New player - COMPLETELY lost

  • Sooo I finally purchased a decent gaming pc and decided to give this a try as I have seen so many great videos online. I did the tutorial, that pretty straight forward but then I was like....what no. I think Im decently smart but I am lost with this game.

    I select play, then I have some adventure and then some jack sparrow stuff. I select adventure. Now I have some selection of three boat types. I have ZERO! idea what the hell am I doing as a new player. Why am I choosing boats? Why I cant just drop into an open world like usual MMO. Does crew size matter? Im playing solo so will I have to work with some people? Is it just in and out like Team Fortress or do I get to improve my pirate and ship? I dont know.

    So I try to choose the small ship, loading screen, I appear on some small ship with some guy that says I SPEAK FRENCH. Great, have again ZERO idea where I am, what am I supposed to do, what is going on. I go back to menu, choose middle ship, appear in some tavern with NPC telling me you will need gold and that there are some merchants etc. Again, Im lost, there is a ship, not some basic one, already tweaked and looks upgraded, there is some guy that throws flame bombs at me and after five minutes tells me "your gay". And Im like what is this game? How am I, as a new player, even begin? Wth is this?

    So I feel absolutely unmotivated if the game itself doesnt show new players the ropes at the beginning. I actually very dislike it when you have to google how to start playing cause the game wont show you.

    Do you guys have similar experience? Or should I just uninstall it cause this is some kind of "special kind" of game?

    Thanks

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  • Choose a sloop
    Closed crew

    When in the game raise your anchor which is behind the wheel

    lower sails

    just see what happens out there

    Don't worry about stuff, there is literally years worth of things to learn and improve on

    just get that sloop moving and sail around and explore.

    If you sink you sink it's no big thing you just get a new boat and keep trying

    If you stick with it the next 6 months will be your glory days, don't rush it or worry about getting things done, just play and explore and enjoy. You'll look fondly back on the experience.

  • @shortleopard603 said in New player - COMPLETELY lost:

    Now I have some selection of three boat types. I have ZERO! idea what the hell am I doing as a new player. Why am I choosing boats? Why I cant just drop into an open world like usual MMO. Does crew size matter? Im playing solo so will I have to work with some people? Is it just in and out like Team Fortress or do I get to improve my pirate and ship? I dont know.

    Boat selection determines crew size. Larger crews are more efficient, solo is a lot harder because you have to do everything yourself and usually isn't a good idea if you're new. After you pick boat selection, you are presented with the options for OPEN or CLOSED crew. Closed crews will only be filled by other players that you invite (or if you have friends, they can join off you via the xbox app or through the gamebar). Open crew will put a bunch of other open crew players together, which as you've experienced can be a mixed bag somewhere between awful and good.

    So I feel absolutely unmotivated if the game itself doesnt show new players the ropes at the beginning. I actually very dislike it when you have to google how to start playing cause the game wont show you.

    Do you guys have similar experience? Or should I just uninstall it cause this is some kind of "special kind" of game?

    Unfortunately the tutorial really only shows you the basics of repairing the ship, bailing water, firing the cannon a few times and how to use the dig maps to locate treasure. There is a lot to learn once you get into the main game. You can learn yourself (Sloop - Closed Crew) which can be pretty brutal, especially when it comes to encountering other crews and trying to figure out naval and player combat or you can try to find some other like minded new players or experienced players who are willing to teach you.

    A good resource is the official Sea of Thieves discord. Use the text channels #adventure-mode-lfg or the #new-swabbie-lfc (this one is specifically for new players) to find a crew. If you mention you're new, you will likely find someone willing to help you out.

  • @shortleopard603 feel free to send me a message and we can play together and I can explain what this game is about. It is very confusing for new players.

  • Im sorry for your troubles.

    But. I’m sorry again, you do know to read the descriptions before jumping into things right? Maybe a tutorial on YouTube? Or the ones ingame?

  • First of all Sea of ​​Thieves is not an MMO, the ship is essential to your adventure.

    Crew size matters in a way, playing alone you are at a total disadvantage, however with 3 more friends you will be using the most difficult ship to control in the game.

