7 Days to Die: Difference between revisions

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(Updating stuff that hasn't been true for years.)
 
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== World Creation and Character Leveling ==
* Adjust difficulty, zombie spawns and all the other various settings according to how good you start getting at the game. For your first game, you probably want to start on Easy. Once you've survived Day 28, you're probably ready to restart on Normal. Also turn on the setting that marks airdrops on the map, it sucks to be so focused on what you're doing that you don't notice the sound of the plane until it's already gone.
* Depending on how you have your game setup, when you die you'll either lose just your quick slots, just your inventory, or both. Those items will be left in a backpack on the ground for you to go back and get where you died. Look for a little blue backpack marker on your compass to lead you back to where you died. It is possible, due to cave-ins or explosions, for your backpack to get destroyed after you die. This sucks, as all the stuff is permanently gone.
* Depending on how you have your game setup, when you die you'll either lose just your quick slots, just your inventory, or both. Those items will be left in a backpack on the ground for you to go back and get where you died. Look for a little blue backpack marker on your compass to lead you back to where you died. It is possible, due to cave-ins or explosions, for your backpack to get destroyed after you die. This sucks, as all the stuff is permanently gone.


* You can level up by crafting and killing zombies. The higher your level, the more perk points you get, which you can spend on things like dealing more damage, increasing max HP, and better recipes.
* If you're playing on the Navezgane map, rather than a random gen world, there are radiation zones that mark the edges of the world. The ground and air are tinted sickly green. They kill you if you wander into them. Randomly generated worlds have no radiation zones, but there are certain points of interest exclusive to Navezgane.
 
* Most achievements don't care what your world settings are, so feel free to turn zombies to always-walk if you want a more chill and/or authentic Romero experience.


* If you're playing on the Navezgane map, rather than a random gen world, there are radiation zones that mark the edges of the world. The ground and air are tinted sickly green. They kill you if you wander into them. Randomly generated worlds have no radiation zones that I'm aware of.  
* You can level up by crafting, looting, and killing zombies. The higher your level, the more perk points you get, which you can spend on things like dealing more damage, increased based stats, and better recipes.
** If you're not sure where to put your perk points, focus on Strength, especially Pack Mule and Sexual Tyrannosaurus. Most of the good crafting perks have a minimum character level requirement, so start looking into Intellect (especially Hammer and Forge) once you're about level 20, and work on making a forge, iron tools, and building a bicycle.
** The only real trap option for perks is Well-Insulated, good clothes will handle temperature resistance just fine.


* Adjust difficulty, zombie spawns and all the other various settings according to how good you start getting at the game. I love 7 Days To Die, but it's still in early access, so you have to tweak the experience a bit because it's easy to get overly efficient and make the endgame fairly trivial.  
== Crafting and Adventuring ==
* You have about eight in-game hours from when you start where no zombies will spawn in the area around you. Use that to gather resources and complete the starter quests as quickly as possible, and to find a building near the trader's base worth holing up in.


* Play around with the crafting system. Almost everything in the game has some sort of use and can be used to craft various items and building materials. Once you play for a while, you'll start learning what to hang on to and what to dump off somewhere, but if you don't know what something does, you can always look at what recipe it's eventually used for.
* Play around with the crafting system. Almost everything in the game has some sort of use and can be used to craft various items and building materials. Once you play for a while, you'll start learning what to hang on to and what to dump off somewhere, but if you don't know what something does, you can always look at what recipe it's eventually used for.
** Don't sell or drop bottles of acid, they're likely to be one of your earliest crafting bottlenecks, and they're extremely expensive to buy from the trader.


* Hordes of zombies typically spawn every 7 days, but mini-hordes spawn at any time if you create enough of a "heat" signature. Things like crafting, rooting around in your backpack, using a forge, using a campfire and setting off explosions can attract some friends. This usually happens if you're doing several of these at once.  
* Stone axes serve as a cheap and effective omnitool throughout most of the game, able to do everything from break trees and rocks to repair your base to kill zombies and butcher animal corpses. Specialized tools will always do the job better, but there's no real reason to not have a stone ax on your hotbar at all times, just in case.
** Certain tools work better on destroying certain materials. Axes rip through wood, picks rip through stone and metal. Pounding away on a steel door with a fireaxe will take longer than using a pickaxe.
** You can hit objects like cars and washing machines with a wrench to get materials from them you otherwise couldn't.


* If you crouch, the game will tell you if you're being stealthy or not. Undetected > Sensed (Zombies smell/hear you) > Hunted (Zombies see you/are looking for you). You can also use this to sneak attack enemies for a bonus where you're undetected. Otherwise, stealth isn't implemented very well yet, so you won't really be Solid Snake of the zombie apocalypse.
* Reinforced iron clubs, and their upgrade, baseball bats, are the single best melee weapon in the game, with the possible exception of the slow and expensive-to-craft sledgehammer.
** Spears are useful during the day when you can easily keep your distance, but become much more of a liability at night once the zombies are running at you full-speed and you don't have the club's high knockdown chance.


* The game gets way easier with friends, but is also way, way more fun.
* If you crouch, the game will tell you how stealthy you're being, and will make every action you do less noisy at the cost of lower movement speed. You can also use this to sneak attack enemies for a bonus where you're undetected.  


