Troubleshooter: Abandoned Children Cheat Codes - Trainers City - Cheats & Soluces -




Name of the file: Troubleshooter: Abandoned Children Cheat Codes - Author: DAV

Troubleshooter: Abandoned Children

Cheat Codes:
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Submitted by: David K.

Tips and Tricks for Getting Started:
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The central and most important avenue to character progression is the
Mastery Board. You can slot in Masteries to get various passive and
active benefits to your character, these Masteries can be acquired as
random loot from enemies (who can only drop Masteries they themselves
possess) or through research, in which you spend some amount of other
masteries in specific amounts and types to craft new ones. To get new
mastery research you need to either acquire a mastery for the first
time as a drop, rank up a character’s class, fully obtain an enemies
information (which immediately unlocks for research any masteries they
can drop), through certain plot decisions or in some rare situations
through a research chain. You can identify a research chain by a little
plus sign on a mastery in the research screen. If it’s grey, you can
craft that mastery and obtain a different one from it. If it’s yellow,
you’ve already done so.

If you slot in four specific Masteries at the same time, you trigger a
set. These range from extremely good to merely nice to have, but they’re
oftentimes the main goal you’re shooting for when designing your board.
Unfortunately, the in-game information on these sets relies heavily on
experimentation, and since experimentation uses up rather expensive
Training Manuals it might be best to use a guide to figure out what sets
are even possible. A good one to shoot for early game, which remains
useful for the majority of the content is Shukuchi, made when you slot
in Extreme Speed, Run, Bounding Step and Lightning Reflexes at the same
time.

You should head to Shooter Street to pick up sidequests as early as it
allows you to. These sidequests provide an invaluable boost to your early
game activities and also reward you with “grinding sets” which make
getting specific crafting materials later on far more efficient in
exchange for being fairly mediocre pieces of low level gear. One exception
is the Gem Crafter’s set, which remains quite solid as a primary combat
set for a long while.

* There are some bosses that only spawn on Hard difficulty and above, so
you should aim to play on that difficulty as soon as you’re comfortable
enough with the game.

* A little trick with dashing attacks. Some attacks, mostly close range
melee moves, can be executed as a dashing attack in which you both move
and attack in the same action. However, the further away you are from
your target the worse your accuracy is, even with these. So if you’re at
double move distance away from a target, you should almost always move
first before executing the attack, to reduce the distance penalties.

* You should aim to fully max out all three of a characters classes as
they all provide extremely useful abilities which can be slotted in
regardless of which specific class the character is currently in. Make
sure to make a separate mastery board for each class, it makes things
much smoother, even if its more expensive initially.

* Item crafting can be extremely useful for gearing up late-comer
characters and making up for deficiencies in loot drops, but it can be
very expensive. I don’t recommend messing with it until you’re level 20
or so, for access to specific grinding locations. However, it’s not a
bad idea to disassemble gear you don’t plan on using as soon as possible.
Finding a balance between selling and disassembling trash loot is
important for getting a reasonable crafting cycle going.

* Early-game tip: Don’t sleep on grenades! Wind Pressure, Smoke and Flash
grenades can be absolute lifesavers if used at the right time. Later on
you might have actually useful gear to place in those slots, but for
early on consider grenades rather than the rather crappy Spoons.

* Early on you get to pick a company mastery, which applies to all your
characters and can be switched out later for 1000 Vill. I highly recommend
the one that grants you extra Masteries to start with, but an argument
can be made for the one that grants you extra items. The others ones are
probably not worth your time.

* Also early on you get to pick an additional district to add to your
Jurisdiction. The menu looks complex but you barely get to interact with
it until much later in the game, so just pick a single district that
seems immediately helpful and ignore any set benefits or the like, as
you won’t get to benefit from those for a long time. I personally
recommend the Shadow Fog district to start with, as it lessens the grind
for Troublemaker info, but this is a personal choice.

* Keep in mind you only get one of the listed perks at any given time
when choosing.

* For equipment selection, early on Hit Chance is your primary and most
important goal. As you progress other stats may compete with it, such as
Block Chance or Dodge Chance, but Hit Chance is always important. A piece
of gear with a high Hit Chance roll is far more valuable than a piece of
gear ten levels above it with no Hit Chance bonus.



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