner's Guide to Wildermyth: Learn the Basics of Combat
Being a turn-based tactical RPG, you must learn how to move efficiently during your turns. This works like a tabletop game, where you move your units strategically around to defeat enemy units.
First, let's learn everything you need for flanking and walling. These mechanics come in handy throughout the game and can keep your units afloat for longer during combat.
What is Flanking?
When your units attack an enemy from a 90°+ angle, it activates flanking. Flanking works wonders in combat as it raises your accuracy to 100%. This means your second attack is a guaranteed hit. You can use flanking on weakened enemies or dodging every strike.
Always plan and place your units accordingly to dish out your flanking attacks that ensure your next hit. To make flanking more effective, let your melee attackers do the duty. These include hunters who wield daggers. Daggers have the advantage of dealing double damage while flanking.
What is Walling?
While flanking improves your offensive abilities, walling is to raise your defenses. You can activate it by making two units stand next to each other. By doing so, these units gain bonus armor, which reduces incoming damage by one point.
Walling makes up for the limited healing methods that are limited in Wildermyth. Most of the time, the only way to regain HP is the natural way, by wandering about without any incoming attack.
If two units are friends, walling increases each other's block stats when they stand adjacent to each other. This is one of the many bonus attributes of walling. Another one would be the reaction attack that activates upon walling.
To practice better walling, check out pets that add a bonus to walling with them. For example, the pet rabbit 'Avenger' offers the Protector ability that shields the ally from incoming damage. Similarly, the 'Pinecone' pet allows you to wall with trees, adding a unique flavor to combat combos.
Don't Be Scared to Split the Party
It's well-known that it's best not to split the party for TTRPGs. Thankfully, that's not an issue for Wildermyth. It would instead add more advantage to your playstyle to split the party.
While you're overland, plan out how you want your units to proceed. During this time, check if splitting the party and completing various tasks is better. First, check out the classes and their unique talents.
For example, warriors can build bridges, hunters can scout more efficiently, and mystics are great at restoring sites. By understanding these class-specific tasks, dividing your units into specialized functions can allow you to complete more tasks faster and more efficiently.
Mission battles don't begin unless you activate or trigger them. So, letting some units wander alone without the team is safe. But be wary of infestations (vine-infested tiles.) To avoid being ambushed on these tiles, staying in groups of two or more is best.
Not to forget, the smaller your groups, the higher the experience you receive from combats. It's refreshing to see a party-based RPG encourages splitting a group and also rewards players for being tactical about assigning groups for various in-game tasks.
Understanding Incursion and Calamity
As we venture around the overworld, various threats become more dangerous with time.
Inclusion means a large enemy group starts to move toward the town to raze it to the ground. If you let the incursion destroy the last town in the game, it ends the game. Completing chapters on time is best to prevent such calamities.
Of course, there is no need to speed up your gameplay to complete each chapter. A more strategic method to interpret their movement can help prioritize better game mechanics and combat. Just make sure that the interception point is three miles away from the source of incursion. Doing so helps to set up your defenses before the enemies draw closer.
Calamities, on the other hand, make your foes stronger by putting more cards into their decks. These cards show the type of monsters that spawn during any mission combat and the bonus type they hold.
Story missions in Wildermyth often present some enemies that aren't present in the Calamities. After a certain amount of time, a new calamity appears. This adds four new cards, which you can allow to happen or use legacy points to cancel them.
Engage to Engage Better
How can friends walling add bonuses to their combat and defenses? Lovers have unique perks. Lovers in Wildermyth receive the Lover's Vengeance, which deals bonus damage to foes that have attacked their partner.
If one of the lovers is a warrior, they can use Engage to attract enemy aggro towards themselves. After the enemy attacks a warrior, their partner can deal double damage to the foe, striking them down more swiftly, thanks to Lover's Vengeance.
That is about it for our beginner's guide to success in Wildermyth; check out the game’s turn-based RPG today and enjoy the grand adventures and mystical stories within.
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