Showing posts with label escape from tarkov beginner guide 2019. Show all posts
Showing posts with label escape from tarkov beginner guide 2019. Show all posts

Friday, August 14, 2020

Do you keep items in Escape from Tarkov offline mode?


If you’re here, you want the answer to “do you keep items in Escape from Tarkov offline mode?” Thankfully, we’re here to tell you the answers you need to hear. Do you keep Escape from Tarkov offline mode loot? Read on to find out if you keep the loot you find during offline mode to use again or not. We’ll also let you know the answer to “do you lose Escape from Tarkov offline mode items?” in the guide below. Find out all you need to know about the game’s offline mode right here.

Do you keep items in Escape from Tarkov offline mode?

Do you keep items in Escape from Tarkov offline mode
No. Once you finish your offline mode match in Escape from Tarkov, you lose all items, loot, XP, and stats you have found and gained. The offline mode in Escape from Tarkov is meant for practice and practice only. Any and all items you find when playing an offline mode match you do not keep. It’s a nil-sum game; you neither lose nor gain any loot, XP, and stats from playing the game’s offline mode.
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Offline mode in Escape from Tarkov is meant for practice. It’s recommended that before heading online you try out the offline mode. This will give you a lay of the land and experience in using the game’s different weapons. It’s a very good mode to try out for those of you who are new to the game, with the ability to play against AI bots and with different weather conditions. As stated above, though, you will lose anything you gain upon finishing an offline raid. It is simply meant for practice.
Unlike the game’s online modes, however, in offline mode, you do not lose your items when you die. This means that you can practice as freely as you like with a particular weapon or piece of gear attached. Now, get out there and practice, soldier.

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Is Escape From Tarkov On PS4?

Is Escape from Tarkov on PS4Battlestate Games‘ first-person shooter MMO was originally made available in Alpha form to PC users back in August 2016, and received a Closed Beta in July the following year – a state it currently remains in. But is a Escape from Tarkov PS4 release in the pipeline? Let’s find out!

Escape From Tarkov PS4

Battlestate Games has not announced plans for an Escape from Tarkov PS4 release yet, and appears to be focussed on the PC version. However, an FAQ posted back in 2015 revealed that a console version was being considered, although the same was said about Steam, which has yet to happen either.
We are considering it, but it’s too early to talk about that.
That was the last the studio discussed a PS4 and/or Xbox One release of the game, so don’t get your hopes up for the time being. Rest assured, we’ll bring you more details about a possible console version as we get them. Honestly, with the massive PS4 userbase and the sheer popularity of the game, we reckon that Escape From Tarkov on PlayStation 4 will probably happen.
Escape From Tarkov PS4 Release
Escape from Tarkov PS4 – An MMOFPS/RPG effort with a twist.

What Is Escape From Tarkov?

Here’s the full blurb:
Escape from Tarkov is a hardcore and realistic online first-person action RPG/Simulator with MMO features and a story-driven walkthrough.
With each passing day the situation in the Norvinsk region grows more and more complicated. Incessant warfare in Tarkov has sparked massive panic; the local population has fled the city, but those who stayed are looking to improve their fortunes at the expense of others. Having accepted the new reality, savage Tarkov locals – “Scavs” flocked into well-armed gangs and started the redivision of the city.
Nowadays, Tarkov is separated by unseen borders, controlled by different groups. Gain-greedy gunmen would go to any length to have their way, including the murder of civilians and direct confrontation with the two private military companies.
The players will have to experience living in the skin of one of the mercenaries who survived the initial stage of the Tarkov conflict. After choosing one of the sides – USEC or BEAR – the player’s character starts to make his way out of the city.
Tarkov is sealed off by UN and Russian military, supply chains are cut, communication with operational command is lost, and in these conditions everyone has to make his own choices of what to do and how to get out of the chaos-ridden metropolis.

Friday, July 31, 2020

How to play with friends in Escape from Tarkov

Jumping into a raid in Escape from Tarkov can be terrifying and will probably result in your death for the first few games. Want to make that death less painful? Bring a friend! It’s not immediately obvious how to partner up but thankfully, learning how to play with friends in Escape from Tarkov won’t take long at all. Just read the guide below!

