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Valheim details customisable difficulty settings and a sort-of creative modePerfect for builders, peaceful strollers, and hardcore survivors

Perfect for builders, peaceful strollers, and hardcore survivors

Valheim Mistlands key art which shows two vikings venturing into an uncharted forest. One holds a torch, the other looks at a hare, while a massive sword lies stuck in the earth behind them.

As one of the verybest survival gameson PC (according to usandRPS readers),Valheimis getting even more ways to play around in its Norse sandbox. Developer Jonathan Smårs took to Twitter yesterday to tease a bunch of difficulty presets and customisable sliders, letting you modify the Viking experience to your liking. The options include both a creative mode (a là Minecraft) and a more ‘immersive’ option.Valheim’s Developers Show Us Everything Mistlands Has To OfferWatch on YouTubeThe brief video that Smårs uploaded only skims through the options, but diligently pausing the video reveals the descriptions for each setting. You can also ignore all of the presets and simply create your own custom difficulty using the modifiers and sliders.The presets include the difficulty options you’d expect. For instance, the Easy, Hard, and Hardcore options impact the difficulty of combat, the number of resources, and the frequency of enemy raids on player bases. But there are some funkier options present too.Hammer mode seems like Valheim’s version of a creative mode. Hammer turns on the passive enemies modifier, meaning baddies won’t attack unless they’re provoked, and it allows you to construct all buildings for free. It’s not like the game’s Viking builders need much help though; players have already constructed everythingfrom The Lord Of The Rings’ Eye Of Sauron to Shrek’s shitter- excuse me, Shrek’spowder room- in Valheim, but I’m excited to see if this newfound freedom on construction costs produces some even wilder structures.Are your ready for hardcore mode in#Valheim? ☠️..or do you prefer something more chill?Note: Actual settings are not final!@valheimgame#gamedev#indiedev#gamedevelopmentpic.twitter.com/9OtOxDpkAo— Jonathan Smårs (@jsmars)April 17, 2023To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settingsThe Immersive option ramps up the survival part of the game, turning off the map and portals, forcing you to really learn your surroundings. And finally, Casual mode also has passive enemies, easy combat, and anything else that will make your playthrough more peaceful. It’s essentially the perfect mode for a virtual hike, letting you soak in Valheim’s soothing blockiness.Smårs confirmed that you’ll be able to change the difficulty in existing worlds, as well as new ones, but it should be noted that the “Actual settings are not final!” yet. Right now, there’s no word on when those final settings might be released yet either, but we’ll be keeping our eyes peeled.Ed and Liam chatted with Smårs last November as theychecked out Valheim’s big Mistlands update, which you can watch in the embedded video above. If you’d like to return to the world of Valheim - or jump in for the first time - you can either grab it on Game Pass, or onSteamfor £15/$20/€20.

