Doc Feral

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Posts posted by Doc Feral

  1. That's a nice piece of weirdness. I personally enjoy staying out of reach so they'll ignore me and then killing them as they stop to howl. "Shut up, you filthy mutt!"

    • Upvote 2
  2. Well, there are so many possible solutions that I don't think it's worth complaining about it. When you harvest meat you usually have decimals. Like your average 1.1 kg rabbit. Select all, deselect till only 0.1 remains and that's it. It works with bigger animals too. You can use the same method to make mincemeat of something to practice cooking or have multiple small pieces to use as decoy. Canceling the harvesting action also works to give even smaller pieces. Or if you eat a steak and it's too much you'll have leftovers. Or you can cancel halfway when harvesting meat.

    Dropping decoys is a hasty action to avoid trouble, so I don't think it would be fitting to choose a steak from the backpack, cut off a tiny bit, drop it on the ground, put the rest away and move on. Grab something fleshy, get rid of it and take cover.

    • Upvote 5
  3. Practical reasons? The dam. It's in the middle of everything, has plenty of lockers, several workbenches. The only flaws is that the nearest bed is in the trailer across the gate and there's no easily accessible kitchen, so you may end up using campfires shielded by some junk in the front yard.

    Beautiful places? Camp office, Mountaineer's hut in TWM, maybe the Paradise Meadows or Pleasant Valley farms?

  4. Random piece of weirdness. I just scored a deadly critical hit on this chubby fellow and the arrow fell of by itself.screen_9d2a3c03-237f-4d7f-94d5-9f6d6a4c6b2d_hi.thumb.png.26d407976ba30b8a99025c2609fb8a57.png

    Or maybe the arrow got it in the throat, the bear started spinning wildly for the pain, the centrifugal force dislodged the arrow and the bear died in a matter of seconds. But then the whole coastal village should be spray-painted red by now...

    • Like 1
  5. Are you sure the fist arrow really missed? Didn't the arrow break on impact and fall off, maybe? Or maybe it just ended up under the carcass and you'll have to wait for it to despawn (don't quarter or the arrow is a goner).

    Did the bear react in some way to the first arrow?

  6. 3 hours ago, ajb1978 said:

    This is the best possible attitude one can have in this game.  "Deal with it, move on, do better," in a nutshell.  Bravo.

    Yes, that was the correct way of dealing with this. And it's not like crossing ML and exploring the dam needs much equipment, after all.

    • Upvote 1
  7. I think it was an old option with the "brands", I've read about it but started gaming later.

    A torch or lit flare will make the wolf keep its distance if you're walking backwards facing it. It's just a way to gain some time when you're heading for a shelter or someplace to jump down. Looks like running with a flaming thing in your hand has a fair chance of scaring off the wolf if surprised (you may jumpscare it hopping onto a ridge). It happened to me once, on stalker and I had normal clothes, no furs. 

    • Like 1
  8. 7 hours ago, DerpyLemon115 said:

    Yep, only food you cook will be safe.

    How can you say that? Have you ever got food poisoning from something (apart from raw meat) at level 5? Was it stated by the devs?

  9. 28 minutes ago, shade_grey said:

    I've experienced this as well...🤔

    I don't think it's luck. I'm eating plenty of "ruined" food and everything is fine.

    I'm still convince "processed" count as"cooked". By the way, it also works with meat I cooked at the beginning of the game and abandoned. No parasites, and no poisoning if ruined.

    • Upvote 1
  10. I just tried it. First (then second, and then third) time ever, since I've never tried challenges before. Part 1 was easy, got to the Dam, confused the fatty with a decoy, ran for the gate and locked it inside. Then made a forced march all the way to the Cabin.

    As a general suggestion, when you leave the Cabin the bear will be in front of you. Don't bother crouching, make a running dash to the right and dive off the cliff. You'll land on a rock ledge, the bear won't be able to reach you, so it will be offended and run away to talk about its troubles to Max. By the way, how does the "hidden content" thingy work?!

    Anyway, I tried it three times, I'm quite sure that at least 25 bullets reached the target, but it never cared nor bled. So I agree that the challenge is totally broken. Maybe a panzerfaust would be better than this so-called Bearkiller?

    • Upvote 1
  11. Before Redux characters such as Grey Mother and Jeremiah were probably even more interesting. Now Grey Mother has gone a bit too far on the nutty side, and Jeremiah's part was shortened a bit. The cut scene when he opened the trapdoor to access his not-sure-what equipment used to make him look much more important. Anyway, I think Jeremiah still gets my vote. Methuselah is a mystical looking strange guy, but having failed to mention there's an axe wielding freak in the dam he lost my esteem.

