



As well as this, you can also customise the loadout for each vehicle, so the key is to make each loadout work for both the map and how you play. That means tanks, planes, trains, whatever - get comfortable with them, get used to them and get attacking with them. The maps we've played so far tell us one thing - maps are HUGE and vehicles are going to be important. The game wants you to use them like an emplacement, which means staying still and just unloading your bullets on a player or position. As best we can tell, the heavier the gun, the more inaccurate they are on the move. The longer you shoot, the straighter the bullets are and the better chance you've got of taking someone out. Instead, your best chance of getting points is to park yourself near a window ledge or under some kind of cover and crouch. We'll go through the various classes in a further point, but the big thing to take away is that the larger machine guns in Support Class are hopelessly inaccurate when you try to run and gun. SUPPORT WEAPONS BECOME ACCURATE THE LONGER YOU FIRE So how can you level the playing field? Well, we've come up with a few tips and tricks we've learned so far that'll help save you from total embarrassment and get your ratios and stats up pretty quickly.ġ0. Battlefield 1, even with its unique setting, is exactly the same. There's always players that seem to know more, shoot straighter and move faster than you and can wipe you off the map just as soon as you spawn in. As with any first-person shooter, the learning curve can be more than a little steep.