    Here I have two tips: The first, follow what the NPCs say and you will have a brief idea of ​​what you need to do in the game. The other tip is to watch some good tutorials that we see on the internet, unfortunately I don't know about English channels, because I only watch speculation ones.

    Finally, this is a sandbox game, you can do what you want with it, but keep in mind that the game is for pirates, other players can and will sink and steal from you.

  • @shortleopard603 said in New player - COMPLETELY lost:

    Do you guys have similar experience? Or should I just uninstall it cause this is some kind of "special kind" of game?

    Not really... first I looked up infos on what the game is about, how does it play and what you do in it (because I like to inform myself and know what I buy and make sure I will enjoy myself with that game). I even watched a small streamer I liked that had just starting playing too, so it was fun to discover and figure out the ropes with him, then when I knew this game was for me, I finally bought it (a few weeks after release).

    All in all, I was aware of what I was getting into, so I don't think it's the game itself that is a "special kind", but I do think there are special kind of players, especially when they rather uninstall a game instead of looking for infos on it... there, maybe this helps a bit? (Pre-googled for you)

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bmhu6fhfTR0

  • You chose to skip the Maiden Voyage I see.

    Just tinker around, read descriptions, explore. Remember to allow yourself to have fun.

    Go on some open crews....you are bound to land with some folks who will help you learn. Or join a Discord of your favorite YouTuber who post about this game and recruit some friends there. Or go to the SoT discord channel to do the same.

    Sorry it wasn't spoon fed to you.

    Looking forward to seeing you on the seas.

  • Ahoy! Welcome to the game! Hope I am not too late to respond. Let me try to answer your question as organized as possible.

    1. To start a game, you have to decide what ship you want, this basically determines how many max players can be in your crew and the difficulty. A sloop is considered hard mode and allows a max of 2 players (The sloop was made for 1-2 people to be able to handle it). A Brigantine is medium difficulty and manages up to 3 players in the crew. A Galleon is considered easy mode, the ship in itself sails like a truck, sluggish and heavy and requires the effort of at least 3 crew members to sail it properly. You can choose to sail in a closed crew server which simply means that you don't want match making (In case you plan to invite friends into your crew up to a max of 3 other players and depending on the ship chosen), other wise, open crew will throw you into a server where an open crew slot is needed which also includes a new server where all open slots exist (Which why sometimes you will appear in the tavern or sometimes you will be dropped in the middle of a sinking ship with cannonballs blasting about and a drunk crew member throwing up all over the place while playing music really badly.
    • Please Note: Even if you play by yourself, you are still considered a "crew member" and part of the ship's crew (A crew of 1). The Ship itself, does not belong to you specifically, it belongs to the crew
    1. This isn't an MMO. It's more akin to a multiplayer RPG adventure sandbox. Rare calls it a SWAG for short or aShared Word Adventure Game which means that apart from your pirate and personal gold, nothing belongs to you, not even the treasure on your ship (Until you sell) nor the ship itself, it is shared with your crew, and the game world itself is shared with other crews aka pvp and other player interaction

    2. The tutorial, "The Maiden Voyage" is heavily RECOMMENDED

    3. As implied with my response #1, Yes! Crew size matters.

    4. The mysterious stranger explains the basics of trading/ treasure finding after you finish the tutorial, which loops back to my point #3. I will explain it in more depth momentarily since this mysterious stranger requires an update with how many changes the game has gone through already and how heavily expository his conversation can be.

    • There are a total of 3 basic trading companies which provides voyages (Missions):
      Gold hoarders focus on digging up or finding treasure and trinkets
      Order of souls focus on pve combat and finding skulls
      Merchant alliance focus on timed quests, and finding animals, spices/ silks, or charting courses.

