How can i play wasteland




















This will bring up a page with a couple of different selections including:. If you want to join a random game, you can do so through the Lobby Browser.

This will showcase a selection of different available co-op games, and you can join pretty much any that you see in the listing. When hosting a game, you can choose to load into a save file that you have already created, or you can create a brand-new game to start off in. We wanted to allow for flexibility, to allow you to play with your friends when it's convenient, and when it's not convenient to play by yourself. For more on Wasteland 3, read our feature on why Fallout fans should be excited for Wasteland 3, or watch us play through over 40 minutes of the game in a New Gameplay Today.

Join Sign In. Post Tweet Email. Follow Us. Share Facebook Post. Twitter Tweet. Email Email. Comment Comment. How can you split up your party of rangers? Ben Reeves. While that experience sounds great, actually starting a co op multiplayer session isn't as intuitive as it could be.

It may seem cumbersome, but it doesn't have to be, and once you know how to effectively use the cooperative system, it's a piece of cake. So let's look into it. So this part is actually either pretty simple or quite confusing, depending on how you want to play online.

To start, click " Multiplayer " on the main menu. You'll be taken to the next screen, which will offer a lobby browser on Xbox and PS4 or multiple choice on PC. This is the easy one. A lobby browser works like any other online multiplayer system where you make open or private lobbies. That's why it's worth diversifying, trying to ensure each squadmate has a different weapon skill.

It's also worth giving them different utility skills—if one PC has Kiss Ass then the relevant conversation options will be unlocked no matter who is doing the talking, and you only need one PC with Demolitions to go around defusing landmines. But sometimes doubling up isn't so bad. The Small Arms skill covers both pistols and shotguns, for instance, which use different ammunition.

And it's fine to have two characters who are good at First Aid, because if you only have one dedicated doctor, who heals the healer when they drop? Plus, a companion may ditch you over a decision you made, perhaps because you backed a faction they have a moral objection to, and suddenly you've lost a specialist. If you can afford to, it's worth hanging onto some skill points after leveling.

If Scotchmo the drinky hillbilly has 20 unspent skill points, he can respec and suddenly become an expert in Nerd Stuff whenever you need one.

The Kodiak is an armored car with its own AI that not only gets you around the Colorado world map, it can sometimes join you in battle. Whether ramming or shooting, it's a devastating weapon even before you outfit it, but it's still worth spending the money on upgrades.

Improve its chassis at your garage to give it more hit points and radiation resistance, which allows you to explore more of the map. An armor-plating upgrade will make it even more damage resistant, and its weapons can be swapped as well.

Plus you can personalize it with a snazzy hood ornament and a horn of your choosing. La Cucaracha is a classic, but when I roll into combat blasting a horn that sounds like a circus clown's nose everyone knows to be afraid. The local Wasteland equivalent of Fallout's stat-boosting bobbleheads are creepy dolls, which look like Cabbage Patch Kids who've seen some shit. These red-eyed babygoths are hidden among the regular loot items you'll find in Colorado, like Snake Squeezins and cigarettes, and they're worth keeping an eye out for.

Thanks, Keen Karen.



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