Monster Hunter Wilds players have found a new way to dodge certain attacks flawlessly – using paid emotes to strike their best pose
Pose!

Nobody likes pay-to-win mechanics in games, but it turns out 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Monster Hunter Wilds has some paid emotes that give you a serious advඣantage during combat.
There are a series of emotes that can be bought and used to pose in the game's built-in photo mode, and some of them allow you to ౠlevitate in 🎐mid-air. This allows you to simply jump over and avoid a lot of low attacks.
, one player has demonstrated this using the Vanish Sign to hop over a Mizutsune’s horizontal water beam attack. Rather than dodging or blocking, the player simply opens up their emote wheel and strikes the pose, which suspends them in the air above the attack safely. This kind of strategy will be especially useful against the 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:new Tempered Mizutsune variant.やったぜ!・:*+.(( °ω° ))/.:+ pic.twitter.com/M2n5KkcukR
Other poses also help you avoid attacks. The Shinobi pose gets you in the air, and the🎀 This Can't Be and Celebratory Knee Slide ones lower you, helping you avoid high attacks.
While these are al🎉l te🌊chnically pay-to-win, they also demonstrate just how accurate the hitboxes in Monster Hunter Wilds are. Next time you get clipped by an attack you swear you dodged, maybe think again.
If you want these emote packs for yourself, they're luckily quite cheap. The Photo Pose Set Vol. 1, which contains the Vanish Sign, is just $4, and t♏he Celebratory Knee Slide is just $2. That's only an extra six bucks, but still, I can understand why some would be annoyed that they'll nee💖d to pay more to stand a better chance against some of the monsters.
In the meantime, check out our Monster Hunter Wilds weapon tier list so you know what to use against the toughest foes, as well as our 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Monster Hunter Wilds review to find out why we think it's the "new peak of the series."
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I'm Issy, a freelancer who you'll now occasionally see over here covering news on GamesRadar. I've always had a passion for playing games, but I learned how to write about them while doing my Film and TV degrees at the University of Warwick and contributing to the student paper, The Boar. After university I worked at ThꦍeGamer before heading up the news section at Dot Esports. Now you'll find me freelancing for Rolling Stone, NME, Inverse, and many more places. I love all things horror, narrative-driven, and indie, and I mainly play on my PS5. I'm currently clearing my backlog and loving Dishonored 2.
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