
Lost Skies is a beautifully crafted game that invites you to explore a realm filled with resources, mysteries, and creativity. As you brave the different biomes in the game, you will build your ship, explore the wilderness, and create nifty tools that help your adventures.
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Posts 2It’s quite easy to lose yourself in the game’s ever-evolving journey and find yourself in a spot where you’re unsure where to go next or what to look for. Along with your tools of exploration, it’s essential to carry some tips that will help your journey.
Hone Your Grappling And Movement Skills
As you explore the game's initial few hours, the grappling hook becomes an excellent tool for exploration. It's your survival kit as well as a traversal system that allows you to access uncharted territories. The basics of it may take a while getting used to, since there are a lot of different tricks you can pull off with the grappling hook.
Once you've walked and run around a fair bit of terrain, it's time to start traversing these with the help of the grappling hook. Try swinging for momentum and boosting yourself to certain terrains. Use the hook's three core abilities for movement: Yanking, Reeling In, and Reeling Out. These three abilities are used for different purposes.
Also, make sure you master swinging and shooting at the same time. This will take a while to get used to, but it proves highly useful when fighting strong opponents. All you need to do is grapple onto a point (like a tree branch), where you can suspend yourself midair. Then, swing around and shoot.
Use Your Belt's Inventory
Hoarding items and stocking up on things you need isn't the right way to go. If your character dies due to some unexpected threat, you'll lose your supplies, and it's important to keep extra things in some kind of storage—preferably one that you can craft.
There's no point in piling up materials like scrap metal and wood early on. Once you've built your first ship frame and are sailing the skies,it's ideal to only keep items that are necessary for what you need to craft next. Usually, these are resources like batteries, metal, iron, and so on.
More importantly, make sure you use your character's belt to carry items you can quickly use. To do so, simply open your inventory and equip them in the slots that are visible at the bottom of the screen. Items like weapons and tools should be kept here, so you can use them the moment an opportunity arises.
Craft Essential Items
Early on in the game, you'll realize how quickly you are running out of things as you fight and explore your way through different islands. However, there are certain items that you must carry with you in hopes of keeping yourself safe from unexpected enemies.
For instance, crafting Light Bullets and Coral Flares is highly recommended. It's easy to run out of ammo and lose sight of your surroundings when fighting against tough enemies. The moment you spot an opportunity for crafting, get yourself some bullets!
It's important to note that, based on the material you choose, crafting items for your ship can differ in quality. For instance, using a certain material to build your ship's sail, such as aluminum, can be worse than using something like lead. So, always look for alternative options in the menu when building a part.
Keep An Eye On Your Ship's Layout
Designing and building a ship in Lost Skies is a core part of the gameplay experience. On that note, focusing on its basic layout is just as important as choosing the parts you wish to craft for your ship.
When building your first ship, you'll be choosing an option that suits your playstyle. Keep in mind your ship's purpose—mobility, transportation, mobile base, and so on. Choose what's most important to you, and build one accordingly.
Likewise, the ship's orientation matters too. Placing the engines as well as the sail decides how you lift off and steer it. Not focusing on these aspects can lead to a clumsy ship that you won't be proud of!
You can board your ship by standing directly underneath it, in case it ends up in a tricky spot in the sky.
Keep Looking For Data Disks
Let's be honest, Data Disks are hard to find. Especially when you're unsure of where to look for them, and what to do with them in the first place. Well, there are a few things to keep in mind when looking for these, since you need Data Disks to improve your research and craft high-tier items.
When exploring the wilderness, look for environments that feel a bit off and have a humming sound. This means huge rocks that seem to sit in random places, spaces riddled with drones, and openings that have little to no glowing light. These are usually places that hold secrets and beg you to explore them.
Once you come across these and dive in a little, you'll spot glowing green chests or structures. These are scannable with your Prism, and help you progress by granting you new crafting recipes, lore, and more. On one island, you'll usually find one or two major spots for Data Disks.
The Crude Atlas Lifter is an excellent tool for moving objects to find new pathways. Place it on a movable object, and attach your grappling hook to pull it towards you.
Create Your Own Goals
While Lost Skies gives you plenty of quests to begin your journey with, it may not be the most ideal way of exploring the world. Deciding which island to visit next can be tricky business, but there are a few goals you can create for yourself to navigate the world better.
Since there is no map to rely on, you want to start by scouting other islands from a distance. The one you start on is where your base is, but this doesn't mean you spend all your time here. Try to notice a series of floating rocks that you can grapple onto, and make your way to the nearest island.
Alternatively, if you wish to craft items without exploring and exposing yourself to danger, you can keep respawning to let the world generate items for you over time. This can be incredibly useful when you're trying to build your first ship and require more than 50-100 metal scraps and wood.
Study Your Enemy
Before engaging in combat, give it a while before you attack or scan objects that appeal to you. Make this a habit every time you find a vantage point. Doing so will help you understand what you're dealing with, since it can be terrifying to be hunted down by a huge group of enemies.
One of the more common enemies you'll encounter is turrets and drones. These pesky machines not only shoot on sight, but they also try to keep track of where you are. So, avoid line of sight and make note of how much ammo you have. At the same time, keep moving if a swarm of drones tries to chase you.
During your early hours, there's a specific "mini-boss" that will try to make your life miserable. This is a machine that stands its ground, producing drones every few seconds, based on how many you take down. Shoot at its mouth every time a drone comes out. Similarly, study the patterns of other enemies before trying to take them down.
Mine Effectively
Mining in Lost Skies isn't as simple as pressing and holding a button forever in one spot to maximize efficiency. Instead, you'll have to precisely aim your Pulse Hammer tool around a rock to mine resources. Because if you don't, you may lose all the resources you could have gotten otherwise.
When mining, you need to aim for the yellow spots of a rock-like substance and keep firing shots as you acquire resources. If you blindly shoot at the same point over and over again, the entire thing will explode.
If you want to use this cleverly, make sure you get every substance you need on the spot and then shoot it enough to make it explode in the face of enemies around you. This can work quite efficiently against hordes of enemies.
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