Arc Raiders Beginner Guide: How to Survive Your First Raids and Actually Extract
If you just dropped into Arc Raiders and died within your first three minutes wondering what happened, this Arc Raiders beginner guide is exactly what you need. We’ll cover the core gameplay loop, the most important survival mechanics, and the mistakes that kill new players before they even see an extraction point.
This guide is written for complete beginners — players in their first ten raids who are still figuring out the basics.
What Arc Raiders Actually Is — and Why the First Hour Is So Confusing
Arc Raiders is a free-to-play third-person PvPvE extraction shooter developed by Embark Studios, the team behind The Finals. You deploy from Speranza, a hub city, onto a dangerous surface called the Rust Belt. Your job is simple in theory: scavenge loot, survive hostile Arc machines and other players, and extract before time runs out or you die. In practice, the game throws all of this at you simultaneously with very little explanation.
The gameplay loop is deploy, scavenge, extract, repeat — and every part of that loop has layers the tutorial barely touches. You return to Speranza between raids to craft, sell, or upgrade gear, then go back out. The faster you internalize this rhythm, the faster everything else starts making sense.
The Two Threats You’ll Face Every Raid
The surface is never safe for two very different reasons. The Arc machines are autonomous AI enemies — remnants of a technological force built to exterminate humanity. They range from fast-moving drones and rooftop skitterers to colossal war machines that stalk the landscape. They will kill you if you’re careless, and engaging them should never be treated as routine.
The second threat is other players. Arc Raiders is PvPvE, which means real people are also out there scavenging, and they have the same option you do: cooperate or eliminate. As a beginner, assume that other players you don’t know have no reason to be friendly until proven otherwise.
The Core Mechanics Every New Raider Must Understand
Before your first real raid, there are two systems you need to get right immediately: loadouts and sound.
Free Loadout vs Custom Loadout
When you deploy, you choose between a free loadout — a basic set of gear provided by the game at no cost — and a custom loadout built from weapons and gear you’ve earned or crafted. New players should run the free loadout exclusively for their first 20 to 30 raids. This is not optional advice — it’s the single most important thing in this guide.
When you’re still learning the Rust Belt maps, figuring out Arc enemy patrol patterns, and identifying where other players tend to cluster, you are going to die. A lot. Dying with rare weapons and high-tier augments means losing everything you brought. The free loadout removes this risk entirely. Learn the game first, bring your good gear later.
Sound Is Your Most Important Survival Tool
Arc Raiders has exceptional spatial audio, and the community discovered early that sound awareness matters more than aim for staying alive. Everything on the surface makes noise: Arc machines, other players, loot containers being opened. Train yourself to stop moving and listen every time you enter a new area.
One critical mechanic most new players miss entirely: press H on PC (Triangle on PlayStation, Y on Xbox) to holster your weapon. Holstering gives you full sprint speed — significantly faster than running with a gun raised. Always holster when moving between locations. Running with your weapon out is one of the most common beginner mistakes and it will cost you extractions.
From what we’ve seen most players struggle with in their early hours, the problem is almost never aim or tactics — it’s priorities. New players try to do too much at once. Here is a simpler framework.
The Three-Step Raid Approach for Beginners
Start every raid with one goal: find the nearest extraction point first. Before you loot anything, locate an elevator or raider hatch on your map. Knowing exactly where you can get out means you’ll never be scrambling blindly when something goes wrong — and something always goes wrong.
Once you’ve identified your exit, scavenge nearby. Prioritize crafting materials and valuables you can sell back in Speranza over weapons, at least early on. The player-driven economy in Arc Raiders means credits are the currency that unlocks everything else, and selling surface loot is your most reliable early income.
When to Fight and When to Run
Resist the instinct to shoot other players on sight. This is the single biggest mistake beginners make, and experienced players know it. When you’re solo and see another raider, your first move should be to assess, not engage. They may be more geared, better positioned, or in a squad. Dying in a fight you chose means losing your run. Dying because you ran away smartly means you’ll be back next raid with everything intact.
Against Arc machines, the same logic applies. You don’t need to clear every enemy you see. Pick fights with Arc units only when the loot reward justifies the ammo and risk cost.
Mistakes to Avoid — Things Veterans Learned the Hard Way
In our experience with Arc Raiders, the gap between players who enjoy the game from the start and those who bounce off it in frustration comes down to a handful of avoidable errors.
Never open loot containers without checking your surroundings first. Opening a container makes noise that carries through the spatial audio system. Arc machines and nearby players will hear it. Clear the immediate area, then loot. Doing it the other way around is how you get ambushed mid-animation.
Don’t ignore the quest system in Speranza. Completing quests unlocks more story, provides gear rewards, and gives you structured goals that teach the map layouts faster than free-roaming ever will. New players who skip quests take twice as long to understand the surface.
Finally, don’t wait until you’re almost dead to extract. Extract when you have good loot and a clear path out — not when you’re low on health, out of ammo, and being chased. The goal of every raid is to come back with something, not to gamble everything on one more container.
Arc Raiders Beginner Guide: The Foundation Is Everything
Arc Raiders rewards patience, map knowledge, and smart decision-making far more than raw mechanical skill. The extraction loop — deploy, scavenge, extract, return to Speranza — is the entire game, and every system builds on that foundation. Master the free loadout phase, learn to use sound as information, and prioritize extraction over heroics.
Once you’ve got a feel for the Rust Belt and a growing stash of credits back in Speranza, the deeper systems — augment builds, custom loadouts, advanced Arc combat — open up in a way that feels earned rather than overwhelming.
Which part of Arc Raiders tripped you up most in your first few raids — the Arc machines, other players, or just figuring out where to go?