    • Apart from these 3, their are 3 more factions which are unique in the way they behave and do not revolve around selling at the Outposts.
      Reaper's Bones Focus is on PvP (Including world events), provides the most gold, and accept almost any loot/ treasure. They are however not in any outpost, to sell they have a specific hideout in the game that can be found by name in the ship's map (world Map). I recommend this only for experienced players. They hold no voyages.
      Bilge Rats Focus is on commendations which are challenges or performing "Feats", and doing time limited or special voyages. Simply complete a challenge, and the commendation is completed/ received. The leader of the Bilge Rats can be found right outside the door of the tavern in case a new time limited voyage/ mission is active.
      Hunter's Call Focus is on fishing and trading cooked meats or fish. They are found in small trading posts across the game

    • Tall Tales, are this game's version of a "story mode" or "Campaign". They take the form of books, and you vote on them like any other voyage. The first OG tales are found across the world and their symbols can be seen in the ship's map table on different islands. The Pirates life tall tales which feature jack sparrow are found in any outpost in the Castaway's camp.

    • Note: The Voyages take the form of BOOKS and to start them you vote on the books, interacting with the castaway does NOT start the adventure. Choosing a "Pirate's life" adventure mode from the main menu, simply throws you in a server close to the castaway's camp for you to start the adventure.

    The game throws you into the world, because as a pirate, you are free to do what you want, as you want it. There is more to see and do apart from the voyages, areas to explore and discover that I won't talk about here so that if you choose to continue to play, you can discover them personally. There is no Main Mission the game's islands, inhabitants, and even seas change from time to time, which revolves around a central main story, however the story is part of the lore of the game and not in one specific main mission. The game updates frequently and every update changes the world in it in some aspects.

    • Finally, if you enjoy game's that spoon feed info, and hold your hand through the game's systems, I want to let you know that Sea of Thieves is not that type of game. It's a game that wants you to pay attention to what you do. The game extremely punishes players for their mistakes. For the most part, if you fee like the game is punishing you, it's most likely your fault. Listen and pay close attention to what you might be holding, or what you might be doing at the time that the game punishes you.

    Again, it's a game that is not easy on new players, it wants players to learn its mechanics, it wants one to learn to get a feel for things, and once you do the game immediately becomes easier. However, this isn't like some sort of in game "Level up" system, I am talking about real life learning from experience exposure to the game itself, and to achieve that, it takes time, so patience is required. You were a bit unlucky with that "French crew member and that other one that seems like they could be a troll", that's not the majority of the community nor players in game. If you suspect trolling of any kind, you are encouraged to send out a report to Rare in the support tab above in this website. Interaction is a huge focus of the game, so communication is a key component.

  • @shortleopard603 You could also use the Looking For Group (LFG) menu on the Xbox app on your PC to find crews who welcome new players. It sounds like you are using the open crew option so the game just matches you up with a random player. Using open crew has never been a great option. Using LFG will increase your chances of finding a decent crew (note, I did not say it is 100 percent reliable). Don’t try to crew on your own unless you have a high tolerance for loss.

    Keep a few things in mind.

    • Outposts are not considered safe zones.
    • Loot is not yours (safe) until you turn it in for gold.
    • Playing solo is very possible but is considered ‘hard mode.’
    • Never carry more loot on your ship than you are comfortable losing; said another way, cash in at outposts often rather than holding onto loot that took you hours to gather.
    • Get over the fear of death and sinking. It will happen a lot. They can only steal what you haven’t turned in yet. Your gold is safe from theft.
    • Watch some videos on YouTube to get an understanding of the game. Captain Falcore, PhuzzyBond, HitboTC are good channels to start.
    • You have the option to mute other crews. Do this if you are bothered by other crews taunting you.
  • @shortleopard603 Ahoy me matey and welcome to the Sea of Thieves!

    Lots of helpful pirates here on the forum, but along with their hints and tips you can also check out the Pirate Academy - a new player guide :)

    https://www.seaofthieves.com/pirate-academy

  • @shortleopard603 I would suggest going to the sea of thieves official discord and looking for a crew there. People will use wierd abbreviations that you don't understand but just say that you are a new player looking for someone to show you the ropes. If that doesent work you can add me and I will personally see to it that you are well met and become one of the most feared captains upon the seas. Assuming I'm available of course 😂

  • @lizalaroo said in New player - COMPLETELY lost:

    @shortleopard603 Ahoy me matey and welcome to the Sea of Thieves!

