badade Posted January 14, 2020 Share Posted January 14, 2020 Try to avoid being surprised and back off without aiming and they obediently follow. When you want to kill, increase separation, aim and CONTINUE walking backwards until they are close as they will straighten up, making an easy kill. Once mastered it makes one shots easier than before and to be honest a bit boring. Just off ti B.I. to see if it works the same on T.Wolves. 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Hotzn Posted January 15, 2020 Share Posted January 15, 2020 Interesting, +1. Shall try that out sometime. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
odium Posted January 15, 2020 Share Posted January 15, 2020 yep thats exactly what i do. killing wolves is trivial once you master it. you have to make sure to lead them into a nice flat open space though, any elevation changes or obstacles and they can zag late in the run Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
badade Posted January 15, 2020 Author Share Posted January 15, 2020 Posted this in December 2019 Timberwolves Passive. "Playing vanilla loper, nothing changed and spent a long time gearing up for the fight but they run away as soon as I come close, even with a 3 bar meat stink. Fluffy in the ammo warehouse was aggressive and a bear near the cannery accommodation, so it seems to be only the T.W.'s; I've submitted a bug report but will have to wait until the 3rd for them to look at it. I don't want to start again" I started a new game in December 2019, geared up 2x bearskin coat and bag, cooking and archery 5 and the same passive timberwolves in B.I. New support ticket and this time they replied and are looking into it? The only thing I haven't tried is starting a custom game as interloper, not changing anything -- I normally start a random interloper game. Can any of the vets help? as I'm not starting a third time and need this game to keep me sane! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
manolitode Posted January 15, 2020 Share Posted January 15, 2020 8 hours ago, odium said: you have to make sure to lead them into a nice flat open space though, any elevation changes or obstacles and they can zag late in the run That's solid advice, you pick the terrain if you got the opportunity, not the wolf. In case you're loping one single arrow might be all the chance you get and you don't want elevation messing up your headshot chances for you. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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