    Hobbs... when he told his story I got more and more convinced he was an useless piece of filth and I made sure to put him out of his misery. Not to mention I didn't want him to get up and kill me in my sleep.

    • Upvote 1
  12. What really makes me go "oh bother" about outdoor fires is that the confusing countdown more than once caused my pots of water to evaporate. I often time the fire to complete a last cooking action and then leave it alone, and if the time stretches I happen to be fooled. I may even have burned moose steaks one or two times.

  13. I like spiders, and anyway they would hardly be detectable. And Canada is not a home to many dangerous spiders, I think.

    If you think about some creepy crawliness, rats would be more likely and could actually have some relevant in-game effect (oh no they ate my cat tails!)

  14. 17 hours ago, hoasd1 said:

    The cave of the Old Bear and his corpse.

    The new entrance of the fallen rail car in Broken Railroad (Region).

    The Bear Spear.

    The cave is the most awesome location I've seen in the game. When I recovered from the traumatic experience of endlessly sneakin' and hidin' I asked about it in a mailbag. I got an ambiguous but not negative answer.

  15. 46 minutes ago, stratvox said:

    The hollow tree up in the Muskeg Overlook can be blown out by a blizzard. Nearly killed my long run guy because I thought it would be okay.

    It's entirely possible that would depend on the tree... what might be safe in some trees won't be safe in others.

    Which tree was that? Like I said, it's possible that that one is okay, while the one up on FM's Muskeg Overlook is not.

    Just figured I'd pick the hive mind's brain before experimenting myself. Those kinds of experiments can be dangerous.

    That tree. It's uphill from Three Strikes going in the general direction of Skeeter's ridge, near the (possible) prepper bunker.

    • Upvote 1
  16. 1 hour ago, Mroz4k said:

    A fire can be blown out by wind if its placed in the hollowed out trunk. Although I admit it could have been a bug on my part - happened only once to me when I placed a fire into the hollowed out trunk in a patch of trees under the final rope climb to Summit. 

    You can place it during the blizzard - but if the wind shifts from a certain direction, I am quite confident the fire can be blown out. Still, the chance of that is probably very small, thus I think that as a last case scenario, fire inside a hollowed-out trunk is not a bad plan.

    That's sad. Now I feel compelled to try again. I had one burning in Pleasant Freeze-your-arse-into-oblivion Valley for days, with several blizzards...

  17. That would be a worthwhile experiment, come on, show some initiative and put your name on it! It's not as insane and pointless as testing if a barricade of multiple campfires can stop a charging bear (sorry @Bronco, my bad), and if things turn bad you can retreat to the tunnel. As for myself, I personally tried a campfire in a hollow tree against a raging blizzard, and it kept burning.

    On the other hand, the whole topic "Hidden caves" is about finding nameless windproof places, so maybe it already has been covered.

    • Upvote 1
  18. Well, two campfires side by side along a wall are not so horrible and will likely be used many times. On the other hand, I agree that one permanently abandoned in the middle of a river is ridiculously ugly.

  19. Well, most stoves have 1 or 2 slots, campfires use less firewood for the same duration and can be lit with the lens, so outdoor cooking already has its advantages, apart from cabin fever. Massive stoves are rare. I usually simply light a couple of decently sheltered fires to have more slots. The lack of firewood is hardly ever an issue, if you don't totally firget about it.

    A large campfire with many slot wouldn't be a campfire anymore. More like an outdoor country fair kitchen, you'd need to use many big rocks to form a wall around it, and maybe poles for hanging pots and spit roasting... great for parties, but it would be a mighty crafting project.

  20. I'm the nature loving type but I prefer the role of the predator, even if the lazy type since I don't hunt (it's way too expensive in Italy). By the way,  killing a rabbit by snapping its neck is a clean way to take it out. I spent much time in the countryside when I was a kid, and I remember seeing that most farmers used to either swing the rabbit by the hind legs and slam its head against a stony surface, or hold it by the ears and punch it. Oh, the eighties... So no, neck snapping doesn't impress me at all. 

  21. 5 hours ago, ThePancakeLady said:

    Oh, yeah. The Ravine is a nice place to make a mini-base or retreat, and stay for short times when I need a break from hostile wildlife. But, no workbench and limited loot to be found makes it a tough place to homestead. But still, a god place for a "time out" break.

    The Ravine, also known as the "Happy hunting ground", is a few meters away from the Dam with its workbench, storage space, bed in the trailer, plenty of materials to salvage and so on. Great place to hunt deer, gather firewood and probably birch bark, and hang out for a while to avoid cabin fever. The only thing it really lacks is a kitchen.