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Team Fortress 2 is now free, here are a few tips so you dont get duffed up

Which mode should I play?


First of all, have a play around with the offline training mode – it’s good for the very, very basics. When you’re ready to go online, click Start Playing – you’ll have to choose a game mode.

The default is Payload, but it’s a little complex. Click the arrow on the right and pick King of the Hill. It’s a mode where there’s only one control point to fight over, and whoever holds it longest wins. It’s Team Fortress 2 in its absolute simplest form, so it’s a great place to learn how all the classes work.
 
If Start Playing fails to find you a game, go back to the main menu and click Browse Servers. This is a big scary list, but once it’s finished loading, look for one that has a number less than 100 in the Latency tab. If they’re all jumbled up, click the Latency tab to sort by that.

You can make this list easier to browse by setting a few filters at the bottom: you don’t want full servers, empty servers, or password-protected servers.

Which class should I choose?


Once you’re in game, pick either team. You usually can’t join the one with the most players. Then you’ll have to pick a class.

A good starting choice is the Medic: you heal people on your team by firing a beam at them, and that’s immediately useful and appreciated by your team mates. At the basic level, it’s all you need to do. And that gives you time to watch how your team mates play, see who beats whom, and learn a bit about what the weapons do.

When you fancy a change, switch to Heavy. You’re slow, and your gun takes a while to spin up, but once you start firing someone’s usually dead by the time you stop. You’re also the first person Medics will think to heal, and since you just played Medic yourself, you know how to be a good patient and keep them protected. It’s a really satisfying relationship.

After that, it’s mostly personal preference. Soldier’s the best all-rounder, so another good early choice. Don’t stick with any of them for too long until you’ve played all nine: each new one you try helps you understand the role of the others better too. Spy is probably the hardest to be effective with when you’re a beginner, but he’s worth playing just so you understand roughly how they work.

Some classes, particularly Spy and Demoman, work very differently once they unlock certain items. To describe all the differences would be long and pointless. But if a black Scottish cyclops charges at you with a giant sword, get out of the way. And if a you hear an electronic crackle shortly after a Spy appeared to die, he’s alive, and he’s behind you.

Bored of King of the Hill now, how do the other modes work?


Payload: the attacking team must escort a cart along some railtracks to an objective. The more of then stay near the cart, the faster it moves. The defenders can stop it by killing them, or standing near the cart themselves.

Payload Race: same as Payload, except both teams have a cart. Up to you whether to focus on escorting your own cart, or stopping the enemy escorting theirs. First cart to the finish line wins.

Control Point: much like King of the Hill, but with five control points. You fight over the central point at first, then whoever gets that can try to take the next point along on the enemy’s side. You can’t capture a point if you don’t own one next to it, and you lose the game if the enemy team captures all your points.

Attack/Defend: just like Control Point, except the red team owns all the points at the start. Only the blue team can capture: once they take a point, it’s theirs forever. Red wins if they can hold out for a certain time.

Capture the Flag:
each team has a briefcase in their base. They have to capture the enemy briefcase, and bring it back to their base. If their own briefcase has also been stolen, they can’t score a point until it’s returned. First team to a certain number of captures wins.


How do I get items?

Every class also has a set of weapons that can be unlocked by earning a certain number of achievements, and these are the quickest way to get something specific for a class you like.

You can see what the achievements are by clicking the rosette icon at the bottom of the main menu: there’s a dropdown list that’ll let you browse by class. Doesn’t matter which ones you go for, these items just unlock when you have a certain number: usually 10, 15, or so.
Eventually you’ll start finding items you already have, or that you don’t want.

You can reduce these to scrap metal by crafting them together, and then use that – and other weapons – to craft ones you don’t have yet. There are hundreds of recipes for this stuff, the best place to browse them is over on TF2Items.com.

To get this sword, spend fifteen years of your life developing Team Fortress games.
If you find something someone wants, you can trade it with them by going to the main menu, clicking Items, then Trading. You can trade with anyone on your friends list when you’re both online, or anyone in your current game.

Lastly, you can just pony up and buy them for real money. Almost everything is available to buy in the Mann-Co store accessed from the main menu. You’ll have to put some money in your Steam Wallet to do so, but you can do that when you check out. The cheapest items are only £0.29 or $0.49c, but be aware that the minimum you can add to your Steam Wallet is £4.
As soon as you buy anything, however cheap, you become a Team Fortress 2 premium player, and you’ll be able to find and craft rarer items.


a full list of all the promotional items and how you get them over on the official wiki.
via steam 

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