Picture this: It’s 2006. Your parents just got you Kingdom Hearts 2, which, for whatever reason, you’re obsessed with. In fact, you like it so much that your parents even got you a massive book filled with information on the game. It’s like an ancient tome; the thing weighs at least six pounds and its page count nears or exceeds 1,000.
When I was a kid, I spent hours with my nose deep in that old BradyGames’ Kingdom Hearts II strategy guide. It had information on everything in the game that I needed to know. Pages upon pages of “how to beat this boss” or “why you need to pick up this item so you can eventually craft this Keyblade.” At the time, I felt that with a game so massive, there wasn’t any way I could play without a strategy guide.
Some 16 years later, Elden Ring has me feeling the same way.
If there’s one thing you’ve heard from the people playing Elden Ring, it’s that the game is immense — and that couldn’t be any more true. I’m only nearing the 30-hour mark in my playtime, but others I know who have crossed 70 hours are still discovering things: New areas, bosses, dungeons, and content to be explored over two-and-a-half days into playing a game. That’s a mind-boggling number of things to keep track of.
During about 20 of my hours playing Elden Ring, I’ve had the game’s Fextralife Wiki open on my second monitor. That’s not to say that I always use it — sometimes you have to let the spirit of adventure take you and just go with the flow, safety be damned. But whenever I’m curious about how to purchase a certain item or whether or not I’m missing something in a dungeon, I give it a read.
Using that Wiki, I’ve been able to purchase more smithing stones to upgrade my weapons, and have found gear that I would’ve
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