How to play with friends in Escape from Tarkov

Learn how to play with friends in Escape from Tarkov and you'll never have to explore these creepy locations alone again.© Battlestate Games
Learn how to play with friends in Escape from Tarkov and you'll never have to explore these creepy locations alone again.© Battlestate Games
Before you can play with your friends in Escape from Tarkov, you first need to add them in-game. Do this by clicking the Messenger tab along the bottom bar of the screen on the main menu. This will open a new menu, and on the top right corner of that will be a Friends button. Click this to open the Friends menu, where you can view any added friends or pending requests. Use the search bar to find your friends’ accounts and send them invites.
With all your friends added, it’s time to join a game and play together together. You all need to start the game, select your PMC, choose the same map and then pick the same time phase. These steps are crucial as unless you are looking for the same map and time phase, you won’t be able to add each other. Next, have everyone pick the same entrance point on the map, hit next going through your loadout until you reach the “Prepare For Escape” screen.
 You should see your character on the left, and a list of names on the right. If you’ve completed the steps above correctly, your friends should start appearing in the list of names on the right. It may take some time for them all to appear. When they do, right-click on their name and click “Invite to Group”. The maximum squad size in Escape from Tarkov is five, so you won’t be able to play with more friends than that.
Whoever sent out the invites will be the party leader, and it’s up to them to ready up once your group is all together. You’ll then load into the game and all spawn in roughly the same area. Don’t forget that there are no friend identifications in Tarkov, so you need to communicate to avoid accidentally shooting one another. It's possible to kill and take your friends' loot, so be sure to only invite those you trust to your group.
Now that you know how to play with friends in Escape from Tarkov, you’re ready to take your squad to the server. Be sure you’ve learned how to extract first so you don’t waste all of the equipment you bring in with you!

