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Tribes of Midgard: Complete Controls Guide and Gameplay Tips for Beginners

Tribes of Midgard Controls

Tribes of Midgard is now available for free for anyone with a PS+ subscription in May. It’s one of three games along with Curse of the Dead Gods and FIFA 22 (click here for all of Outsider Gaming’s guides on FIFA 22). In Tribes of Midgard, you must defend Seeds of Yggdrasil from the Legions of Hel nearly every night while providing the Seeds with souls to power them and advance your settlement level. You can play solo or through online co-op.

Below, you will find complete controls for Tribes of Midgard. Following the controls will be gameplay tips.

Tribes of Midgard PS4 & PS5 controls

Note that the left and right analog sticks are denoted as L and R with pressing them L3 and R3, respectively.

Below, you will find gameplay tips for beginners. These tips are also geared toward those who prefer playing solo.

1. Harvest EVERYTHING in Tribes of Midgard

Harvesting a branch pile.

The most basic element for your success will be to harvest as many materials as possible. In the beginning, you’re relegated to things not needing equipment like branches, flint, and plants. Beyond the materials – which you’ll need to create equipment, weapons, and more – you will gain souls with everything you harvest (more below).

To harvest materials like stone and trees, you will need a pickaxe and lumberaxe, the lowest quality of which are flint and most accessible for you when you begin. Flint is lying around your village in abundance, along with branches, that you can then trade in the village for the requisite equipment. You must then harvest stone and wood to trade for weapons and armor with the blacksmith and armorer.

Trading harvested iron with the blacksmith for the basic Villager Sword I.

The further away from the village you travel, the more high quality materials you can harvest. However, you’ll also encounter stronger enemies in these areas, so make sure you are well equipped before you go exploring lest you become relegated to fighting unarmed.

2. Keep an eye on weapon and item durability

Item durability is the green bar beneath your equipped item. Here, the player is rescuing a prisoner from a ritual.

Unfortunately, you can’t just go hacking-and-slashing everything you see indefinitely. Each item has a durability meter that is the green bar underneath it on your HUD. When the durability reaches zero, you’ll automatically switch to another weapon you have equipped or, if you don’t have any weapons, unarmed.

There are five different durability ratings with associated colors in Tribes of Midgard:

Durability applies to your pickaxes and lumberaxes as well as weapons and shields. If you have a shield equipped, the shield icon will appear above your weapon in the HUD with its own durability meter.

Keep an eye on which class you select as each will have a preferred weapon. Speaking of classes…

3. Choose the class that best suits your playstyle of what’s available

Ranger and Warrior are available immediately, but the other six require leveling up.

There are eight classes in Tribes of Midgard, though only two are immediately available with the Ranger and the Warrior. Below are the classes and their details:

Seer Dagný healing the player, the pulse of healing lasting two minutes and recovering 400 HP or so with each pulse.

Unlocking the other classes, particularly the last three, may take a lot of time, but they’re worth the endeavor.

The three sets of challenges you can do: Class, Achievement, and Saga.

Beyond unlocking the classes, there are also challenges you can complete in Tribes of Midgard. There are three types of challenges: Class, Achievement, and Saga. Achievement challenges are based on in-game achievements (which are tied to trophies). Class challenges are connected to each class, so you will need to unlock all eight for these. Saga challenges are those that are during each season, such as defeating the legendary Fenrir, the Great Wolf (Season One), or Jörmungandr, the World Serpent (Season Two, the current season).

Each achievement will nab you either in-game currency, horns (for upgrades), weapons, armor, and more. Make sure to pay attention to this screen so you know what you need to accomplish.

4. Make sure to feed souls to the Seed of Yggdrasil

The game’s primer on souls.

Souls, as mentioned earlier, are harvested every time you gain some materials, though in small number. The main purpose of souls is to feed the Seed of Yggdrasil enough to upgrade the village. Simply head to the Seed in the village and hit X to unload souls (up to 500 at a time). The Seed of Yggdrasil will need ten thousand souls to upgrade. However, the Seed will also lose one soul every four seconds.

Unlocking a chest in an enemy camp, which takes holding X for five uninterrupted seconds.

To gain souls beyond harvesting materials, defeat enemies, loot chests, and defeat Jötnar (bosses). The latter two will reward you with the most souls. You can also maximize souls from harvesting by cutting down Yew and Rowan trees at night.

Nightly, you will face of with the Legions of Hel as they seek to sap the souls from the Seed. You won’t have to defeat every single enemy as you just need to make it to the morning. However, be aware that the difficulty increases with every day that passes. In particular, if a Blood Moon is out, the enemies are stronger!

The red on the screen indicates low health, becoming more pronounced the closer to death.

You have three gates that you can close off, but the enemies will attack and eventually destroy the gates. Do your best to keep them from entering the village, but they will come from all three entrances. In particular, focus on the enemies draining souls from the Seed!

If you fail, the Seed of Yggdrasil will be destroyed and you will receive a game over. On the bright side, the animation of the Seed being destroyed is a sight to behold. After your game over, you’ll be brought to your progress screen that will indicate the amount of experience you earned, days survived, and more.

You should be able to gain at least one level with each outing early on until you reach around level five, all dependent on how long you survive, of course. Check the experience rewards from the main game screen to see the rewards for progressing to each level.

5. Defeat Jötnar for massive gains in souls and experience

Defeating Jötunn Geirröðr, an ice giant.

Jötnar are the bosses in Tribes of Midgard. They’re named as Jötunn individually. The first one you’ll most like come across – and defeat – is the ice giant Jötunn Geirröðr. The giant is slow and lumbering, but unleashes mostly AoE ice attacks as well as an ice projectile. Be aware: if you fight it in the icy area to the southeast of the village, you’ll take cold damage unless properly equipped with ice resistance! Try and wait until it hits the grassy plains to attack and defeat the boss.

The Jötnar in Tribes of Midgard are (in alphabetical order):

Thus far, there are also two Saga Bosses in Tribes of Midgard: the aforementioned Fenrir (Season One) and Jörmungandr (Season Two). Saga Bosses are on an entirely different level than the Jötnar, but also provide the greatest rewards. Battle them at your own peril

There you have it, your complete controls guide and tips for beginners and solo players. Harvest materials and souls, defend the Seed of Yggdrasil, and show those Jötnar who really rules Midgard!

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