How-tos

The Cycle: Frontier beginners guide – Tips and tricks for new players


The Cycle: Frontier is an unforgiving experience: every time you drop onto the lush surface of Fortuna III, you risk losing everything you bring along with you. In order to progress in the game and have fun, it’s important to continuously leverage the risks you take against the investments you’ve made and to mentally prepare for failure. This guide will arm you with the tips and basic information you need to bypass many of the frustrations The Cycle: Frontier serves up to beginners.

Outfit yourself cheaply (unless you can’t afford to)

When you prepare your loadout for your next drop in The Cycle: Frontier, it’s usually a good idea to be stingy. Take an effective budget gun, and leave your second weapon slot open — that gives you extra room for any gun you find on the surface. Also don’t bring any mining gear (the Mining Tool and the Scanner are a waste of currency and backpack space in their current state), and don’t buy Data Drives, since you can almost always find them lying around Uplinks stations.

Sometimes you will be tempted to splurge on high-end equipment to give yourself an edge. There’s nothing wrong with that — especially if you have a difficult contract to fulfill — as long as you commit to it. If you are taking an expensive gun or a large backpack, don’t cheap out on your helmet and body armor, unless you want to donate your shiny gear to an ambusher with a rusty trenchgun.

While on the planet, make sure to move valuable loot to your Safe Pocket. Don’t stash ammo or consumables there unless that’s all you have; keeping them in your backpack instead allows you to lose encumbrance every time you fight or heal, which is a small but not insignificant help. Also note that Old Currency tokens are weightless, meaning you can put them in the Safe Pocket even if it’s full.

Don’t fight unless you can win

You will often run into other prospectors in The Cycle: Frontier and feel compelled to light them up on sight. That’s all good and well, except combat encounters in Frontier can be very unpredictable compared to other FPS games. Before you engage, consider the following:

  1. Are you sure you are not outnumbered? Trios and duos share the same lobbies as solos in The Cycle: Frontier.
  2. Are you fighting in the best range for your weapon? Many players think that as long as they have bought a high-penetration weapon, they can easily gun down everyone in their way. However, different ammo types have different damage dropoff values, with light ammo being particularly weak in this regard. An ASP Flechette Gun can kill in less than a second if your opponent is right next to you, but it will barely tickle them if they are more than 30 meters away.
  3. Is peace an option? If your backpack is full of valuables and you are near your extraction as a solo, negotiating a safe exit may be your best bet. If you want to try it, simply pull up your comms wheel and open with “Hello” to let your opponent know you would like to talk. Then use “Friend?” to suggest an alliance. If the other player is in a similar mood, they will respond accordingly, and you will both be able to continue your respective missions safely. Sometimes the other player will trade items with you, or even tag along for the rest of your mission (this is particularly great, as it allows you to extract at either player’s extraction points.) Anecdotal evidence suggests this method works more often than not, though occasionally you will get shot in the back the moment you look away from your new friend.

If you don’t think you can win and you would rather not negotiate, you can try to make an escape by throwing a Smoke Grenade. This cheap consumable will often save your life, and it’s also a great tool to obscure your entry into the extraction ship if you fear snipers may be camping nearby.

Spend your earnings wisely

Most materials and items in The Cycle: Frontier can be sold or traded for multiple different uses. For example, Polymetallic Prefabricate can be used to craft high-level weapon attachments, invested in Quarters upgrades, delivered for Faction contracts, or simply sold for some quick K-marks. Depending on what type of player you are, you should dump your hard-earned loot into the area that allows you to do more of what you like.

That said, there are some general tips you should consider. For starters, any materials used to craft Backpacks should be your priority to extract with and should never be traded for anything else. Backpacks are the most important item in The Cycle: Frontier, as higher tier packs allow you to carry more loot unencumbered, and thus to survive longer and fulfill more Contracts.

You should also avoid selling materials in general unless you’re trying to just nudge into the next Faction tier to unlock new Contracts. Floating a lot of resources in your Stash is the best way to quickly fulfill delivery Contracts; this pays off a lot more K-marks and Faction points than just selling materials. To ensure you progress in The Cycle: Frontier as quickly as possible, focus on upgrading your Inventory tech tree for your Quarters first, increasing your Stash and Safe Pocket sizes.

One-shot Striders with your knife

This final bit of advice is incredibly simple: holding M1 with your knife for a split-second charges up your melee attack, allowing you to kill Striders in one hit, silently and without spending ammo. As basic as this move is, it seems that most The Cycle: Frontier players aren’t aware of it, considering that a recent community manager post on Discord highlighted Striders as the creature responsible for the most prospector deaths so far.



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