Tuesday, July 28, 2020

Escape from Tarkov - The power and price of popularity

I watched more Escape from Tarkov before I played it. A hugely popular Twitch Drop event from late December to early January finally convinced me to buy in, and during my first game all I could think of was:
"His palms are sweaty, knees weak, arms are heavy ..."
Yes, Eminem's opening line in "Lose Yourself" more than adequately describes the feeling Tarkov invokes as a realistic, high risk-high reward survival game.
I loaded in and encountered a player quite suddenly after they jumped a fence. After a brief battle, I emerged victorious, greedily scooping up their loot for myself, fully intending to add their stuff to my stash after I extracted from the map.
Shortly after, I was eliminated while running around, sent back to the loading screen to try again with my loot, which used to be someone else's loot, now in the hands of the player that took me out.
My next game I took it slow ... deliberate, silent -- annnnnnnnd I'm gone. I never even saw the player.
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It is the hardest game I have ever loved, and its unique gameplay loop, depth and strategy have pushed it into the limelight, captivating streamers and audiences alike. But captivation and calamity often go hand-in-hand in the gaming and streaming world. Server crashes and disconnects, lag spikes and rubber banding, excessive queue times, and an influx of cheaters from China (a region notorious for cheating in online games) accompanied the game's rise.
Sound familiar? A gritty, fun FPS in which a sudden pop of popularity exposed bugs, problems and exploits the developer wasn't ready for? If you're thinking PUBG, we're on the same page.
"It's unlike any other game I think right now," said Benjamin "DrLupo" Lupo. "You can play it a bunch of different ways. You can play it super fast and you'll get punished for it sometimes or you'll win big, or you can play super slow. It has thriller-style mechanics, as you're seeing high tension gameplay."
Lupo is one of the many streamers who have reaped the rewards of Tarkov. He was an early adopter, playing the game about two years ago, which has given him a leg up on in-game knowledge. He knows the loot, the builds, the maps, the common tactics used ... and it all comes together for an entertaining, educational stream.
Because of this, his viewership has more than doubled, he said. Prior to Tarkov, his focus was on Fortnite, in which he was pulling around 5,000 to 7,000 viewers on average. Not only has Tarkov made Lupo a more common streaming name, but the viewership has remained in those double digits after the Twitch Drop event that thrust Tarkov into the mainstream.
"I've wanted this for such a long time, for this game to get noticed in a way that I feel like it deserves," he said.
This isn't the first time a game has taken over the streaming kingdoms, either. The aforementioned PUBG took center stage in 2017. Fortnite made its mark in 2018 behind the AAA studio Epic, capitalizing on its status and resources to produce a largely bug-free, cheater-free, unique, and ultimately fun (read: hugely monetizable) battle royale experience. Now, it seems to be Tarkov's turn in 2020 (it's important to note that the game is advertised as still in beta).
And much like games before it, the popularity has grown to a point where third-party competitions have cropped up. Boom.tv just held its first Code Red $10,000 Escape from Tarkov tournament. The winner was the one with the most roubles (in-game currency) at the end of eight hours of playing (you could only sell to vendors), and dog tags (player-only items you loot off players you eliminate) were worth 200,000 roubles a pop.
Lupo took third, while Australian streamer Pestily took first. Other top streamers like Jaryd "Summit1g" Lazar and Guy "DrDisrespect" Beahm also participated, keeping Tarkov on the top of Twitch for most of the day's tournament. It's unclear how future Tarkov competitions will play out, but for a first attempt, it was a pretty unique take, especially in the era of battle royales like Apex, Fortnite and PUBG.
The developer and publisher of Escape from Tarkov, Battlestate Games, is made up of about 100 people. Front-facing Nikita Buyanov is leading the charge, and even with a few years of work behind the game, BSG was not prepared for how successful the Twitch Drop event would be.
"When the drops event started, the server overloads began and we were busy with work," he said." "It was already clear that EFT was at the top, everyone started posting about it and paying attention to it, but we were not up to it. Therefore, unfortunately, it was not possible to fully experience [the moment the game became popular]."
Twitch Drops allow viewers to earn in-game items by watching streamers play the game. Tarkov's event reportedly pulled in over 30 million hours viewed, with 8.3 million objects handed out. This tabulated to over 1,000,000,000 roubles.
"There was an exact understanding and forecast that the growth of players will happen, but it was difficult to predict what numbers will be exactly," Buyanov said.
Buyanov recalls the rise of PUBG, and the problems that came with it, saying Tarkov is experiencing the same kind of popularity spike. "Indeed, there are examples of projects that have become very popular and experienced problems. Our precautionary measures led to the ability to have everyone set and ready at their battle stations. And this continues up to this day we have to work at night and on weekends."
Unfortunately for Buyanov, they do not deal with the lines connecting the client and servers, saying if the "the servers, data centers, and their employees were ours, of course, the situation would be much better." Servers are continually added, and the game becomes more stable each week, but more problems rear their ugly head -- cheating will always be a concern, something PUBG had difficulty addressing for a while until they introduced region-locking (Battlestate says they have region-locked Asia and utilize BattleEye to combat cheaters). Even today PUBG continues to battle cheaters, performance issues post-updates, and most recently, DDoS attacks.
Despite the exposed digital shortcomings, the game has only continued to grow, and with that growth comes more eyes and critique in the real world. For example, an interview from 2016 was unearthed and quickly circulated where a Battlestate employee stated that Tarkov is only a place for "hardened men" and they "came to the conclusion that women are not allowed to be in the war."
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This was not taken well by the internet, and BSG issued an apology and clarification, saying the employee was "reprimanded and properly instructed."
Battlestate Games@bstategames
Regarding the 3 years old article with points about women in EFT. The answers were done by one, not a key BSG employee which probably were misinterpreted and as a result didn't reflect the official position of the company, that we always respected women in wars and military women
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Still, Tarkov does not have plans to put women in the game as playable characters. On this, Lupo said he's more concerned about balance and competitive edges, but added games can be viewed as art, and it's up to the artists to create and the audience to respond.
"Ultimately, the game that they are making, and I think people sometimes lose sight of this, a video game can easily be viewed as art," he said. "You ever play Bastion? Bastion is an absolute work of art. It's beautiful. This is just as much a work of art, it's just a different art style, and if Battlestate thinks that their piece of art they are making shouldn't have XYZ thing in it, no matter what it is, it's up to them, not us. On the other side of that, it's up to us to react in whatever way we see fit. That could be that we like it, that could be that we're mad about it. I just want to play the game because I think it's fun."
It's tough to say how long the popularity of Tarkov will last, when everything will be fixed, or if the next big streaming game will come before that happens. Lupo streamed the first Destiny for a year and a half because it was good for business. That kind of wear-and-tear can visually impact a streamer and his or her audience, so introducing something that holds the attention of the streamer and the audience like Tarkov is just the injection some streamers needed -- as long the game continues to get better.

"It captivates the viewer in a way that nothing else really has in a long time, I think, from what I've seen," said Lupo. "That's my opinion."

Monday, July 27, 2020

How to get Escape from Tarkov Twitch Drops: schedule, rewards, more

The Escape from Tarkov community is going to be getting a new round of Twitch Drops to take with them in their treks across Norvinsk, and here’s how to prepare for the upcoming items.
The  Twitch promotion will give new players and seasoned veterans the chance to earn some extra in-game gear ranging from weapons to equipment.
But audiences will have to be sure to follow the simple process of signing up for the actual giveaway by linking a few accounts together in order to be eligible for Battlestate Games’ upcoming event.

EFT Twitch Drops schedule

Twitch Drops for Escape from Tarkov will be going live on Thursday, June 11 at 2:00 AM PT / 5:00 AM ET / 10:00 AM BST and will run for 11 days. The promo will end on Monday, June 22, also at 5 AM ET.
  • Read more: Surv12 and Vaseline crafts added to Escape From Tarkov Medstation
There’s going to be a huge list of streamers getting the “Drops are enabled” tag on the first day and will rotate through multiple broadcasts for the majority of the giveaway. However, on the final days of June 21 and June 22, everyone who was eligible to have drops enabled their EFT streams from before will have them active to give viewers a chance to watch, collect and play.
Battlestate Games
EFT players looking to add to their inventory will have a chance to do so during the Twitch Drops event.

