Risk of Rain 2 Beginner's Guide - Tips & Tricks
5-Minute Primer
Risk of Rain 2 is a third-person roguelite shooter that drops you onto an alien planet and tasks you with surviving until you can escape. Unlike traditional games, there is no pause button, enemies scale infinitely, and death is permanent. You select a survivor, land on a map, open chests to gain random items that stack and synergize, find a teleporter to go to the next level, and repeat until you beat the final boss or die trying. The game is entirely about momentum: if you stand still, the difficulty timer will swallow you whole. If you keep moving, killing, and looting efficiently, you transform into an unstoppable god of destruction. Everything in this guide is designed to help you achieve that momentum as smoothly as possible.

First Hour Checklist
Your first few runs will likely end in chaotic death, and that is completely normal. However, you should approach these early runs with a clear set of priorities to build muscle memory and unlock the foundational tools you need for future success. Check off these tasks during your first hour of playtime:
- Complete the first teleporter event: Learn the rhythm of activating the teleporter, surviving the charging phase, and using the teleporter pad to leave.
- Die on purpose after stage 2: Once you understand the basics, die so you can return to the lobby and spend your hard-earned money.
- Buy the Equipment Drone at the shop: This is your absolute first priority purchase. It costs $50 and gives you a vital fourth ability.
- Unlock the Captain: Spend money to unlock the Captain's bubble shield, which makes early teleporter events infinitely easier.
- Experiment with two different survivors: Try Commando for your first life, then switch to Huntress or Engineer to feel how drastically the game changes.
- Find a 3D printer: Locate at least one 3D printer to understand how item duplication works.

Key Systems Explained
Combat and Enemy Scaling
Combat in Risk of Rain 2 is fast, mobility-focused, and highly reliant on positioning. Every enemy has a telegraphed attack, and learning to dodge-roll or sprint through these attacks is more important than raw damage output. The game uses a unique difficulty scaling system tied to a timer in the top right corner of your screen. Every 60 seconds, the difficulty increases, spawning tougher elite enemies and increasing the overall health and damage of all foes. This means time is your most valuable resource. Taking ten minutes to clear a map for extra items will often result in a harder subsequent stage than if you had left immediately. Learning to balance looting speed with stage progression is the core skill of the game.
The Economy
The in-game economy revolves around gold, Lunar Coins, and limited chest types. Gold drops from enemies and is used to open standard chests, activate shrines, and operate 3D printers. Gold disappears when you leave a stage, so spend it all. Lunar Coins are a persistent, account-bound currency that drops rarely from enemies or environmental objects. You keep these even if you die. They are used to buy Lunar items at the shop between runs, unlock new survivors, or activate special Lunar shrines in-game that offer powerful items at a severe cost (like losing 90% of your health). Managing Lunar Coins early on is critical, as you want to avoid spending them on single-run items when you desperately need permanent unlocks.
Progression and the Loop
Each run is self-contained. If you die, you lose all your items and start from scratch. However, your overall account progression is tracked via the Profile level. Gaining profile levels unlocks new items to spawn in your runs, new challenges to complete, and new logistical slots (which allow you to pick what items spawn in a run). Challenges are specific tasks—like "Kill 15 enemies in 3 seconds"—that reward you with permanent unlocks, such as new survivors or game-altering artifacts. The meta-progression is slow but meaningful, ensuring that even a disastrous run where you die in two minutes feels like it contributed to your long-term success.

Build / Character Choices
Choosing the right survivor drastically alters your early game experience. While you will eventually want to master all of them to complete challenges, beginners should stick to a few specific characters to learn the ropes without becoming frustrated.
The Best Starting Choice: Commando
The Commando is the default character, and for good reason. He is perfectly balanced and excels at teaching the game's core mechanics. His primary attack, Double Tap, fires two quick, accurate shots. His secondary, Full Metal Jacket, pierces through all enemies and walls, allowing you to safely damage enemies hiding behind cover. His utility is a simple dodge roll that grants brief invincibility frames—a crucial tool for learning enemy attack timings. His ultimate, Suppressive Fire, stuns enemies in a cone, giving you massive crowd control. Play Commando until you can consistently reach stage 4 or 5. If you are struggling with Commando, you are struggling with the game's fundamentals, not the character.
The Ranged Alternative: Huntress
If you struggle with aiming in a fast-paced 3D environment, the Huntress is your savior. Her signature trait is that her primary attack, Strafe, automatically aims at the nearest enemy as long as you are vaguely looking in their direction. She also has Flurry, a rapid-fire attack that locks onto a single target, and Glacial Impact, which freezes enemies solid. Her ultimate, Arrow Rain, is a massive area-of-effect damage tool. The trade-off is that she has no defensive abilities (no dodge roll, no shield). She teaches you how to maintain distance and use verticality to survive, but removes the burden of precise aiming.
The Safe Pick: Engineer
The Engineer is highly recommended for players coming from tower defense games or those who find the early game chaos overwhelming. He has the highest effective health out of any survivor in the early game. His primary fire shoots bouncing grenades, while his secondary places a static Turret that auto-attacks enemies. He can have two turrets out at once, effectively tripling your damage output and giving enemies other targets to shoot. His utility places a massive Shield that blocks all incoming projectiles from outside, which trivializes the notoriously difficult early teleporter events. Play Engineer if you want a relaxed, methodical pace while you learn the maps and item synergies.
Who to Avoid Initially
Avoid MUL-T (requires high mechanical speed and complex inventory management), Loader (requires precise grappling hook mechanics and understanding of i-frames), and Artificer (extremely fragile, requires precise aiming and mana management). Save these for after you have a dozen successful runs under your belt.

