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There are multiple players who are going to immediately take to the game, but there are also going to be people who do not know what they are doing. There are some common mistakes that many players make while playing through the game.

7 Acting Selfish

Acting selfish is going to be the mistake that gets so many players killed in the long run. While it may work in other survival horror games, being selfish in The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil in Me will be punished.

Being selfish and only caring about a player’s own self is a great way to get important characters killed off, meaning players will not be able to go for the best ending. It is best to put the player’s own neck on the line every chance they can get.

6 Forgetting To Take A Look Around

There are multiple things for a player to explore and discover within the game The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil in Me. A lot of these things can lead to all sorts of information being gathered up along the way.

This can include being able to learn the full picture of the story - all the worldbuilding coming together - or even finding a vital clue on where to go next. A player should remember to try and examine everything they can, so this way they do not miss finding or picking up anything.

5 Forgetting That Saying Nothing Is An Option

There are going to be times when a player is given a choice on what to say - these are time sensitive choices as well, to cause further panic within a player. As such, a player may feel rushed to make a choice on what to say.

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However, something that many players may not realize - especially at first - is that saying nothing is actually a valid choice that can be used at times. Sometimes, if a player stays quiet and lets the other person speak, they will gain more info as the person keeps talking to fill the silence.

4 Not Knowing When The Game Saves

As it turns out, a player is not allowed to manually save in The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil in Me. This is something that the game made in order to keep a player from save scumming - that is, going back in their save file every time they make a wrong choice.

However, something many players may not know is when the game automatically saves, as players who quit the game before a save will lose progress. The safest time to quit is generally when the game switches perspectives, as it saves every time.

3 Forgetting To Mess Around With The Difficulty

Surprisingly, there is an actual difficulty mode for a player to mess with when they get started to the game. This difficulty mode can be for players who want to experience the story, but not the combat.

Many players can find a nice balance of game play and story if they adjust the accessibility of the game. However, not a lot of players know that it is a thing, and as such may try to keep going in a game too difficult for them.

2 Only Playing Through The Game Once

A player is going to need multiple play throughs in order to get all of the content they want to experience out of the game. Choices are permanent, after all, and the game will not let a player go back to fix their choices immediately.

Playing through the game multiple times is how a player is going to experience all the content that the game has to offer. It is worth it for the full story, anyway, so a player should have no qualms about it.

1 Not Replaying Scenes

There are going to be multiple scenes that a player will experience in The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil in Me. This is, of course, to be expected - within each scene will come multiple choices that a player will have to make.

As it turns out, though, a player can actually replay a lot of scenes that they just went through, in order to get a better outcome. It is worth noting that this is not the same as save scumming - a player will have to go all the way back to the beginning for these scenes, instead of just replaying one particular choice.

The Dark Pictures Anthology: The Devil in Meis available on PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X and Series S, and Microsoft Windows.

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