    Lots of helpful pirates here on the forum, but along with their hints and tips you can also check out the Pirate Academy - a new player guide :)

    https://www.seaofthieves.com/pirate-academy

    Dagnabbit! I was going to post a link to that! 😮‍💨

  • I learned to play by doing closed crew sloop for a few hours. Then I jumped strait into open crew and had the other players teach me. There’s something special about this community and their willingness to teach new players. I think it may even be a reason some veteran players continue to play open crew🤷🏻‍♀️

    Open crew can be awful sometimes. And sot is is not a game you can just pick up for a bit and set down. You have to have a few hours. So if you get into open crew and someone is already barking at you or the vibes off leave immediately and try open crew again. Takes a few tries to find some nice people. Have a mic. Anyways good luck..

  • @zzombiechipmunk Loving that gamertag. 😅

  • @rikjaxx Hah, Maiden Voyage completed I did, as Yoda would say. Still Im clueless. Thats why I am annoyed. Tutorial doesnt show you anything except for some basics regarding your character and ship. Im sure world of warcraft wasnt spoonfeeding players back in TBC ages and didnt have to watch youtube video about what to do during first 5 minutes of game.

    But thanks, will try to find some people and get into it. Just saying this might be the reason new players dont play it. Cause I have a busy life and just wanna relax with the game. Not buy a manual and spend hour figuring out, what to do. Thats not spoon feeding, thats called "normal learning curve".

  • That was something dedicated players have warned for since years ... You see , Sea of Thieves is a growing game and it keeps growing nomatter it's age .That way it becomes hard to figure out what to do first when you are New and Alone on the Sea...

    Back in our days , when people still used gamechat , many Pirates would offer help to New Pirates as we were told and as we got a great gloom over our Hearts after such a session...

    There was even a Notorious Pirate by the name of Mr J4dio who founded all by himself The Pirate Academy , the REAL Pirate Academy , not that stolen weak tea not even worthy of that Glorious name of those days.
    This man took a whole afternoon to take a New Pirate on a Sloop and showed them how ships worked ,how fortress raids , encountering skeleton Fleets , fighting or negotiating human Pirates , Tall Tales and so on and on....

    Alas, because of the very high demand combined with a personal setback he had to let that go ... It was also a one man undertaking ,which was doomed to be overwhelmed by huge numbers of New Pirates that wanted to learn this game...

    Any Gamedeveloper , not only Rare , should realize that when their game starts , not everyone knows about it , and it feels like if you miss the train in the first station then when you finally caught up with the train ,in it's thirth or fourth station, you get the feeling like you can't follow what's going on...

    i do like Multiplayer Games ,in theorie , but i hate the fact that i jump in in a game that is already rolling and has already experienced previous chapters /seasons/ episodes or whatever they may be called ...i always feel like an Outlander in these games and since that "new " hype of not using gamechat in any game anymore , mostly thanks to unneccesary toxic talkings , nobody is willing to teach the New...

    This is a Magnum .44 that always shoots in the foot of every Developer but i think they all have peglegs and don't seem to be caring alot of the losses that this method brings along...

    We ,once , had Deckhands ,where people looked up to , or the Boatswains who were chosen for their positivity but were never triggered to give them a form of task like the Deckhands had ...

    Maybe it is time that Rare chooses " Teachers of the Sea " or something or maybe inspire a few of their Content Creators to stop screaming and start educating this game ... The means are there , but if the Will to do that is there too? Well, that's the question, hey?

  • @clumsy-george Oh you mean like the tons of guides on youtube?

  • Part of this is based on luck, however you're looking at this from a highly negative eye.
    Being thrown like this without specific knowledge is also a part of the adventure and the fun, there is nothing that you HAVE to do but instead you're limited to only your imagination and just trying stuff.
    And if I may add, it's normal to be confused when you're in a new game.

  • @clumsy-george said:

    i do like Multiplayer Games ,in theorie , but i hate the fact that i jump in in a game that is already rolling and has already experienced previous chapters /seasons/ episodes or whatever they may be called ...i always feel like an Outlander in these games

    A lot of pirates get this feeling from this Sea, as well as others - myself included.

