Level 29: Ultramarine Core, a delicious mahogany and indigo armour coating that I have called dibs on, sorry.Level 20: The Kerberos helmet, which looks like the sort of thing a soldier would wear in the trenches of World War 2.Level 17: Carbon Tundra, the first armour coating for Eaglestrike - this is the moment everyone rocking the armour won’t also rock the same exact colour scheme.Levels 13 and 14: The beefy Crabshell shoulder pads for Eaglestrike.Level 5: The base Eaglestrike armour core.Level 3: Eagle’s outlook, a patently ridiculous stance (that I am absolutely equipping the second I earn it).Here are some of the standouts that’ll become available as “Fracture: Entrenched” cycles in and out of availability: Cosmetics that are legit worth the grind are not available until later levels. You can get a pistol skin pretty early on, and you get Eaglestrike itself relatively quickly too. The catch is that there are basically no good rewards in the first week. Others, like “win one Land Grab PvP match,” are subject to the skill level of your teammates. (Completed Fracture challenges also earn you XP toward your standard battle pass.) Some of the challenges, like “complete one Land Grab PvP match,” are a breeze. But for events, XP doesn’t matter: Once you complete a challenge, you unlock a new level and earn its reward - no need to keep track of XP or do armchair addition or any of that. Progress is earned by completing challenges affiliated with the currently active “Entrenched” playlist, which puts you into matches of Land Grab.įor the standard battle pass, completing challenges earns you XP, and earning 1,000 XP grants you a level-up. Like the pass for “Tenrai,” the one for “Entrenched” is free, and you can complete it alongside your standard seasonal one. Earning rewards in “Entrenched” works much the same way. In season one, the “ Fracture: Tenrai” event allowed players to unlock the samurai-inspired Yoroi kit by way of a 30-level bonus battle pass. “Fracture” events are essentially an excuse to add non-conventional Halo cosmetics to Infinite, justified in the lore through a bunch of stuff to do with interdimensional rifts and multiversal travel and blah blah blah. The second, “ Fracture: Entrenched,” is all about the new don’t-call-it-king-of-the-hill Land Grab mode. The season’s first event, “Interference,” focused on the new don’t-call-it-a-battle-royale Last Spartan Standing mode. Halo Infinite’s second season has only been live for a matter of weeks, and developer 343 Industries has already rolled out two “events” - or time-limited playlists in which you can play to unlock specific rewards - for the free-to-play shooter. Bad news: Your personalised version won’t look cool for months. Pretty neat, right? Good news: The kit itself is pretty easy to get. It’s a promotional shot for a cosmetic set of Halo Infinite armour called Eaglestrike. Nope, that key art above isn’t a promo image for Wolfenstein.
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