Anyone still treating ARC Raiders like a long-term storage simulator is about to get a rude wake-up call. With the Riven Tides reset set for April 28, the smart move now is to spend what you've got, test weird builds, and stop babying that gear. Even things tied to progression, like Raider Tokens, matter less if you're playing scared and leaving strong kits untouched. A wipe changes the mood of the whole game. Suddenly, that “I'll save it for later” mindset just doesn't hold up. If you've got high-end weapons, rare mods, or a Caravan setup you've been meaning to try, now's the time to throw it into live runs and see what actually works under pressure.
Why passive runs won't carry anymore
For a while, a lot of players got comfortable with the same routine. Drop in. Skirt around the edges. Grab materials. Avoid noise. Extract. It worked, sure, but it also made too many matches feel flat. Riven Tides looks like Embark's answer to that problem. The new Damage Challenge shifts the reward structure toward players who can actually fight and make decisions fast. That's a big deal. You're not being nudged into conflict anymore. You're being pushed there. And honestly, that's probably healthier for the game. The old rat-style approach won't disappear overnight, but it's clearly losing value. If you can't win duels, pressure a squad, or hold a position when things get messy, you're going to feel it fast.
The catch-up system changes the grind
One of the better parts of this update is that it doesn't seem built only for the no-lifers. The catch-up mechanic should help returning players and late starters reach the 91-point skill cap without weeks of dull grinding. That number is going to matter, especially once the new endgame loop settles in. More importantly, it means matches should be decided less by who farmed the longest and more by who reads the fight better. That's a much better place for a PvPvE game to be. You'll still need solid gear and smart planning, no question, but the gap looks less punishing now. If you've been away for a bit, this is probably the easiest moment to jump back in and not feel miles behind.
Panorama Azzurro looks built to punish lazy habits
The new map might be the part that changes moment-to-moment gameplay the most. Panorama Azzurro isn't just another pretty zone with a new colour palette. It sounds like a map that forces movement, timing, and awareness every minute you're alive. Vertical fights already make people panic, and once you add shifting water levels, the usual routes and angles become unreliable. That's where old habits die. Players who always rotate the same way or hold the same kind of cover are going to get caught out. You'll need to think upward, react faster, and reposition before the map does it for you. It's less about memorising lanes and more about adapting on the fly, which should make good squads stand out straight away.
Use the wipe window properly
What Embark is saying, without really saying it, is simple: stop hoarding and start learning. This final stretch before the wipe should be used for hard pushes, risky drops, and loadout testing, not for sitting on a pile of untouched loot. Burn the legendaries. Push fights you'd normally avoid. Figure out what feels right before the reset hits. And if you're trying to get ready quickly, plenty of players also keep an eye on services like U4GM for game currency and item support while they sort out their plans. April 28 is coming fast, and the players who adapt early will have a much easier time once Riven Tides goes live.