    It's 1 of the chief reasons I absolutely hate the seasonal model, especially those with passes. It's profitable, sure, but it's also limiting how much you truly get to see or do in regards to the Adventure as a whole (some games are allegedly rectifying this to some degree - this 1, and Halo Infinite, just to name a couple). It's, IMO, a cop-out, because it's a rotten carrot-on-a-stick instead of a golden appple. Developers would rather use their game as a service to milk what they can out of pirates for a single game for 10+ years instead of making that game a beautiful masterpiece of an Adventure that withstands the testament of time because of its own merits. Besides, not working on new projects can lead to stagnation and stifle innovation and creativity.

    I feel like many a game developer has fallen into this void, and it's not necessarily for the better.

  • @shortleopard603

    Im sure world of warcraft wasnt spoonfeeding players back in TBC ages and didnt have to watch youtube video about what to do during first 5 minutes of game.

    All games have some sort of learning curve. This one's a bit bigger, because you're supposed to learn them as part of the experience.

    About you being confused about ship, I understand being confused to start, but the game tells you right there the differences. On the side it says "Larger ships are best worked by larger crews." Then, each ship has a crew size. From those two pieces of information, you should have worked out that you were alone and probably needed a sloop. Then, after clicking a ship, the info on the side says "Seeking pirates to play with? Join an Open Crew." And each description tells you that you and your friends can join or your friends and other players can join. I get starting off confused, but you can't really say that the game has bad onboarding if you never read/thought about the descriptions in the first place.

    Your main problem is expecting the game to be an MMO and then trying to apply MMO logic to starting out. What you need to do is decide if you want to play with other people, and then pick a ship that you think fits that best. The others have explained well, if you need a crewmate, the LFG is a great place to go. Either join a post that sounds friendly or make your own. You can literally put in the LFG "New player, need help" and someone will want to help out most of the time.

    Cause I have a busy life and just wanna relax with the game. Not buy a manual and spend hour figuring out, what to do. Thats not spoon feeding, thats called "normal learning curve".

    There's no levels that grant more power in this game. The power you are given comes from knowledge and experience. So in a way, the learning curve never ends. You get better at playing the game every time that you play it. The only thing other players have over you is how long they've played the game and got experience. So, if you get past the initial learning curves, you can move on to the next and the next, and using what you've learned to win in scenarios is what makes you feel good.

  • @shortleopard603 Hey hi, welcome to the seas! SOT is a special kind of game but if you uninstall you will miss out on a great experience. It is worth your perseverance. You need to understand there is no linear progression, your ship and weapons will not be upgraded, there are only cosmetic enhancements. Your challenge is, if you chose to accept it, is improving yourself. So every time you play, everything you learn, is meeting that challenge. SOT is like learning to play a guitar, anyone can pick it up and in a short time play a reasonable tune, but it takes a lot of practice to master it.

    How you choose to learn is up to you, tools not rules. You can bash away on your own with no outside input, read social media, watch videos or find teachers, or a combination of everything it takes to get you successful voyages. There is no right way, only what works for you. This is why there is no "hand holding"; you have freedom to grow, learn, make mistakes, meet your own challenges and make your own way. It's your journey, your guitar... play it anyway you want.

    Would it help if I told you years ago when I started it took me three days to figure out how to raise the anchor? I look back, shake my head and laugh. I am not a master to this day and not sure I ever will be, but I have immensely enjoyed the trip and have experienced great satisfaction progressing. You are a new pirate, but I don't have one game item that is better than you already have. I only have cosmetics that represent my journey and my experience. Potentially in six weeks you could be a much better pirate than me. It's up to you!

  • @shortleopard603 new players are actually much luckier than those of us who started back when the game was first launched. They have the wealth of knowledge shared by these pirates and many guides shared on the social media platforms.
    We didn’t even have the maiden voyage to teach us the basics. You just gotta try things, that’s the best way to learn. New players also get prompts, press this, click that. There’s not much more the game can tell you really. Takes you to go out there and make your own adventures and learn on the go.

