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該用戶從未簽到
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Anyone jumping into Modern Warfare 4's DMZ will notice pretty fast that loadouts matter more than they used to. The mode is built around persistence now, so every run feels like a choice, not just a warm-up. If you are trying to stay alive and keep decent gear, it helps to plan before you drop in. Some players even use a Bot Lobby MW4 session to get comfortable with weapons and movement before heading into the real thing.
Why Balance Beats Fancy Builds
The best kits in DMZ are usually the ones that can handle a bit of everything. A rifle that works at mid-range, clears AI cleanly, and still feels usable when a player squad shows up is worth more than some gimmicky build that only shines in one lane. You do not need a perfect setup. You need one that will not fall apart when the fight changes, and it always does.
Solo Players Need Room to Adapt
If you run solo, an assault rifle is still the safest pick. Add a suppressor, a solid optic, and a magazine that does not run dry too fast. That gives you room to move, break contact, or finish a mission without burning through ammo. Solo players live and die by small decisions. One bad push can wipe the run, so keeping the weapon simple and reliable usually pays off.
Squads Can Specialize More
In a team, things open up a bit. One player can cover long sightlines with a sniper or marksman rifle, another can stay close with an SMG, and a third can keep a flexible rifle ready for whatever comes next. That kind of split works because someone is always watching a different problem. You'll see better results when everyone knows their role instead of copying the same build three times.
Gear Choices Matter Just as Much
Weapons get the attention, but gear does a lot of the heavy lifting. Better armor, a bigger backpack, and useful tactical items can save a run that should have gone bad. The new crafting side of DMZ also means you can build up supplies over time instead of hoping every extraction is lucky. Players who invest in survival usually get further than the ones chasing kills every match.
That is why loadout planning in DMZ feels more like preparation for a raid than picking a class in multiplayer. You want something that matches how you actually play, not what looks strong on paper. If you are patient, move with purpose, and build around survival first, you will extract more often and lose less gear. And if you want a quieter way to test setups before risking your best kit, a cheap Bot Lobby MW4 run can help you sort out what really works when the pressure is on.
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