How to sign up for EFT Twitch Drops

Signing up for the drops is easy, but will take a bit of a procedure to make sure your account is eligible to start earning rewards as soon as you tune into a qualifying stream.
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  1. Create an Escape from Tarkov Profile (if you don't have one) which will be linked to your game.
  2. Link your Twitch profile to your Escape from Tarkov account from the EFT site here.
  3. Tune in to any approved EFT streaming channels with the “Drops are enabled” tag from June 11 - June 22.
  4. Farm hours to start earning rewards!
The devs said that “at certain intervals” people will get one item. You can have multiple items but the time logged will only count for the streams that are qualified for drops.
Battlestate Games
There's going to be a swarm of EFT streamers eligible for Twitch Drops.

EFT rewards from Twitch Drops

The developers weren’t specific about the rewards that would be available, but they did say that there were going to be a host of chances for getting a guaranteed drop.
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Weapons, equipment, “various” rare items and more will be available for players to collect. Though EFT veterans hope that the devs don’t get too generous and drop items that can sway the game’s economy.
Like all Twitch Drop events, this is sure to get more people interested and will be a good time to load into the survival game and enjoy the fruits of your viewership.

Friday, July 24, 2020

Escape From Tarkov devs reveal Flea Market changes in June 19 update

Escape from Tarkov devs Battlestate Games have revealed a few changes to the Flea Market following the most recent technical update, though, some fans aren’t too pleased with what has been changed. 
With Escape From Tarkov being ever-changing, Battlestate Games are continually new updates to add new content, make sure that things run smoothly, and generally ensure that the shooter and looter title is balanced for both new and veteran players.
However, their most recent technical update has sparked a little bit of backlash after the devs decided to make some pretty big changes to the way the Flea Market works – specifically, with what items players can sell.
Battlestate Games
The Flea Market and Traders are used to build up cash in EFT.
With the technical update dropping on June 19, the devs noted that now, players can only sell guns on the flea market if they were found in a raid. On top of that, the ability to barter with the flea market is also limited to items that are found in a raid. 
  • Read More: Escape from Tarkov devs reveal new map & changes for patch 12.7
This means that items that are looted following a kill on another player, are no longer eligible to be sold on the flea market. This has, obviously, upset a few players who had modeled their play style around killing enemies and selling the unneeded gear. 
Battlestate Games@bstategames
The technical update is complete.

Changes:

1. From now on you can sell guns on the flea market only if it was found in raid.
2. Barter on the flea market is only possible with found in raid items.
3. Various technical improvements of anti-cheat system https://twitter.com/bstategames/status/1273982581562884096 
Battlestate Games@bstategames
In 15 minutes, we plan to perform technical update of the game to improve the stability.
Maintenance will take about 2 hours #EscapefromTarkov
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Some players suggested that the flea market would completely become a thing of the past because of these changes as it has pretty much become rendered useless.
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  • Read More: Surv12 and Vaseline crafts added to Escape From Tarkov Medstation
Others pleaded with the Devs that an update should be made to make enemy gear count as  ‘found in raid’ items so that they can continue to play in the same way as before, but, perhaps, cut the prices of those items.
WayTooBasikkTTV@WayTooBasik
Replying to @bstategames
In the next update we will be removing the flea market and in 12.8 there will no longer be any loot or traders.
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Royal@Royalxkillerx
Replying to @bstategames
You need to make it so if you kill a pmc there loot is considered found in raid, cause logically if you kill and get there loot in raid you technically found it in raid, it would make fighting so much more with it
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However, some fans backed the changes from Battlestate, noting that the game is purposefully meant to be difficult and that these changes only ramp up the difficulty.
bobbleheadztv@bobbleheadztv
Replying to @bstategames
i love those complainments about this, but do they all know that this is a HARDCORE shooter, there are not much casual things, rip those casuals and go play cod :) (german english is best english!)
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Jc Custer@Jcuster28
Replying to @bstategames
The complaints make me laugh. Game is supposed to be hard. The game is built for you to die and not make it out. When you do you can still USE the PMC'a you killed gear or sell it to traders. Maybe make traders give more money or make ammo cheaper is only thing I'll give into
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Of course, with the changes only being in their infancy, it’s unknown as to whether or not the devs have considered reverting things.

We’ll just have to wait and see if it turns enough players off of playing Tarkov to be considered a major problem.