  • @shortleopard603 I don't disagree with you tbh. I remember being a bit lost in the beginning too. But I assume this is by design as Rare wants you to explore the sandbox on your own terms. I recall my sons and I on our first sessions...."Hey, what are those glowing ribbons? Don't know...let's go explore and find out". I remember our fear when the first Skeleton ship spawned out of nowhere....lol. In this game you learn by doing because you have nothing to lose (except time).

    It's actually very enjoyable. The tough part about this game, especially for new players, is while you are exploring, you can get ganked by another ship. Frustrating as hell. I hated that. I hated that while I was minding my own business trying to grind for cosmetics, others would ruin my day. Finally, when you reach a certain level, usually Pirate Lord, that doesn't matter as much since you will have most of everything you might want and fighting others adds to the making your day unpredictable, which is fun too.

    In the end, this game is a blast. There are so many paths you can choose to go that makes every day a new adventure.

    So give it another chance, I'm sure you'll see why so many love this game.

  • @shortleopard603 said in New player - COMPLETELY lost:

    Cause I have a busy life and just wanna relax with the game. Not buy a manual and spend hour figuring out, what to do. Thats not spoon feeding, thats called "normal learning curve".

    Everyone has a life with obligations and stresses.

    The thing about being new in this game or having limited time to play it is that everything matters and everything counts.

    Killing this or killing that, opening this or finishing that, turning this or that in, random action here and random action there. It all counts for something, commendations and events, deeds, season pass

    That's something veterans of piracy no longer have. A loss is just a loss to a piratical old timer but a loss is never just a loss to those that haven't yet accomplished as much.

    Imo it's very important for pirates that are new to just focus on living in the moment. Falling in love with the freedom that the sea brings. Everything you do is going to count for something for many months ahead. Play to enjoy and explore and everything else comes later.

    You only get a short window of time to have no idea what is going on when experiencing something new. That isn't something to run from it's something to embrace. That's where the foundation is built. In the unknown, where everything is new and exciting and mysterious.

    It's a thrill that gold and achievement can never bring back to your experience. Be confused, be lost, it's a wonderful thing for an adventurer to go through.

  • @junior7973
    No, that's not what i mean , i've watched many videos of people that tried to teach others with their You Tube videos , but when i ask a question then You Tube doesn't answer....People that take you along on a journey will probably answer your' questions...

  • @clumsy-george Ehh how would that work lol? Even if we take the sloop "new guy" would still have to learn on his/her own
    An example would be I can control the ships speed (combat speed if you like) but other then hit whatever "new guy" hit the other ship is still down to "trials and errors"

    All OP have to do is pick up some resource (don't have to) and set sail, you don't even have to pick up a voyage(s) one can just sail and do whatever

  • SOT is actually very accessible, you just skipped the tutorial that shows the basics.

    You should appreciate the fact that this game doesn't tell you exactly what you should be doing and that you actually need to turn some gears in your head to figure things out, it's quite rare these days to find games like this, especially with PVP that can happen anywhere at anytime.

    People have also been conditioned to not use their brain while gaming, as almost every game that has come out in the past 10~ years has flashing UI markers, minimaps and sometimes even glowing paths that can't be missed and lead the player straight to their objective.

    The worst thing that happens from playing SOT is that most other games will become a bit boring and easy, and that UI and map markers will start to look quite obnoxious.

  • @junior7973

    of course , but what we meant was : Guide a New Pirate around the world , show him/her how to start to sail , where to sail to , how to get maps and so on ... That , of course , doesn't mean to create perfect cannonneers , or tactical sailers . that's impossible to do in an afternoon... i'm still having trouble hitting ships if i have to put the game down for a week , thanks to circumstances...

    But there is a difference between jumping in a game where you are lost or the fact that someone took time to guide you in this Magical world...

    It may seem as a bit of a loss of time to you , but i can assure you that there is a lot of joy and even a bit of pride if you hear that after a session people were motivated to keep playing ... And gaining experience with people who know a thing or two is always better than reading a long list of tips and tricks ... There always needs to be an oppertunity left for " suprises" , so we didn't betray any Tall Tale or solution , we only told him what they were or how to trigger them because Tall Tales are Sacred in our opinion...