As one of the verybest survival gameson PC (according to usandRPS readers),Valheimis getting even more ways to play around in its Norse sandbox. Developer Jonathan Smårs took to Twitter yesterday to tease a bunch of difficulty presets and customisable sliders, letting you modify the Viking experience to your liking. The options include both a creative mode (a là Minecraft) and a more ‘immersive’ option.Valheim’s Developers Show Us Everything Mistlands Has To OfferWatch on YouTubeThe brief video that Smårs uploaded only skims through the options, but diligently pausing the video reveals the descriptions for each setting. You can also ignore all of the presets and simply create your own custom difficulty using the modifiers and sliders.The presets include the difficulty options you’d expect. For instance, the Easy, Hard, and Hardcore options impact the difficulty of combat, the number of resources, and the frequency of enemy raids on player bases. But there are some funkier options present too.Hammer mode seems like Valheim’s version of a creative mode. Hammer turns on the passive enemies modifier, meaning baddies won’t attack unless they’re provoked, and it allows you to construct all buildings for free. It’s not like the game’s Viking builders need much help though; players have already constructed everythingfrom The Lord Of The Rings’ Eye Of Sauron to Shrek’s shitter- excuse me, Shrek’spowder room- in Valheim, but I’m excited to see if this newfound freedom on construction costs produces some even wilder structures.Are your ready for hardcore mode in#Valheim? ☠️..or do you prefer something more chill?Note: Actual settings are not final!@valheimgame#gamedev#indiedev#gamedevelopmentpic.twitter.com/9OtOxDpkAo— Jonathan Smårs (@jsmars)April 17, 2023To see this content please enable targeting cookies.Manage cookie settingsThe Immersive option ramps up the survival part of the game, turning off the map and portals, forcing you to really learn your surroundings. And finally, Casual mode also has passive enemies, easy combat, and anything else that will make your playthrough more peaceful. It’s essentially the perfect mode for a virtual hike, letting you soak in Valheim’s soothing blockiness.Smårs confirmed that you’ll be able to change the difficulty in existing worlds, as well as new ones, but it should be noted that the “Actual settings are not final!” yet. Right now, there’s no word on when those final settings might be released yet either, but we’ll be keeping our eyes peeled.Ed and Liam chatted with Smårs last November as theychecked out Valheim’s big Mistlands update, which you can watch in the embedded video above. If you’d like to return to the world of Valheim - or jump in for the first time - you can either grab it on Game Pass, or onSteamfor £15/$20/€20.

As one of the verybest survival gameson PC (according to usandRPS readers),Valheimis getting even more ways to play around in its Norse sandbox. Developer Jonathan Smårs took to Twitter yesterday to tease a bunch of difficulty presets and customisable sliders, letting you modify the Viking experience to your liking. The options include both a creative mode (a là Minecraft) and a more ‘immersive’ option.

Valheim’s Developers Show Us Everything Mistlands Has To OfferWatch on YouTube

Valheim’s Developers Show Us Everything Mistlands Has To Offer

Cover image for YouTube video

The brief video that Smårs uploaded only skims through the options, but diligently pausing the video reveals the descriptions for each setting. You can also ignore all of the presets and simply create your own custom difficulty using the modifiers and sliders.

The presets include the difficulty options you’d expect. For instance, the Easy, Hard, and Hardcore options impact the difficulty of combat, the number of resources, and the frequency of enemy raids on player bases. But there are some funkier options present too.

Hammer mode seems like Valheim’s version of a creative mode. Hammer turns on the passive enemies modifier, meaning baddies won’t attack unless they’re provoked, and it allows you to construct all buildings for free. It’s not like the game’s Viking builders need much help though; players have already constructed everythingfrom The Lord Of The Rings’ Eye Of Sauron to Shrek’s shitter- excuse me, Shrek’spowder room- in Valheim, but I’m excited to see if this newfound freedom on construction costs produces some even wilder structures.

Are your ready for hardcore mode in#Valheim? ☠️..or do you prefer something more chill?Note: Actual settings are not final!@valheimgame#gamedev#indiedev#gamedevelopmentpic.twitter.com/9OtOxDpkAo— Jonathan Smårs (@jsmars)April 17, 2023

Are your ready for hardcore mode in#Valheim? ☠️..or do you prefer something more chill?Note: Actual settings are not final!@valheimgame#gamedev#indiedev#gamedevelopmentpic.twitter.com/9OtOxDpkAo

The Immersive option ramps up the survival part of the game, turning off the map and portals, forcing you to really learn your surroundings. And finally, Casual mode also has passive enemies, easy combat, and anything else that will make your playthrough more peaceful. It’s essentially the perfect mode for a virtual hike, letting you soak in Valheim’s soothing blockiness.

Smårs confirmed that you’ll be able to change the difficulty in existing worlds, as well as new ones, but it should be noted that the “Actual settings are not final!” yet. Right now, there’s no word on when those final settings might be released yet either, but we’ll be keeping our eyes peeled.

Ed and Liam chatted with Smårs last November as theychecked out Valheim’s big Mistlands update, which you can watch in the embedded video above. If you’d like to return to the world of Valheim - or jump in for the first time - you can either grab it on Game Pass, or onSteamfor £15/$20/€20.