You can be running, fighting or harvesting, the game just stops dead (it doesn’t even slow down) and then it carries on like nothing has happened. Another issue is that Rust Console Edition stalls very frequently, and whatever you are doing at the time just stops. The animals are worse, believe it or not, and I’ve been killed by a deer stuck in a cliff, and been attacked by a horse stuck in a rock… and best of all, if you are killed by an animal, they are all called James, which is a classy touch even if it is confusing why. The Xbox players are just as unforgiving, but when they are armed only with rocks, it’s a bit easier to run away. My pro tip is to stick to the Xbox only servers, as the PC players have had years to get tooled up and will happily ruin your whole day. It is absolutely demoralising, and I soon found myself in the bottom half of the server browser, looking for the less populated servers in order to stand a better chance of living. You could say that the player base in Rust Console Edition is without doubt the most brutal and unforgiving I have ever encountered, taking every opportunity to screw others over and kill the weak without hesitation. Without a word of a lie, I had made a wooden hut and managed to lock the door, so the other player decided to break through the wall, shoot me in the face with a shotgun, help himself to anything that wasn’t tied down, and then went on his merry way without a care in the world. This is very annoying, but nothing like as annoying as if you manage to escape the beach (where you seem to always spawn if you haven’t managed to put a sleeping bag down somewhere to act as a spawn point), gather some resources and cobble together a crude shelter, only to then have someone decide that you may have something that they want. In fact, the first thing that hits you upon spawning into the world is usually a much higher level being killing you instantly fast sending you back to the spawn screen. Rust: Console Edition is available now for PS4 and Xbox One.The first thing to mention is that Rust is a multiplayer only experience, so forget the peaceful exploration of Minecraft, because this is nothing like that. And if you don’t want aim assist, you can always disable it. While nobody being able to aim on a controller meaning that fights are a bit ridiculous on console, aim assist helping people out with their controller aim will level the playing field a little more. To enable aim assist in Rust on PS4 and Xbox One, go to your settings either from the main or pause menu and then go to Controls > Sticks and enable aim assist to On.īear in mind that Double Eleven are constantly updating the game to optimise it, so if you have no option to enable aim assist in Rust: Console Edition, it’s likely because the developers have had to disable it or it needs more testing.Īim assist of course wasn’t a feature of Rust: Console Edition’s early betas, though Double Eleven did promise to add it along the line. Rust on PC is all about the fine margins of aiming and hitting your shots, while Rust: Console Edition will probably leave you reaching for the aim assist. Rust: Console Edition is pretty much everything you know and love (and probably dread) about Rust in a smaller package for PlayStation and Xbox fans.
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