Valheim Beginner’s Guide: Eight Tips I Wish I Knew When I Started My Viking Journey

Since releasing just over a month ago, Valheim has become a smash hit selling over 5 million copies and earning overwhelmingly positive reviews on Steam. This praise isn’t unwarranted, Valheim creates a unique experience that is unlike any other game in the survival genre today. It’s this uniqueness that can make getting into Valheim a little challenging. Even after 80 hours of playtime, there are still a plentitude of mechanics and systems I’m just now figuring out—ones I wish I knew at the beginning of playthrough.
Here are eight tips to help you get started in your Valheim viking journey from a guy who wishes he knew this stuff sooner.
Gathering Your First Resources
You’ll spend a lot of time gathering various resources in Valheim, but before you have any tools, chopping trees and breaking rocks won’t be an option. Instead, look around the forest floor for fallen branches to pick up. Loose stones can also be found near larger rocks and scattered about and flint can be found on the ground near rivers and the ocean. Most resources have a place they tend to spawn in, so be on the look out wherever you go. These resources also respawn over time, so don’t be afraid to comb over a place you’ve previously picked over.
How To Get New Recipes
When you open the crafting menu in Valheim for the first time, you may be shocked to see that only a few options are available. In order to get more crafting recipes, you have to find one or more of their crafting components. The game does a pretty good job of handing you recipes when you need them, so don’t worry if it feels likes you’re behind. Chances are, you’re right where you need to be.
Abandoned Homes Are Ripe For Renovation
Scattered all about the starting meadows biome are abandoned huts, shacks and longhouses. Instead of launching right into your mansion, consider getting some practice on one of these shacks. Building in Valheim is a very resource intensive process, and that dream longhouse you’ve been envisioning will probably take a lot longer than you think.
In addition to allowing you to build, the hammer tool also lets you repair existing structures at no cost when a workbench is built nearby. Finishing off the walls and roof of one of these homes will take far less wood than building a new one from scratch, and gives you a great launching point to map out the rest of your viking adventure.
Even if fixer uppers aren’t your thing, deserted homes are a quick way to get a decent amount of wood. Just place down a workbench nearby and deconstruct everything in sight.