Sacrificing the mission to save a few civilians will not make you popular with the chain of command. On you second time through, if you want to try and hold everyone's hand and save every soul out there. The path is unmarked and the least thing to concern yourself about is the witch Cho blabbering on about your performance on the radio. This is a military action, not a walk down the yellow brick road. Trying to force your way into the area will leave your six exposed and get yourself killed. It seems the game set about half of the civilians in areas that are just crap-tastic to try and rescue. If you can do C on your way from A to B, then do it. Stop by a location near you base an establish an outpost. I highly recommend scrounging for supplies on your way in when you first start the game. That said, if I could scrounge for supplies NEAR a civilian then I would do that.Īs soon as the threat level jumps from 1 to 2, you need to start heading back to your base. Scavenging for supplies was secondary (to support the mission) and rescue of civilians was of the least importance. My first time through, I set my priorities as the mission primary. My recommendation is take the mind set of the person in charge and try to accomplish the mission. You are going to have to make choices and none of them are easy. And by "pausing" I mean put the story mission on hold to do scavenger runs or side missions. Originally posted by Le Deflagosseur:Anyone got any advice for Lifeline? The start seem way too messy, does it cool down at some point or do you get bombarded by side missions while your base is constantly under attack? I do side missions, people at base die during sieges, I stay for siege and people die on missions.Ĭant even "pause" the story missions like in the original storyline.
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