* Care packages drop at 12:00 every day from a plane that flies over. It's worth trying to find these when you see them parachute down (trailed by orange smoke) as they usually have good supplies, rare gun components or rare crafting schematics. Or sometimes they're absolutely worthless. It's a gamble. You can also adjust how often the care packages drop in the game setting.
* Most buildings, especially large ones, are laid out like dungeons, with a specific intended path through them and a cache of supplies at the end.
** Said caches are usually either on the roof or in an underground chamber, so feel free to skip all that noise if you aren't specifically clearing the whole building. (Either for a mission or for the XP.)


* Minerals spawn in the ground, either randomly or down in tunnels you'll run across. It's worth remembering where these are as they are the best way to get plentiful forging resources to make armor, bullets, building supplies, etc. Be careful when mining though, a cave-in can kill you and even destroy your backpack.  
* Hordes of zombies typically spawn every 7 days, but mini-hordes spawn at any time if you create enough of a "heat" signature. Things like crafting, gunfire, using a forge, using a campfire and setting off explosions can attract some friends. This usually happens if you're doing several of these at once. Torches and other firelight also passively generates heat, but electric lights don't.


* The hunting rifle and the crossbow are slow, but very powerful. With some good aim you can one-shot most zombies.
== Other/Meta ==


* Certain tools work better on destroying certain materials. Axes rip through wood, picks rip through stone and metal. A high enough quality in either (flawless) can destroy pretty much anything with equal speed. But pounding away on a steel door with a fireaxe will take longer than using a pick-axe.
* Take the wiki with a grain of salt, some of the pages (guides, especially) haven't been updated in several releases.


[[Category:Games]]
[[Category:Games]]

Latest revision as of 17:02, 29 May 2020

World Creation and Character Leveling

  • Adjust difficulty, zombie spawns and all the other various settings according to how good you start getting at the game. For your first game, you probably want to start on Easy. Once you've survived Day 28, you're probably ready to restart on Normal. Also turn on the setting that marks airdrops on the map, it sucks to be so focused on what you're doing that you don't notice the sound of the plane until it's already gone.
  • Depending on how you have your game setup, when you die you'll either lose just your quick slots, just your inventory, or both. Those items will be left in a backpack on the ground for you to go back and get where you died. Look for a little blue backpack marker on your compass to lead you back to where you died. It is possible, due to cave-ins or explosions, for your backpack to get destroyed after you die. This sucks, as all the stuff is permanently gone.
  • If you're playing on the Navezgane map, rather than a random gen world, there are radiation zones that mark the edges of the world. The ground and air are tinted sickly green. They kill you if you wander into them. Randomly generated worlds have no radiation zones, but there are certain points of interest exclusive to Navezgane.
  • Most achievements don't care what your world settings are, so feel free to turn zombies to always-walk if you want a more chill and/or authentic Romero experience.
  • You can level up by crafting, looting, and killing zombies. The higher your level, the more perk points you get, which you can spend on things like dealing more damage, increased based stats, and better recipes.
    • If you're not sure where to put your perk points, focus on Strength, especially Pack Mule and Sexual Tyrannosaurus. Most of the good crafting perks have a minimum character level requirement, so start looking into Intellect (especially Hammer and Forge) once you're about level 20, and work on making a forge, iron tools, and building a bicycle.
    • The only real trap option for perks is Well-Insulated, good clothes will handle temperature resistance just fine.

Crafting and Adventuring

  • You have about eight in-game hours from when you start where no zombies will spawn in the area around you. Use that to gather resources and complete the starter quests as quickly as possible, and to find a building near the trader's base worth holing up in.
  • Play around with the crafting system. Almost everything in the game has some sort of use and can be used to craft various items and building materials. Once you play for a while, you'll start learning what to hang on to and what to dump off somewhere, but if you don't know what something does, you can always look at what recipe it's eventually used for.
    • Don't sell or drop bottles of acid, they're likely to be one of your earliest crafting bottlenecks, and they're extremely expensive to buy from the trader.
  • Stone axes serve as a cheap and effective omnitool throughout most of the game, able to do everything from break trees and rocks to repair your base to kill zombies and butcher animal corpses. Specialized tools will always do the job better, but there's no real reason to not have a stone ax on your hotbar at all times, just in case.
    • Certain tools work better on destroying certain materials. Axes rip through wood, picks rip through stone and metal. Pounding away on a steel door with a fireaxe will take longer than using a pickaxe.
    • You can hit objects like cars and washing machines with a wrench to get materials from them you otherwise couldn't.
  • Reinforced iron clubs, and their upgrade, baseball bats, are the single best melee weapon in the game, with the possible exception of the slow and expensive-to-craft sledgehammer.
    • Spears are useful during the day when you can easily keep your distance, but become much more of a liability at night once the zombies are running at you full-speed and you don't have the club's high knockdown chance.
  • If you crouch, the game will tell you how stealthy you're being, and will make every action you do less noisy at the cost of lower movement speed. You can also use this to sneak attack enemies for a bonus where you're undetected.
  • Most buildings, especially large ones, are laid out like dungeons, with a specific intended path through them and a cache of supplies at the end.
    • Said caches are usually either on the roof or in an underground chamber, so feel free to skip all that noise if you aren't specifically clearing the whole building. (Either for a mission or for the XP.)
  • Hordes of zombies typically spawn every 7 days, but mini-hordes spawn at any time if you create enough of a "heat" signature. Things like crafting, gunfire, using a forge, using a campfire and setting off explosions can attract some friends. This usually happens if you're doing several of these at once. Torches and other firelight also passively generates heat, but electric lights don't.

Other/Meta

  • Take the wiki with a grain of salt, some of the pages (guides, especially) haven't been updated in several releases.