While you won’t need to use this strategy against the enemies you encounter early on, it’s a cool and useful tactic for bosses and stronger foes you fight later on. This is useful because some enemies are vulnerable to different types of weapons - for instance, stabbing instead of slashing - but also because swapping on the fly will allow you to use skills from the other weapon while the skills on the previous one are still cooling down. The button with the orange weapon icons next to the Switch allows you to swap between two weapons you have equipped. When it’s available, the Switch button will flash, and once used, the meter needs to be refilled for its next use. That button also doubles as a meter that fills up with a light blue color as you damage enemies. ![]() Just tap the desired skill button to activate it you’ll have to wait for its cooldown to complete before using it again.Ībove the skills is a button marked ‘Switch’ that can unleash an especially powerful skill. These skills do more damage than a normal attack, generally effect an area indicated by a darkened area on the screen and can also have other effects on enemies. You start the game with a single skill but can have up to four of them slotted at a time per weapon you have equipped. You can also hold down the button to continuously attack.įour buttons around the main attack button are for sword skills. Simply walk up to an enemy - you’ll know them from the red crystals over their heads - and tap it to start attacking. The largest of the buttons in the bottom-right corner is for basic attacks. The combat system in Integral Factor is easy to learn but has surprising depth to it. Along with emotes and stamps, you’ll also find a chat bar with three option: ‘Say’ is public chat to anyone around, ‘Party’ chats with anyone you are currently grouped with, and ‘Tell’ is like a whisper in other MMOs that sends a message to a particular player.įight for Your Right to Party: An Intro to Combat The bar at the bottom of the screen is for in-game communication. From there you’ll find tabs to check your character status, equip items, view quest info, find your friends or party members and access the shop. The upper-left corner of the screen has a hamburger icon which will produce a menu (and make your character look as if he or she is accessing the in-game menu in true meta fashion). The next location you need to reach to proceed on your current quest, if any, is marked by a crosshairs, and tapping on the mini-map expands it to a full-sized overlay. ![]() The upper-right corner features a mimi-map, which marks both your location and the direction you are currently facing. Anywhere else on the screen, you can hold and drag to look around, as well as pinch to zoom in and out.īuttons in the bottom-right corner of the screen are for combat, which we’ll get to in its own section. In the bottom-left corner of the screen is a virtual thumbstick to move your character. Integral Factor is played from a third-person perspective and the basic controls are pretty simple. Getting Around Aincrad: Controls and Other Basics ![]() Read on through the rest of our Sword Art Online: Integral Factor tips and you just might make it to floor 100 yourself someday. Inside the game, you have access to NPCs and even cross paths with Kirito and the others, but who’s going to be your guide to the game? That would be us. Well, until someone invents the NerveGear, that is. ![]() Integral Factor then retells the story many fans known from a different point of view, and since it is also an MMORPG in its own right, it’s as close to putting yourself inside Sword Art Online as it’s possible to get. Instead of playing as Kirito, Asuna or other well-known characters, you take on the role of one of the many anonymous players trapped inside the game within the game. SAO has had games built around it before, but Bandai Namco has taken an interesting and logical approach with this one. But that conceit made the Sword Art Online light novel and anime series awfully popular, and it’s front and center in the latest mobile game based on that franchise, Sword Art Online: Integral Factor (Free). Yeah, that would be pretty bad news considering all the stats that indicate people don’t generally finish the games they buy. Imagine getting trapped inside a video game and the only way to get out is to beat it.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |