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The Isle Cheats

The Isle

Cheat Codes:
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Submitted by: David K.

Parasaurolophus Survival Guide:
-------------------------------
Written by Sargon The Grape

This guide attempts to bring you the most up-to-date survival walkthrough for 
Parasaurolophus.

-=Stat Rundown=-
Parasaurolophus is a fairly safe choice of dinosaur for a player who wishes to avoid 
combat, but not be totally helpless when forced to fight. Despite being seen as an 
easy meal by many, a vigilant Para is difficult if not impossible to chase down and 
kill without being quietly surrounded by a stealthy pack beforehand.

-=Pros=-
* Faster than anything which can easily kill it.
* Stronger than anything which can easily outrun it.
* Low food and water requirements even while growing.

-=Cons=-
* Fairly slow to grow (3 and 1/2 hours from spawn to full adult).
* Very low bleeding resistance.
* Loud as . The chat-call can be heard from almost as far away as most 1-calls.

-=Growth Strategy
The juvenile Parasaurolophus is too slow to run from most predators, and too weak to 
fight anything its own size or larger. Therefore, the order of the day is stealth. 
Despite its flamboyant coloration, the juvie Para is well-suited to hiding under trees 
with low-hanging branches thanks to its sitting animation, wherein it slightly curls its
 body to reduce length. Since the juvie Para can last about a half hour without eating 
or drinking, filling up both bars right at dusk and then sitting under a tree for the 
night is the most ideal way to gain substantial growth whilst going unnoticed.

The adult Parasaurolophus is substantially faster and stronger right from the moment 
you hit “grow,” but still has a hard time with anything larger than Dilophosaurus for 
the first half of its growth. After hitting that halfway point, only large and fast 
predators Allosaurus and Giganotosaurus pose a major threat; said threat can be 
avoided through stealth, provided you can find foliage thick enough to hide you. 
Somewhere between 0.9 and 0.95 growth is when you can confidently hang out in open 
fields to take advantage of your speed.

-=Life as an Adult=-
The adult Parasaurolophus tends to find the most success with a semi-nomadic lifestyle,
but is just as viable as an explorer for those players trying to learn a map. It loses 
hunger and thirst slowly enough that a Para player can claim a rather large area as its 
home to wander and even nest in. Only the largest Para herds will ever consume resources 
quickly enough to require a mass migration, again owing to how large of an area they can 
afford to wander around any given pool. In my own playthroughs on the Isle V3 map, it’s 
not uncommon for me to wander between two fairly distant bodies of water (such as the 
twin lakes and the gigantic marsh) without hardly eating or drinking, just because I can.

When being hunted, especially by a pack, you should always choose running as your first 
option. Para is basically the Allosaurus of the herbivores, and consequently is somewhat
 fragile for its size. When fleeing, you should initially trot until the predators are 
close and/or crouching, at which point you should run. This will almost always put enough 
distance between you to out-last their ambush speed. Once you have begun running, KEEP 
THE CAMERA POINTED FORWARD. Not doing this is the most common mistake I see with any 
dinosaur, and it kills me every time I see it. Not looking where you’re running is 100% 
guaranteed to have you run into an object or off a ledge, immobilising you or inflicting 
bone break respectively. Instead, just run for about twenty seconds, then slow down and 
have a look behind you. Any predator besides Carnotaurus will be at a safe enough distance 
to view this way, and you might even be able to rest for that extra stamina regeneration.

Fighting is occasionally unavoidable. Maybe they’re faster than you (i.e. Carnotaurus). 
Maybe they got ahead of you while you hid in some brush. Maybe you just weren’t paying as 
good attention as you thought. Regardless, it’s going to happen. Now Para isn’t exactly 
helpless, but it’s not a tank and bleeding takes its toll super fast. If you choose to 
fight, it has to end quickly. The following bullet points will explain.

A personal favorite tactic of mine, when targeted by mid-tier carnivores, is to charge 
right at them with a head swing. For reasons I can only guess at, these players seem to 
never expect a Para to go on the offensive, and freak the ???? out when it happens. Now 
Para headbutt can only do raw damage, it deals no bleeding or bone break, but this is 
apparently enough to scatter even a large pack in my experience. Thus, it’s pretty much 
the best way to give yourself an opening to start running like the wind.
On the off chance that you do get caught, the pummel attack will one-shot any small- to 
mid-tier carnivore bar the Ceratosaurus. You will get bit as the cost of doing this 
attack, though, so reserve it for a last resort and don’t try to face-tank an entire 
pack with it. Even if the entire pack is somehow stupid enough to suicide themselves 
this way, you will undoubtedly die from the accumulated bleeding.
You cannot fight the adult apex predators. If you’re being vigilant then they should 
never even be able to reach you. Getting killed by Giganotosaurus is understandable 
given how fast its ambush is, but there’s no excuse for allowing a Tyrannosaurus Rex 
to kill you. That’s just your own bloody fault for not paying attention.

Nesting is quite easy as a Para, and best used as a respawn point for group-mates. Like 
with all dinosaurs, Para hatchlings do not require water and can feed from the nest, so 
it is not necessary for them to be near food and water; quite advantageous to be away 
from the latter, in fact, to avoid predators. Both Isle V3 and Thenyaw Island have 
plenty of backwater areas that make ideal nesting grounds.
 
The last point to cover is herds. A herd of Paras should usually be just as skittish as 
a single individual simply to avoid unnecessary bleeding, but may have to go on the 
offensive if there are juveniles or even hatchlings to protect (unless, of course, you’re 
the sort of underhanded rogue who uses those as decoys). As stated above, Para’s low-
maintenance nature makes migration unnecessary for all but the largest herds. It might 
be wise to do so anyway, though, since the sheer amount of noise you generate is certain 
to attract… interested parties.

-=Final Comments=-
I am by no means an expert at this game, and for that very reason the ease with which I
 handle Parasaurolophus playthroughs should speak volumes for how beginner-friendly they
 are. This guide might make it sound a little too easy, but I suspect most of you reading 
this know that all things in The Isle are easier said than done. Still, I must admit 
that Para is quite a bit easier to play than most dinosaurs, and certainly easier than 
my personal favorite, Carnotaurus.




How to Use Hypsi Correctly:
---------------------------
Written by joe.alton1

This guide tells you how to use the Evrima branch’s Hypsilophodon properly!

-=What is the Hypsilophodon?=-
The Hypsilophodon, or Hypsi, Hypso, Hypsil is an herbivore in the Evrima branch. When 
spawning in you are automatically an adult since there is no reason to spend 10 minutes 
growing this when a Dryosaurus, the second fastest to grow would take 20-30 minutes.

-=First Use: Nesting=-
This is most likely the way developers want us to play Hypsilophodon.

Notice how I said before that Hypsilophodon takes 10 minutes to grow, making it the 
shortest time possible, yet it starts adult when spawning in?

The nest will have 6 eggs to start, but they may turn rotten. That’s on your part. If 
it is getting too cold, just put more Hypsilophodons inside until it heats up. 
Hatchlings cannot heat a nest.

Hatchlings will need to be fed for around half of their life, and then they will have 
to eat and drink on their own.

If you find 2 other Hypsilophodons, the third will still be able to help out. It turns 
out that any adult Hypsilophodon can feed hatchlings without them being their own!

-=Second Use: Annoying Others=-
This can be common as most Hypsilophodons do not find a mate since they are usually 
seen as useless.

To annoy others, you just have to spit at them. You can even force people to their death! 
Here are examples:

* Trick them into chasing you, blind them, and if they are mad enough they will charge 
  off a cliff.
* Spit at people who are in fights, causing them to be blind and not see the next 
  Stegosaurus tail spike.




How to Use the New Omniraptor:
------------------------------
Written by Zunya

This is a guide to help others play as the new and “improved” Omniraptor.

-=Don’t Play as It=-
Unless you want – let me explain..

Step one to being a good Omni player: Don’t Use This Dinosaur.

I used to love the Utah, and what it used to be, but know I see what it has become. 
The devs have KILLED this dino. I mean, even the Isle’s best Utah player, (If y’all 
don’t already know who i’m very disappointed) Nappn, cant even play Utah and won’t.

And that speaks LEVELS. The stamina drain, with just one tick of bucking, does 40% 
stam. 40%. I mean what the actual fu-. This is insane!! What where the devs thinking?? 
And, you know what, i’m in banned from the game for badmouthing the devs and speaking 
my opinion, then I don’t even know where to begin. The turn radius on the Utah is 
that of a Pachy, and that is not OK. The Utah is a raptor, they are meant to out-agility 
everything in the game so far!

-=Ok, Use It, But Under These New Tips and Tricks=-
Now when I said to never play as this Dino, I was exaggerating some. Playing as the 
Omni can still be fun. But if you want to take down big prey you will for sure need 
a big pack, like 8+ Utahs. Pouncing your prey to death has gotten harder with the new 
and “improved pounce stam drain”. If you hold on for just too long, BOOM you fall off 
your prey and most likely die.

The MOMENT your prey starts bucking, jump off right away, or else you risk losing 
nearly half your stam in one bucking tick. You can still have fun alone if you just 
want to goof around, or hang out and explore, scavenging is also an option as well 
as hunting small prey and young prey, but really, there is not solo Utahs hunting 
Carnos anymore. I’m sorry guys, its just impossible, nappn agrees, he refuses to play 
Omni until they fix it. Now update 6 is a great update!! If your lame (JK) and are a 
Pachy or Carno main. But if your cool (Also JK, play as whatever u want) and are a 
Utah main, this update SUCKS SO BADLY.

-=Closing and Final Thoughts=-
Now I have to say that this is the end of this guide, I might and probably will add 
more to it someday, but for know this is the end. I hope y’all enjoyed this joke of 
a guide, but also true guide, stay safe out there and good luck!! Also, remember.




How to Survive as Utahraptor:
-----------------------------
Written by AlphaSquirrel

A basic survival guide on how to find food, grow to adult and, if you want, find 
a mate as the Utahraptor! This is for every raptor player out there and i hope i 
see more raptor players around!

-=Spawning in at a Nest=-
If you spawn at a nest you dont really have much to worry about till your old enough 
to move out. We will get to that later.

-=Spawning in as a Fresh Spawn=-
Spawning in as a fresh spawn is a little harder than being nested in. You start on 
low hunger, you’re small and nearly defenceless and you are so slow that the only 
things you can hunt with ease are chickens and rabbits.

-=Finding Food=-
As a fresh spawn almost anything can kill you or is faster than you, I recommend 
hunting rabbits and chickens until your a bit bigger. I also recommend spawning south, 
center, north east or south east just stay away from north west till adult ok?

-=Leaving The Nest=-
Leaving your nest can be hard depending on what sorta nest you’re in, it can come 
real fast. After you leave your nest each creature leaves the nest (for me) at a 
certain stage, Since this guide is about raptors, leave the nest around sub adult. 
After leaving the nest you should be big enough to hunt deer and goat but not pig 
yet! Pig can kill you almost as easily as they kill fresh spawns kill a few deer 
and drink a bit and continue this cycle until adulthood.

-=Adulthood and Finding a Mate=-
By now you should be adult or you’ve been killed and you can either explore or find 
a mate. If you want to explore chose male cause then you get the display colours or 
if you want to mate choose female because most people chose male because you Don’t 
have to click anything to change your gender and, also as stated above they get 
cool colours.

-=Conclusion=-
I really hope this guide helped you become Isla Spiro’s most intelligent, cunning 
predator. Goodbye and remember, happy hunting!




How to Play Omniraptor:
-----------------------
Written by leopard

This is only for omnis, not carnos, not pts, not deinos, this is a guide for omni 
players who want to skill up.


-=Utah Attacks + health + plus damage=-
Omnis attack damage to certain dinos: The Carnotaurus, a head bite does quarter 
damage, but decent bleed, Body attacks And pounces for carno: Body: Half a quarter,
but 5.5 bleed Pounce: 8.8 bleed no damage health! You are NOT invinceable, you 
have health, and not much with it Your weight depend on you health, say your, 
56kgm, you have 56 health, and you die to: 1 stego swing: 1-2 carno rams: 3-4 
pachy hits: and 1 to deino, Drowning for the lunge: if your a baby ptera can 
kill you in 5-6 hits: teno 2-1 tail slams: Dryo 0 damage if your a adult baby,..: 
carno bite: 2-3: you do have the upper hand of aglitiy so take it wisely, 
Utahs attacks: Alt bite Alt+leftclick: bite Leftclick: pounce right hold the 
mousebutton.

-=Growing your omni tips and tricks on how to survive=-
You an omniraptor, dont get into fights at a young age, you should run away as 
you dont have much health, feed on ai, and watch your bleed, once you get to 
about subadult start feeding on boars and dryos or hypsi’s or perhaps baby’s, 
this will feed you intill your adult, once you hit the adult stage, you can 
start killing Tenos+carnos+stegos, but do not be so proud of youself if your 
doing a good job remember your fragile and can die easily.

-=Fighting dinosaurs and how to properly fight them (you dont have to do it)=-
Your fragile so listen closely carnotarus: fight with focus, and use your aglity 
and a light body to outaglitize the carno, specifically jumping small cliffs, 
never ever pounce unless nessecary this can end in disaster. Tenotosaurus: once 
again use your speed and aglitiy for the higher advantage, and watch there tail 
closely as they have there advantages against your too, keep in mind your stamina, 
if you run out, theres no possible way ”yet” you could survive. Stegosaurus: 
speed and aglity again come in hand for this, pouncing could be nessecary in this 
case, but again watch your stamina these blades are equiped with none ending 
stamina so just watch that, but head bites it your best choice, lore the stego 
to swing, then dart in using your speed to get a bite. Deinosuchus: you cant 
fight this tank.



How to Hunting AI:
------------------
Migrations, afaik, have no effect.

I think where AI can spawn might be somewhat fixed, as in it doesnt just randomly 
spawn anywhere. But I´m also unsure of that.

My best advice is probably to keep playing to gain more knowledge of the map. It 
might also be advantagous to select somewhat popular spawnpoints (I.e. Northwest 
planes), since its more likely that you will be able to either find other juvie 
players to eat, or leftovers to scavange.

Scavanging also ties in with map knowledge. Once you get an idea of the areas most 
players frequent and the routes they take, finding food will become easier.

Also, don´t listen to nay sayers. If you are really not enjoying your time, sure, 
stop playing. But theres players that literally refuse to eat AI to challange 
themselves. If they somehow manage to do that (I can´t), then I´m sure your survival 
rate will go up over time as well.

In the end, this is a survival game, starvation is par for the course until you 
manage to overcome that hurdle.



Tips for Ptera Nutrition:
-------------------------
Not a lot of people like new recent change because as you have experienced yourself 
a Ptera barely gets any food at all from them and even for “experienced” players it 
takes ages to fill up your diets and hunger with fish.

Unfortunately Crab and Turtle spawns are also kind of on vacation still so they are 
not viable alternatives either.

My tips for Ptera players is to first when you spawn in fly around a bit looking for 
things to scavenge while keeping and ear out for froggies. If you find a frog kill it 
and take some distance from it, when/if the murder birds spawn and gather near the 
body you rush in and kill as many of them as you can. If they start flying you either 
use a big rock or tree as cover to pick them off when they crash or start flying until 
they get tired of you and goes away.

That should hopefully leave you with a frog and some dead birds, all of these are on 
your diet and combined with your starting dot diet gives you the +50% growth rate buff.

Then you either keep flying around looking for things to scavenge or you fish every 
now and then to keep your dot diet and hunger from dropping too low.

By the time your S and Line nutrients are about to decay you should be fully grown or 
close to it, depends on how long it took you to start that diet. Being fully grown 
gives you more freedom in how to get any diet that you want but I suggest that fishing 
stays as more of a emergency reserve food.

Look instead for dead or weak players that you can kill, lungs are a good source of 
the dot nutrient instead of fish or you could go more with the Line diets for better 
NV. Even just 1 dot nutrient gives you 10% stamina buffs so using fish to keep that is 
kinda easy while you can fill up the other 2 slots with Lines which are much easier to 
get hold of.

When fishing and you catch a fish you should cling to a wall/rock/tree instead of 
landing since you can eat the fish when you are clinging and then take off with 0 
stamina cost.

I use custom keybinds so will explain with the actions rather than keys..

Clinging = fly towards the target, use the key to slow down your flight, hold secondary 
attack (I know this one, mouse2!) and the “slow down” button… Z?

If you are flying slow enough while holding both Z and mouse2 when you touch the tree 
or whatever you will cling to it. Eat the fish, then just jump off and you are flying 
again but it uses 0 stamina for the jump.


Its very useful to fish a lot in a short/er amount of time since you do not waste nearly 
as much stamina and resting time to get it back compared to if you land every time you 
get a fish.
 
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