Watch Dogs: Legion is a beast of a game. Much of that has to do with the fact that you can control anyone and everyone, making it tough to decide where to go and who to recruit. After playing the game for review, I’ve come up with some helpful tips I wish I’d known during my early hours. Whether you’re new to the series or a Watch Dogs veteran, this spoiler-free beginners’ guide should help make your trip to London a smoother experience.
Start With Permadeath On
At the start of the game, players are presented with the choice to play with permadeath. If you agree, you’re free to turn it off later. Leave it off, however, and you can’t activate it for the rest of your playthrough. Unless you’re sure you don’t want to deal with losing agents for good, start with permadeath and see how you like it. I played the entire game with it on, and while losing a great agent feels like a gut-punch (often due to my own stupidity), it raises the stakes in a way that enhances the experience.
Plus, as I mentioned in my review, you can’t kick people out of your group for some reason. Once a squad fills up (which include your active roster and the dozens of tagged prospects), you can’t tag any new recruits until someone eats it. It’s a bizarre oversight, and because I filled my squad with chumps early on, I had to manually slaughter squad members to make room for superior recruits.
Team-Building Advice
Given that literally everyone around you can be recruited, it can be overwhelming to decide which citizen to bring in first. As a rule of thumb, try to focus on folks with at least two skills. Three is even better, but uni-taskers are a waste – even if their one skill is amazing. I guarantee you can find dozens of others people possessing that same skill plus a few others. Since eliminating squad members is a chore, you also don’t want to pad your crew with dead weight.
For my team, I relied on three to four multi-capable agents for active field duty. I then filled the rest of my squad with members possessing team-wide passive skills. For example, I kept investors to earn money faster, doctors to reduce the time injured agents sit on the shelf, and even a fashion designer to reduce clothing costs. These players are meant to chill on the bench, but that doesn’t mean they can’t fight if an emergency calls them to action.
Recruit Enemy Faction Members
Bad guys turned babyfaces are worth gold. They take a little extra convincing (via an additional side quest), but they’re worth it as they bring their uniforms too. Wearing a clan outfit allows you to stroll into a respective faction area with relative ease. You just have to avoid getting too close to enemies so they don’t catch a good look at you. That’s an easy problem to avoid, and I can’t tell you how many sticky situations I’ve casually bypassed thanks to some good camouflage. Try to recruit at least one member of each faction ASAP, especially Albion enforcers. Once you have, it’s also worth tagging a few more during missions. That way you have potential replacements on file in case your active ex-villain goes down. You need a special skill to recruit enemies, but I’ll touch on that later.
Clear Boroughs Sooner Rather Than Later
Red map icons mark borough uprising missions. Completing these tasks raises citizens' defiance levels in that area, and finishing them all unlocks a big final mission. You want to prioritize clearing the city sooner rather than later. Doing so not only makes people easier to recruit, but higher-quality prospects start appearing more frequently. Additionally, the game straight up gives you a top-tier agent as a reward for completing a district. Borough uprisings rank among Watch Dogs: Legion’s most exciting missions, so there’s plenty of incentive to bang them out early.
Go For The Green Diamonds
See those green things? They’re tech points, and they’re used to purchase tech (obviously), as well as upgrades for said tech. They’re scattered all over the city, often behind a hacking or environmental puzzle, similar to Batman’s Riddler trophies. The more you pick up, the faster your arsenal grows, which means life in Watch Dogs: Legion gets easier sooner. Go out of your way to pick these up when possible. On that note…
What Skills To Get
Watch Dogs: Legion’s offers 24 skills, several with additional upgrades tied to them. To save you trouble and tech points, here are the skills worth acquiring early.
- Infiltrator Spiderbot: One of your first tools, and the one you’ll easily use the most. Upgrade it fully as quickly as possible to gain three extremely valuable skills: non-lethal takedowns, a double-jump, and cloaking.
- AR Cloak: Areas are often crawling with enemies/drones, and this makes it easier to slip around or break sight when you’re spotted. Upgrade it fully for longer cloak duration and long-distance takedowns.
- Skin Mesh: This one-time purchase reduces incoming damage for all agents. If you’re playing with permadeath, this is a must-have.
- Deep Profiler: Another one-time buy, but this one is needed to recruit enemies. This device reveals additional data on desired recruits, displaying their entire schedule and the tasks necessary to convince them to join you.
- Disrupt Hack: Temporarily disrupts enemies’ tech, briefly stunning them. Invaluable for creating an escape window or to go in for an instant takedown.
- Riot Drone Hacks - Every drone type is worth hacking, but none gave me more trouble than this one. Riot Drones are the go-to combat drones for all enemies, and they can be a huge pain to deal with. It’s an expensive upgrade tree, but at least unlock the ability to disable them to give yourself some form of defense.
Don’t be Afraid to Experiment
Watch Dogs: Legion encourages creative thinking so spend time messing around with its systems. If one route through an area fails, try finding another path or mixing up your loadout. Recruit citizens with wackier skills, like protestors and beekeepers, and take them for a spin. You can always murder them if they don’t work out. So get out there and retake London in whatever dumb way you see fit.
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