    A game is not always about being or becoming the Best of the Best , sometimes it's just fun to explore and meet all those colourful people , if they dared to use gamechat that is...

  • @shortleopard603 i sent you a message on xbox when you were playing saying i would be happy to show you the ropes, then sent you a message on this forum, then invited you to an xbox call. I'll even make choo choo noises while I'm spoon feeding you.

  • @clumsy-george I'm still gonna ask how would that "system" work? Or how would the devs make it? You have yet to make that clear
    And sounds a lot like the "thing" you talk about is called crewmate...

    But I get it, it's hard for some to "handle" that type of freedoom SoT offer as Raaka Verinen said

    "People have also been conditioned to not use their brain while gaming, as almost every game that has come out in the past 10~ years has flashing UI markers, minimaps and sometimes even glowing paths that can't be missed and lead the player straight to their objective."

  • @junior7973

    It doesn't has to be difficult : Rare could organize the question if people would be interested to spend some time , people they find on this Forum or maybe Twitter . Of course ,they need to be sure they aren't trolls ... Or people can just do that out of their own movement ... A title is not necessary but it would or could motivate people to do that .

    We didn't need a title , we just did and we enjoyed it , and some of those Pirates are still sailing to this day... i would also like to play other multiplayer orientated games , don't mean shooters but a bit like this or Fallout 76 , and some others but ... It isn't easy to jump into a game that is already running for some years so a bit of guidance , not to get good , but just knowing how to start would be welcome...

    Back in the day , this Community had no problem of doing this ...but times moves on and so did several Pillars of this Community ...alas.

  • Ahoy matey!!!

    You can solo sloop, it's the smallestr boat. When arriving to an outpost, go to the gold hoarders first. Get to know the game, how to pin point other islands on the map.
    If you are completely lost, some people do upload the quests on Youtube, worth a shot. You shouldn't give up. If you go to the Sea of Thieves discord, a lot of other pirates like yourself will help you and show you the ropes.

    I usually solo sloop, not the most effective way to get quickly to pirate legend nor harvesting em skullies and chests and other treasure.

    I hope the seas treat ye well says I!!

  • @shortleopard603

    Hey Bud, Welcome to Sea of Thieves!

    As a Veteran Player for 4 Years ( on March 18th ) Let me welcome you to one of the most addicting games out there! I can see your frustration especially being a BRAND NEW player coming into this game with 4 years worth of Content to explore. You can only imagine what it was like for us back in 2018.

    If you are playing alone, I highly recommend doing a Sloop Closed Crew. When you load into the Outpost, just walk around and explore, check out all of shops, talk to all of the NPC Players and see what they have to say and offer.

    Look in Barrels that you see on Islands and Outposts, grab some supplies for your boat and stock up! Once you make a little bit of money, there is a chest right next to the Shipwright on the Dock where you can Decorate your boat with all fancy cosmetics after purchasing them!

    Raise that Anchor, drop sails and just explore! Visit different Islands and see what is there, you'll find random Rowboats filled with goodies, random Treasure, Enemy AI's to fight and more.

    While sailing, you may encounter some wild Sea Life that will cause a Threat to you so be prepared! All I will say is when the water turns black and your boat stops moving, you are in for a surprise =)

    Also, don't forget you are a Pirate, so be careful of other player boats out there that you will meet! Some MAY be friendly to you, but other's not so much! Protect your Treasure at all Costs until you sell it at an Outpost!

    Just play it at your own pace, enjoy the game, and just LEARN. You will learn everyday. Check out some YouTube Videos as well! You will sink, OFTEN. Don't get frustrated. Get back on that boat and keep on Sailing!

    Happy Sailing!

  • @shortleopard603 I mean it's an adventure, explore, speak to NPC, inform yourself instead of sticking to your comfort zone and used to be babysit by everything although I can give it to you that it is clouded when you don't have a basic of things. And being with a friend is almost a must otherwise the game is pretty boring when you can't vomit at your mate

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