Pitfalls to Dodge
New players inevitably fall into several traps that cut their runs short. Recognizing and avoiding these common rookie errors will instantly double your survival time.
- Ignoring the Teleporter Timer: When you activate a teleporter, a 90-second timer starts. During this time, enemies spawn in massive waves. The portal only opens once the timer hits zero. The biggest mistake is activating the teleporter, running away to explore the map, and getting picked off by elite enemies. When you hit the button, stay near the teleporter, circle-strafe around it, and focus purely on survival until it opens.
- Hoarding Lunar Coins: New players often refuse to spend Lunar Coins because they are rare. This is backwards. Your first priority is spending 50 Lunar Coins on the Equipment Drone at the lobby shop. Your second priority is unlocking the Captain's Brooch (shield ability) for 10 coins. Do not spend Lunar Coins on the Bazaar between Realms until you have these two permanent upgrades.
- Chesting Blindly: Opening every single chest on a stage before finding the teleporter is a death sentence. The longer you take, the harder the game gets. You should find the teleporter first, clear the immediate area around it, and then spend your remaining gold on chests that are relatively close to the teleporter. If a chest is across the map and you are low on gold, skip it.
- Standing Still: If you stop moving, you die. This applies to combat, looting, and waiting. Always be strafing, always be jumping, and always be aware of your surroundings. Standing still to read an item description or aim a difficult shot will usually result in a Beetle guard slamming into you from off-screen.
- Taking Bad Lunar Items: Lunar items (indicated by a blue glow) offer massive power spikes but come with severe, permanent drawbacks. Stone Flux Pauldron cuts your movement speed in half when you aren't sprinting. Brittle Crown makes you lose gold when you take damage. Beginners often take these because the upside looks cool, only to realize the downside makes the run unfun and unplayable. Until you understand the game's pacing, skip most Lunar items unless you desperately need a specific power spike.
- Ignoring 3D Printers: 3D Printers allow you to trade a specific type of item in your inventory for another random item of that same tier. If you have a bad common item, a 3D Printer gives you a free reroll into a potentially run-defining item. Always look for the glowing green lasers of a 3D Printer and prioritize using them.
- Fighting Everything on the Ground: The maps in Risk of Rain 2 are built vertically. Enemies spawn everywhere. If you see a massive horde scaling a cliff below you, do not jump down to fight them. Let them come to you, or simply walk away. You are not required to kill every enemy; you are only required to survive.
Next Steps
Once you can consistently reach stage 5 with the Commando, Huntress, or Engineer, you have graduated from the beginner phase. Your next goal is to start piecing together how the game's various systems interlock to create the massive power fantasies the game is famous for.
Learning Item Synergies
Stop looking at items in isolation and start looking at how they combine. Ukulele and AtG Missile Mk. 1 both deal area-of-effect damage on hit. If you stack these with items that increase your attack speed, like Soldier's Syringe, you create a chain reaction where a single shot causes a dozen explosives to go off simultaneously. Brilliant Behemoth adds explosive damage to all your attacks, which procs both the Ukulele and the Missiles, leading to exponential damage scaling. Spend time reading item descriptions carefully and thinking about how they interact with your specific survivor's skills.
Mastering the Bazaar Between Realms
On stage 3 or 4, you will encounter a blue portal. Jumping into it takes you to a secret shop populated by a mysterious merchant. Here, you can spend Lunar Coins to buy highly powerful Lunar items, or trade regular items for massive multipliers using the Trade-off Terminals (e.g., trading 5 common items for 1 uncommon item). Once you have your permanent unlocks sorted, saving up 15 to 20 Lunar Coins to spend at the Bazaar is an excellent way to guarantee a strong mid-game.
Understanding the Final Boss
The game does not end by running out of stages. After looping back to the first stage (stage 5 and beyond), you must actively locate the Primordial Teleporter. This portal takes you to the Realm of the Ancients, where you fight the game's final boss, Mithrix. Do not attempt this fight until you have a solid build consisting of at least 15-20 items. The fight has multiple distinct phases, and surviving requires a mix of high mobility, sustained damage, and healing. Look up a video guide specifically for Mithrix before attempting him, as his mechanics are highly unique and unforgiving.
Unlocking Artifacts
Artifacts are toggleable modifiers that completely change how the game plays. For example, Artifact of Dissonance makes elite enemies appear much earlier, while Artifact of Sacrifice removes all chests but causes enemies to drop free items when killed. Unlocking and experimenting with artifacts is where Risk of Rain 2 truly becomes a sandbox. You unlock artifacts by completing specific, hidden puzzles found in the game's secret maps—such as the Abandoned Aqueduct or the Sulphurous Pools. Exploring off the beaten path to find these hidden zones should be your primary motivation once standard runs feel too easy.
Remember that Risk of Rain 2 is a game of momentum. Every chest you open, every enemy you kill, and every second you save compounds into a massive snowball effect. Focus on mastering the basics of movement and survival first, and the universe of complex item synergies will naturally open up to you as you play. Good luck, survivor.





