10 Tips For Playing Prey

Prey is a big game. It’s long and it’s so puffed up with stuff that a lot of the time a player spends in its space station setting can feel more like a too-long chore list than a life and death journey to ward off an impending alien invasion. But Morgan Yu has a job to do. The enormous Talos I has to be saved and knowing what deserves her attention is the first step forward.
1. Don’t Expect Much From the Story
In its first hour, Prey sets up what looks to be a pretty decent science fiction story. For the rest of the game, it ignores it (until an unbelievably goofy post-credits twist ending). Players expecting to see the opening’s focus on alternate history and fallible memories develop throughout will be disappointed. Prey is better approached as a toy box. Its greatest accomplishments are in the many ways Morgan can choose to navigate the broken down space station, not in the story it’s hardly interested in telling.
2. If You Don’t Want to Fight the Monsters, Don’t Fight the Monsters
A last piece of guidance regarding tempered expectations: Prey is a lot of things, but a good shooter isn’t one of them. Though the player collects plenty of weapons—guns, grenades and super powered abilities alike—none of them are particularly enjoyable to use. Combat typically plays out as a panicked rush to find where aliens or turrets are attacking from then a blurry chaos of swinging wrenches or shooting bullets and bolts of energy at the target until it stops moving. For the most part, this can be avoided, especially in situations that require simply getting from one previously explored area to another. Prey’s stealth is a bit too messy to count on—the best way to avoid combat is to run as fast as possible to the appropriate elevator or airlock and leave the suckers behind.
3. Get the Robot Control Ability
Following the last piece of advice: get the ability that allows Morgan to hijack robots as soon as they start to represent a threat. The floating “operators” are one of the biggest nuisances of the game, spraying a constant beam of damaging laser when nearby. Being able to take control of them (and their evil cousin, the turret guns) so that they fight each other makes it easier to avoid a frequent annoyance. This ability is even more important later in the game when operators become, for a good long while, the most common enemy patrolling Talos I.
4. Upgrade the Shotgun
Even running from enemies or turning them against each other, getting through Prey still requires at least a bit of shooting. While most of the weapons aren’t too hot, the shotgun is pretty decent. Lining up a quick blast can tear a chunk off an alien’s health bar or, in some cases, take the smaller enemies out entirely. Morgan comes across a lot of weapon upgrade kits throughout the game. Make sure to apply most of them to the shotgun, the first and last choice in monster killing.